1 / 15

Mastery Teaching and the Role of Formative Assessments

Mastery Teaching and the Role of Formative Assessments. by Donna Bradford. “Reviving Reteaching ”-Robert Marzano. Formative assessment must be used regularly to target areas of deficiency and inform instruction Reteaching is a natural component in the instructional process

aizza
Download Presentation

Mastery Teaching and the Role of Formative Assessments

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Mastery Teaching and the Role of Formative Assessments by Donna Bradford

  2. “Reviving Reteaching”-Robert Marzano • Formative assessment must be used regularly to target areas of deficiency and inform instruction • Reteaching is a natural component in the instructional process • Effective reteaching: • use a different approach than the one used during initial instruction • build upon previous activities • focus on what was missed

  3. When & How to Reteach? • During instruction of new content • continual monitoring through periodic questions, observations, student participation etc. • Use “chunking” when presenting information • Well designed questions aimed at key concepts • provide alternative examples or explanations

  4. When & How to Reteach? • During review of material required for moving on • temporary study groups based on student needs, led by aide or teacher • enrichment activities • small tutorial groups (peer tutoring) • learning centers

  5. “Mastery Learning”-Thomas Guskey • Core components of mastery learning provide the foundation for RTI, UBD, Differentiated Instruction • Founded on Benjamin Bloom’s idea that all students can learn if teachers provide appropriate learning environment and adequate time for learning • The term “mastery learning” coined by Bloom

  6. What is Mastery Learning? • a strategy/model of teaching that incorporates using formative assessments as a tool to develop corrective procedures and provide feedback for all students

  7. How Mastery Learning Works • All students are given a diagnostic pre-assessment to identify students who may be at risk • Teachers plan and organize units to be taught in two week periods • High-Quality Instruction is delivered • Formative Assessments follow • includes explicit targeted suggestions called “correctives” about what students need to do to correct learning difficulties

  8. How Mastery Learning Works • Student completes corrective activities • Parallel formative assessment administered

  9. High Quality Instruction • First Level of intervention (RTI Tier 1) • instruction should be multifaceted; adapted to students needs/interests; differentiated based on knowledge, skills, cultural backgrounds • developmentally appropriate • research-based instruction in general ed classroom

  10. Formative Assessment • progress monitoring & student feedback • administered weekly or biweekly to measure most important learning goals • variety of assessments used as evidence of student learning

  11. Corrective Instruction • Second Level of intervention (RTI Tier 2) • accommodate different learning styles or learning disabilities • cooperative/small groups • peer tutoring • individual instruction, alternative method, additional time for learning • Adds about one or two days to the unit block • Saves time in long run because students are ready to move on to other content

  12. Parallel Formative Assessments • second chance for student to demonstrate mastery, grade counts equal to students who passed initial assessment

  13. Enrichment activities • enables students to explore topics of interest in greater depth • May involve academic games, multimedia projects, peer tutoring

  14. “Using Formative and Alternative Assessments” - Tricia Britton • Student scores on summative assessments improved due to using formative assessments to shape instruction • Formative assessments used: • pretest • “three quick questions” • labs • homework • science project • alternative assignments

  15. Alternative Assessments/Rubrics • students choose from a list of options • rubric provided so students know expectations & teacher has objective tool for measuring outcomes • ideas for alternative assignments: • write lyrics for a familiar tune • design a web page • create a concept map & explain it • make a brochure • make a 3D model • Record a Video • Design a poster

More Related