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FaIR GRADING PRACTICES

FaIR GRADING PRACTICES. Presented by: KIMBERLY BRUNSWICK Director of Content Collaborative Learning. Fair Grading - Defined. The subjective process of determining a student’s knowledge or understanding of a given topic, regardless of behavioral influences. Success - Defined.

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FaIR GRADING PRACTICES

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  1. FaIR GRADING PRACTICES Presented by: KIMBERLY BRUNSWICK Director of Content Collaborative Learning

  2. Fair Grading - Defined The subjective process of determining a student’s knowledge or understanding of a given topic, regardless of behavioral influences.

  3. Success - Defined Deep understanding or high levels of proficiency are achieved only as a result of trial, practice, adjustments based on feedback, and more practice.

  4. What will you do?

  5. Step Three

  6. Step Four

  7. What are the underlying perspectives on grading? • Grading is not essential for learning. • Grading s complicated. • Grading is subjective and emotional. • Grading is inescapable. • Grading has a limited research base. • Grading has no single best practice. • Grading that is faulty damages students AND teachers!

  8. Grading for Learning • Brain-Based Research • Multiple Intelligences • World Economy • Standards

  9. What do they really mean? The questions that p______ face as they raise ch______ from in_________ to adult life are not easy to an_______. Both fa______ and m_____ can become concerned when health problem such as co______ arise any time after the e_________ stage to later life. Experts recommend that young ch______ should have plenty of s______ and nutritious food for healthy growth. B______ and g_____ should not share the same b_______ or even sleep in the same r_____. They may be afraid of the d______.

  10. Some things are not what they appear to be…. The questions that poultrymen face as they raise chickens from incubation to adult life are not easy to answer. Both farmers and merchants can become concerned when health problem such as coccidiosis arise any time after the egg stage to later life. Experts recommend that young chicks should have plenty of sunshine and nutritious food for healthy growth. Banties and geese should not share the same barnyard or even sleep in the same roost. They may be afraid of the dark.

  11. Standardsdo NOT define… • How teachers should teach • All that can or should be taught • The nature of advanced work beyond the core • The interventions needed for students well below grade level • The full range of support for English language learners and students with special needs • Everything needed to be college and career ready • A curriculum

  12. CCSSO Standards Are…. • “New” - standards are going to be introduced to all grade levels and subject areas • “Changing” - some standards will shift grades dramatically • “Rigorous” - in most cases, they are much more dense • “Replacing” - some familiar and comfortable standards are simply gone

  13. Relationships Between Taxonomies- Mathematics New Bloom’sDOK SEC Memorize Facts Remembering RecallDefinitions & Formulas Understanding Skills & Perform Procedures • Concepts Applying & Strategic Demonstrate Understanding • AnalyzingThinking of Mathematical Ideas Evaluating Extended Conjecture, Analyze • Thinking Generalize, Prove • Creating Solve non-routine problems/ • Make Connections

  14. Relationships Between Taxonomies - Ela and Reading New Bloom’s DOK SEC Remembering Recall Memorize/Recall Understanding Skills & Concepts Perform Procedures/ Explain Applying & Strategic Thinking Generate/Create/ Analyzing Demonstrate EvaluatingExtended Thinking Analyze/Investigate Creating Evaluate/ Integrate

  15. Research • ….student’s need to practice a skill approximately 24 times to reach 80% competency…. • Marzano

  16. Classifying Targets Knowledge Mastery of substantive subject content where mastery includes both knowing and understanding it. Reasoning The ability to use knowledge and understanding to figure things out and solve problems. Performance The development of proficiency in doing something where it is the process that is important such as playing a musical instrument, reading aloud, speaking in a second language or using psychomotor skills. Products The ability to create tangible products, such as term papers, science fair projects, and art sculptures that meet certain standards of quality and present concrete evidence of academic proficiency.

  17. Next Generation of Assessments • Realistic, complex performance tasks, immediate feedback, and incorporate accommodations for a range of students • Better measure higher-order thinking skills so vital to success in the global economy of the 21st century • Students must analyze and solve complex problems, communicate clearly, synthesize information, apply knowledge, and generalize learning to other settings

  18. How does this affect Assessment? Skills Taught vs. Assessment Given Creating Evaluating Applying & Analyzing Understanding Remembering Skill 4 Skill 3 Skill 2 Skill 1

  19. Research • The United States Department of Education indicates that 40-70% of the current materials on the market are inappropriate for the new Common Core State Standards or out of the order that they will be tested.

  20. Things must Change • Identify desired results, • determine acceptable evidence of achievement and then • plan learning experiences and instruction around what we have discovered.

  21. Seven Reasons for Standards-Based Grading • Grades should have meaning. • We need to challenge the status quo. • We can control grading practices. • Standards-based grading reduces meaningless paperwork. • It helps teachers adjust instruction. • Teaches what quality looks like. • It’s a launch pad to other reforms. Patricia L. Scriffiny Expecting Excellence

  22. William Patterson “ Fair does not mean equal; …”

  23. Ken O’Connor • Bob Marzano • Thomas Guskey • Doug Reeves • Mixed Bag

  24. Ken O’Connnor “ …to treat them (children) the same is actually unfair… we need to see fairness as equity of opportunity to achieve.”

  25. For at least one hundred years, teachers at almost every grade level have been using grades of some type – letter grades, percentage scores – as the overall indicator of student achievement. Students, parents and community members also have assumed that these omnibus grades are reliable measures of student achievement. … In short, Americans have a basic trust in the message that grades convey – so much so that grades have gone without challenge and are, in fact, highly resistant to any challenge. As education reporter Lynn Olsen notes, the use of grades is ‘one of the most sacred traditions in American education … The truth is that grades have acquired an almost cult-like importance in American schools. They are the primary shorthand tool for communicating to parents how children are faring.’” From Robert Marzano, Transforming Classroom Grading, 2006 (ASCD)

  26. “Grading requires careful planning, thoughtful judgment, a clear focus on purpose, excellent communication skills, and an overriding concern for the well-being of students…..”

  27. Doug Reeves “If you want to make just one change that would immediately reduce student failure rates, then the most effective place to start would be challenging prevailing grading practices.” “…the most effective grading practices provide accurate, specific, timely feedback designed to improve student performance.”

  28. Mixed Bag? • …teachers and principals state they learned “next to nothing about tracking performance for the purposes of ensuring progress. • Jane E. Pollock

  29. Who lives in • your school?

  30. Focus on the Student “If expectations aren’t being explained to kids, how can we expect them to meet them?” Linda Ham, Principal Maplewood Elementary Indianapolis Indiana

  31. Feedback to learner Fair Grading Proven Gains

  32. Feedback • “If we just grade assignments and never use that information to help inform our instruction, we have wasted our students’ time and we have reinforced to students the false notion that the only reason they are learning the material is to take a test.” • Robyn R. Jackson

  33. Research Students who can identify what they are learning significantly outscore those who cannot. • Robert Marzano (2005)

  34. Hodgepodge examswork habitsprojects homeworkeffortportfolios participation quizzes attendance neatness compositionslabs observations reports attitude

  35. What causes the greatest discrepancies? • Scale • Categories • Evidence • Outliers

  36. How would they do in your class?

  37. Scales • Percent • Rubric • Mixed

  38. 100 Point Scale 100 Point Scale Congratulations, Tony! You have earned a D.

  39. Rubric or Level Scoring Using level scoring Tony earns a C mathematically. A full letter grade higher than using the 100 point system.

  40. Categories • Total Points • Homework/Tests/Quizzes • Formative vs. Summative • Academics vs. Employability (21st Century Learning)

  41. Evidence • Average • Trend • Last “?” Grades • All of the Above

  42. Trend or Foe Power Law formula: Tony earns 93% - up from 80% when a 50 was substituted for a 0 and is actually higher than any one score!

  43. Outliers • Homework • Behavior • Effort • Participation • Attitude • Missing Assignments

  44. Process Criteria Congratulations Tony! You have earned a B.

  45. Zero Policy Options

  46. Any change?

  47. Robyn Jackson “If we just grade assignments and never use that information to help inform our instruction, we have wasted our students’ time and we have reinforced to students the false notion that the only reason they are learning the material is to take a test.”

  48. What will you do?

  49. Defining Your Next Steps • Research • Make Decisions • Follow Through

  50. Why 6-12 months?

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