| Fifty Classroom Assessment Techniques are presented in this book. The book is in the
HCC library if you want additional techniques or additional information on the five
described below. These techniques are to be used as starting points, ideas to be
adapted and improved upon.
|
| Background Knowledge Probe |
- Description:
- At the first class meeting, many college teachers ask students for general
information on their level of preparation, often requesting that students list
courses they have already taken in the relevant field. This technique is
designed to collect much more specific, and more useful, feedback on students'
prior learning. Background Knowledge Probes are short, simple questionnaires
prepared by instructors for use at the beginning of a course, at the start of
a new unit or lesson, or prior to introducing an important new topic. A given
Background Knowledge Probe may require students to write short answers, to circle
the correct response to multiple-choice questions, or both.
Step-by-Step Procedure:
- Before introducing an important new concept, subject, or topic in
the course syllabus, consider what the students may already know about
it. Recognizing that their knowledge may be partial, fragmentary,
simplistic, or even incorrect, try to find at lease one point that
most students are likely to know, and use that point to lead into
others, less familiar points.
- Prepare two or three open-ended questions, a handful of short-answer
questions, or ten to twenty multiple-choice questions that will probe
the students' existing knowledge of that concept, subject, or topic.
These questions need to be carefully phrased, since a vocabulary that
may not be familiar to the students can obscure your assessment of
how well they know the facts or concepts.
- Write your open-ended questions on the chalkboard, or hand out
short questionnaires. Direct student to answer open-ended questions
succinctly, in two or three sentences if possible. Make a point of
announcing that these Background Knowledge Probes are not tests
or quizzes and will not be graded. Encourage students to give thoughtful
answers that will help you make effective instructional decisions.
- At the next class meeting, or as soon as possible, let students
know the results, and tell them how that information will affect what
you do as the teacher and how it should affect what they do as learners.
|
| Minute Paper |
- Description:
- No other technique has been used more often or by more college teachers than
the Minute Paper. This technique -- also known as the One-Minute
Paper and the Half-Sheet Response -- provides a quick and extremely
simple way to collect written feedback on student learning. To use the
Minute Paper, an instructor stops class two or three minutes early and asks
students to respond briefly to some variation on the following two questions:
"What was the most important thing you learned during this class?" and "What
important question remains unanswered?" Students they write their responses on
index cards or half-sheets of scrap paper and hand them in.
Step-by-Step Procedure:
- Decide first what you want to focus on and, as a consequence, when
to administer the Minute Paper. If you want to focus on students'
understanding of a lecture, the last few minutes of class may be the
best time. If your focus is on a prior homework assignment, however,
the first few minutes may be more appropriate.
- Using the two basic questions from the "Description" above as
starting points, write Minute Paper prompts that fit your course
and students. Try out your Minute Paper on a colleague or teaching
assistant before using it in class.
- Plan to set aside five to ten minutes of your next class to use
the technique, as well as time later to discuss the results.
- Before class, write one or, at the most, two Minute Paper
questions on the chalkboard or prepare an overhead transparency.
- At a convenient time, hand out index cards or half-sheets of scrap
paper.
- Unless there is a very good reason to know who wrote what, direct
students to leave their names off the papers or cards.
- Let the students know how much time they will have (two to five
minutes per question is usually enough), what kinds of answers you
want (words, phrases, or short sentences), and when they can expect
your feedback.
|
| Muddiest Point |
- Description:
- The Muddiest Point is just about the simplest technique one can use.
It is also remarkable efficient, since it provides a high information return for
a very low investment of time and energy. The technique consists of asking
students to jot down a quick response to one question: "What was the muddiest
point in ........?" The focus of the Muddiest Point assessment might
be a lecture, a discussion, a homework assignment, a play, or a film.
Step-by-Step Procedure:
- Determine what you want feedback on: the entire class session or
one self-contained segment? A lecture, a discussion, a presentation?
- If you are using the technique in class, reserve a few minutes at
the end of the class session. Leave enough time to ask the question,
to allow students to respond, and to collect their responses by the
usual ending time.
- Let students know beforehand how much time they will have to
respond and what use you will make of their responses.
- Pass out slips of paper or index cards for students to write on.
- Collect the responses as or before students leave. Stationing
yourself at the door and collecting "muddy points" as students file
out is one way; leaving a "muddy point" collection box by the exit is
another.
- Respond to the students' feedback during the next class meeting or
as soon as possible afterward.
|
| One-Sentence Summary |
- Description:
- This simple technique challenges students to answer the questions "Who does
what to whom, when, where, how, and why?" (represented by the letters WDWWWWHW)
about a given topic, and then to synthesize those answers into a simple
informative, grammatical, and long summary sentence.
Step-by-Step Procedure:
- Select an important topic or work that your students have recently
studied in your course and that you expect them to learn to summarize.
- Working as quickly as you can, answer the questions "Who Did/Does
What to Whom, When, Where, How and Why?" in relation to that topic.
Note how long this first step takes you.
- Next, turn your answers into a grammatical sentence that follows
WDWWWWHS pattern. Not how long this second step takes.
- Allow your students up to twice as much time as it took you to
carry out the task and give them clear direction on the One-Sentence
Summary technique before you announce the topic to be summarized.
|
| What's the Principle? |
- Description:
- After students figure out what type of problem they are dealing with, they
often must then decide what principle or principles to apply in order to solve
the problem. This technique focuses on this step in problem solving. It
provides students with a few problems and asks them to state the principle that
best applies to each problem.
Step-by-Step Procedure:
- Identify the basic principles that you expect students to learn in
your course. Make sure focus only on those that students have been
taught.
- Find or create sample problems or short examples that illustrate
each of these principles. Each example should illustrate only one
principle.
- Create a What's the Principle? form that includes a listing
of the relevant principles and specific examples or problems for students
to match to those principles.
- Try out your assessment on a graduate student or colleague to make
certain it is not too difficult or too time-consuming to use in class.
- After you have make any necessary revisions to the form, apply the
assessment.
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