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UC Education Plus

L3 Economics – Making Internal assessments part of your teaching and learning programmes. Derek McLauchlan 25 th February 2013 derek.mclauchlan@canterbury.ac.nz. UC Education Plus. Mihimihi. CULTURALLY RESPONSIVE CLASSROOM.

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UC Education Plus

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  1. L3 Economics – Making Internal assessments part of your teaching and learning programmes Derek McLauchlan 25th February 2013 derek.mclauchlan@canterbury.ac.nz UC Education Plus

  2. Mihimihi

  3. CULTURALLY RESPONSIVE CLASSROOM productive learning relationships established TangataWhenuatanga Kotahitanga Strong (economic) learning focus High yet realistic expectations Manamotuhake Model best practice Ako Wānanga An ethic of CARE Allow students to think for themselves Trusting classroom community Ako Whanaungatanga Classroom routines Show interest in student ideas Respect and value languages and cultures of students Manaakitanga Whakapiringatanga Wānanga Manaakitanga

  4. In PLD folder see files : - Ethic of care jigsaw - pieces -teacher ideas - Tātaiako self reflection focusing + learning inquiry

  5. Summative Assessment Formative Assessment Formative Assessment Formative Assessment CULTURALLY RESPONSIVE CLASSROOM productive learning relationships established 'He pitomata, he mea angitutōiaākonga‘ Each student is an opportunity NOT a challenge Desired learning outcomes • steps / skills / content required for students to achieve+ • ie. teach them the rules of the game so they can play it Know your student • learned experiences- prior knowledge Engage student in NEW learning experience • New activities / different teaching approaches Little will change unless something different happens in the classroom Teacher Reflection - upskilling / changing practice ONLY when the students are ready

  6. Know your student Assessment of student learning needs  “The primary purpose of assessment is to improve students’ learning and teachers’ teaching …” New Zealand Curriculum, Assessment, p.39  “Healthy assessment practice uses multiple samplings from multiple sources.” NZEI Te RiuRoa & Lester Flockton, 2009 Refer to Assessment section of The Connected Curriculum

  7. Desired learning outcomes • Eco curriculum guide (used to be call T+L guide)http://seniorsecondary.tki.org.nz/Social-sciences/Economics •  see pre upload versions – 1. Adjustments to Key concepts2. New L3 Key concept indicators • Standards / Conditions of Assessment for Internals • http://www.nzqa.govt.nz/qualifications-standards/qualifications/ncea/subjects/economics/levels/ • Exemplars • http://www.nzqa.govt.nz/qualifications-standards/qualifications/ncea/subjects/economics/annotated-exemplars • Texts / workbooks / colleagues • Content / Skills template – BLANK Derek’s attempt

  8. New Learning Experience - that connect to students lived experiencesand prior knowledge Petty and Constructivism • Eco content / skills • In class simulation eg coke / food • Online simulation • eg AmosWEB • Student Inquiry • Whiteboards for modelseg S/D folder • Brainstorm for others • Literacy • Unpack exemplareg NZCETA workshop 2012 • Graphic organiser • eg 1.4 • Checksheets • Placemats • Brainstorm for others  ADD TO - Content / Skills template Derek’s attempt

  9. Formative assessment is: Assessment FOR Learning Rather than Assessment OF Learning Assessment on line

  10. ‘Formative assessment refers to all those activities undertaken byteachers, and by the studentsin assessing themselves, which provide information to be used as feedback to modify the teaching and learningactivities in which they are engaged. Such assessments become formative when the evidence is actually usedtoadapt the teachingto meet the needs.’ -Black and William

  11. What is so special about Formative Teaching? Sadler ’89 analysed feedback to show that for learning to take place the learner needs to know: • The goal • e.g. “I need to use the correct method to explain in detail consumer equilibrium. I need to use formulas and models, and refer to these in my explanations” • Their present position: • ie how far they have achieved the goal. • eg. what they do right and what they do wrong “I use the correct method usually and calculate the answers correctly, my diagrams are clear and I refer to them well in my explanations.” • How to close the gap • ie between the goal and their present position • e.g. “I need to ensure I don’t confuse income and substitution effects. I need to be better at linking changes in MU as a result of price changes to choice a consumer makes about what quantity to consume.” • Learning logs • Checksheet as learning log • PIPS

  12. Formative assessment DOESN’T always have to be done by the teacher Use the hand out below to complete your Eco planning template Snippets from Rethinking Classroom Assessment ….

  13. Usual 2 step approach Carroll’s 3 step approach Students do some on their own Students do some on their own Peer explaining Teacher shows how on the board Teacher shows how on the board application application comprehension knowledge knowledge Self and Peer assessment… See Geoff Petty on Formative Teaching Methods

  14. Summative assessment • 3.3 example • 3.3 example + answers • 3.4 – peer assessment template

  15. End of Session 1

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