Assessment of student learning plays an important new role in teaching: no longer signaling the end of instruction, it is now recognized to be an integral part of instruction. While assessment of learning has always been and will continue to be an important aspect of teaching (it’s important for teachers to know whether students have learned what teachers intend), assessment for learning has increasingly come to play an important role in classroom practice. And in order to assess student learning for the purposes of instruction, teachers must have a “finger on the pulse” of a lesson, monitoring student understanding and, where feedback is appropriate, offering it to students.
A teacher’s actions in monitoring student learning, while they may superficially look the same as those used in monitoring student behavior, have a fundamentally different purpose. When monitoring behavior, teachers are alert to students who may be passing notes or bothering their neighbors; when monitoring student learning, teachers look carefully at what students are writing, or listen carefully to the questions students ask, in order to gauge whether they require additional activity or explanation to grasp the content. In each case, the teacher may be circulating in the room, but his or her purpose in doing so is quite different in the two situations.
Similarly, on the surface, questions asked of students for the purpose of monitoring learning are
fundamentally different from those used to build understanding; in the former, the questions seek to reveal students’ misconceptions, whereas in the latter, the questions are designed to explore relationships or deepen understanding. Indeed, for the purpose of monitoring, many teachers create questions specifically to elicit the extent of student understanding and use additional techniques (such as exit tickets) to determine the degree of understanding of every student in the class. Teachers at high levels of performance in this component, then, demonstrate the ability to encourage students and actually teach them the necessary skills of monitoring their own learning against clear standards.
But as important as monitoring student learning and providing feedback to students are, however, they are greatly strengthened by a teacher’s skill in making mid-course corrections when needed, seizing on a “teachable moment,” or enlisting students’ particular interests to enrich an explanation.
(Danielson, C. 2013)
Assessments are used in class to determine student capability, to check understanding of content, and to determine where further instruction is needed. One example where I applied assessment for my instruction was during my Senior Practicum. One way to assess student learning and capability is through worksheets, whether physical or online. These quick tests tell the teacher where instruction is needed, or if the class is ready to move on. This example of a lesson plan with a well created assessment has set out what the assessment will tell me, and what I will do with that data. It helps me determine whether I should continue my instruction, or work on one area continuously to meet success.
A great method that I use to monitor student learning and get feedback from my students is by creating formative assessments. Formative assessments inform the teacher what the students are understanding and were they still need assistance. It lets the teacher know where instruction is still needed. This method of checking student understanding, I find is great through the use of whiteboards. At the school I currently student teach at, every student has a whiteboard. The class is asked a question and the students are asked to write down what they think the correct answer. This is a great way to perform a quick formative assessment in your instruction to help the teacher understand what components the students understand and where they still need assistance. The picture used to represent this artifact is used for presentation and is not my own.