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I recently began reading “The Art andScience of Teaching” by Robert Marzano and have found it to be extremely useful on a number of levels. Firstly, it has reminded me of many practices that I had forgotten or which had fallen by the wayside as new ideas were explored. Secondly, I have been exposed to some new and innovative ways to implement best practice in my classroom or new twists on old practices. Finally, I have also learned quite a few new strategies and techniques, which I am going to use to inform my practice.
Like many of you, I learn most effectively
when I find ways to integrate what I have just learnt into what I already know,
so that it ceases to be new knowledge, but instead just becomes my knowledge. To
that purpose, the next few blog posts will be my reflection on how I can
effectively integrate what I am learning into what I already do.
Setting Effective Learning Goals
Learning goals are statements which define
what a student will know (declarative knowledge) or be able to do (procedural
knowledge) by the end of the lesson or unit of work. These are most useful when
expressed in terms of “the students will be able to…” or “the students will
understand…”. Fortunately for me in both the Queensland and Australian
curriculums learning goals are expressed this way. Setting too many learning
goals for any particular unit of work makes it difficult for students to focus
on what they should be learning. Not
only should learning goals by determined by the teacher, but having students
create their own learning goals is a great way to engage them in ownership of
their learning.
In my current Year 9 class, some students
are lacking the skills to be independent learners. To improve this I have been embedding
opportunities into the unit design for students to identify their strengths and
weaknesses in this area and hopefully improve. One example of this is that in
their current project the students have both collaborative and individual
components to complete. Every fortnight
students have a simple rubric to highlight where they evaluate team work skills
of both their team members and themselves. Students evaluate each team member,
including themselves on:
- Providing ideas
- Providing solutions
- Positive attitude
- Focus on the task
- Being a respectful group member
This originally began as a means of
accountability until I realized that it was a much more powerful tool when
students had to also look at their own behavior within the team and not just
judge others.
At the bottom of the rubric is an opportunity for the students to reflect on
their behavior as an independent learner. The five behaviours are being
reflected upon are:
- Meeting deadlines
- Focusing on the task
- Requesting clarification
- Organisation skills
- Ability to work independently
This is a great idea to help students
identify their weaknesses and to see what they should be aiming for however
falls down because it is once again teacher imposed. In my next unit of work I am going to ask
students to identify their own learning goal and offer the behaviours we have
already been working on as suggestions of they may like to use to establish
their own learning goal\s.
Assessing Learning Goals
In my education system we have criteria set
by regulatory authorities to determine student achievement based on their
performance. What they don’t do is help students to be able to determine how
they are incrementally improving as they work towards attaining the learning
goal. Whilst I have to use the mandated criteria for determining student level
of achievement on summative assessment, I have decided to use learning goal
rubrics on all formative pieces of assessment and have the students track their
learning progress as they acquire the knowledge\skill of the learning goal.
Marzano recommends a rubric scale of 0-4 in
his simplified scale; 0 meaning that even assisted the student can demonstrate
no skill or understanding; progressing through levels of assistance, complexity
and types of errors to 4 where the student can apply the knowledge\skill and
make inferences beyond the explicit teaching of the classroom. In addition, he recommends that students
track their learning through the levels and that all improvements are counted
as successes and celebrated.
My students are currently studying a unit of graphic design including learning to use
Photoshop. When they enter my classroom for the first time, most of the
students would be a 0 as they have no prior knowledge of how to use the
software. As the unit progresses and
they learn new tools and effects students will move away from teacher supported
learning to the application of skills and procedures which have been explicitly
taught. Finally, some students will be
able to move past that which has been explicitly taught into the classroom and
be able to investigate and extrapolate to use the software in new ways.
Marking student work using this rubric is
much more friendly to students in terms of supporting their development of the
learning goals. In addition, having
students self reflect to determine what level they think they are operating at
gives me opportunity to work with the student to determine what they need to do
to move to the next level using a common language. As a means of encouraging
continuous improvement I am also going to have the students plot their marks on
a graph so that they can see their improvement over the unit of work. Finally
and most importantly I’m going to remember to praise and publicly acknowledge
everyone who is moving in a positive direction regardless of whether that
movement is from 0-1 or 3-4.
Summary
In my next unit of work I’m going to use
learning goals in the following way:
- Identify learning goals
- Have students identify a learning goal for themselves
- Create a rubric for each learning goal (for formative assessment)
- Use the rubric to grade formative assessment
- Have students self-reflect using the rubric
- Give all students a graph on which to plot their results
- Celebrate successes