Use one or more of these attached mini rubrics to help students understand what success looks like when they are engaged in student talk.
Let us know how we can further support you with student talk.
Common Core Speaking and Listening Standards
Grade 6 http://www.corestandards.org/ELA-Literacy/SL/6/
Grade 7 http://www.corestandards.org/ELA-Literacy/SL/7/
Grade 8 http://www.corestandards.org/ELA-Literacy/SL/8/
Grades 9-10 http://www.corestandards.org/ELA-Literacy/SL/9-10/
Grades 11-12 http://www.corestandards.org/ELA-Literacy/SL/11-12/
Wednesday, October 29, 2014
Wednesday, October 22, 2014
Student Driven Success Criteria--Formative Assessment with a Google Form
As suggested last week, co-creating your success criteria is an effective strategy
that will shift the ownership of learning from the teacher to the student which
in turn will increase the relevance, clarity and motivation of students.
This week, we want to show you an easy way to have students revisit the success
criteria at the end of the lesson using a Google Form. Follow the steps below
or watch Kimberly do it:
e
e
(If you have
difficulty getting the video to play in Chrome, try it in IE.)
- Before class, create a simple Google Form with the following questions: Name (text), Period (choose from a list), a grid question with blank rows and the levels of achievement across the top, and Additional Reflection or Comments (paragraph text).
- As you and your students co-create the success criteria, fill in the rows of the grid question. I wouldn’t hesitate to let students see you do this—just pull up the form and type as you brainstorm criteria.
- At the end of the class, have students fill out the form. (Share the link to your live form by getting a short URL and writing it on the board, emailing the URL to your students, posting the link on your SWIFT site or in Google Classroom.)
- Review your responses in the spreadsheet: FormàShow summary of responses.
If you’d
like to make a copy of Kimberly’s form as a starting point for your own, let
her know.
Wednesday, October 15, 2014
Student Driven Success Criteria
Co-creating your success criteria is an effective strategy
that will shift the ownership of learning from the teacher to the student which
in turn will increase the relevance, clarity and motivation of students. After
you have developed and shared your learning target to students, ask them the
question: What will success look like? It is important that you visually
capture the student’s responses for all to see. Use your student’s responses to create the success criteria, working to build consensus that is aligned
to the standards you are teaching to. You may even choose to capture
student discussion within a blank rubric.
Questions to ask
students if the learning target is process based:
· If we videotaped class, what should
we see each other doing?
· During a discussion, what types of
behaviors should we see?
· What are some non-examples? What do
we not want to see?
· What types of behaviors are
exemplary?
· How can we show evidence of the
behavior?
|
Questions to ask student
if the learning target is product based:
· What should the product look like?
· Can the product be broken down into
clear measurable parts? If so, what are they?
· What components of the product do
we value more than others?
· What components are essential to
demonstrate you got it?
|
At the end of the lesson students will have clear criteria
to compare their learning with the target.
Wednesday, October 8, 2014
Success Criteria as a Rubric
We see lots of Success Criteria written as bullet points or a checklist. This is great, but sometimes a checklist just doesn’t quite hit the mark for your Learning Target. How about writing your Success Criteria as a rubric?
This week we want to share a link to a blog that speaks to the power of Success Criteria when presented in a rubric. While there, you can also check out Marzano’s Levels of Understanding rubrics.
We know that the blog includes an elementary math example, (counting to 100) , but it is a good concrete example of the use of Success Criteria that can be applied with all grade levels and content.
Below we've included 4 other examples of Success Criteria rubrics for a variety of content areas and grade levels.
Let us know if you experiment with writing your Success Criteria in rubric form. It would be wonderful to have more examples to share out with colleagues.
This week we want to share a link to a blog that speaks to the power of Success Criteria when presented in a rubric. While there, you can also check out Marzano’s Levels of Understanding rubrics.
We know that the blog includes an elementary math example, (counting to 100) , but it is a good concrete example of the use of Success Criteria that can be applied with all grade levels and content.
Below we've included 4 other examples of Success Criteria rubrics for a variety of content areas and grade levels.
Science: (You might want to rework this into student friendly language so that students could self-reflect on their level of learning.)
Level
|
Description
|
Level 4
Above and Beyond
|
Student accomplishes level 3 AND goes beyond in some
significant way, such as:
Explaining
unexpected results
Judging
the value of the investigation
Suggesting
additional relevant investigations
|
Level 3
Complete and Correct
|
Student analyzes and interprets data correctly and
completely, AND draws a conclusion compatible with the analysis of the data
|
Level 2
Almost There
|
Student notes pattern or trends, BUT does so incompletely
|
Level 1
On Your Way
|
Student attempts an interpretation, BUT ideas are
illogical, OR ideas show a lack of understanding
|
Level 0
|
Student’s response is missing, irrelevant, or illegible.
|
x
|
Student had no opportunity to respond
|
Math:
Learning Target: I can solve equations that include
rational numbers
Descriptor
|
Proficiency Scale
|
3
|
I
can always or almost always correctly solve one-step equations that include
rational numbers
(fractions, decimals, and
integers)
I
remember to check my answers for accuracy
|
2
|
I
can solve one-step equations that include whole numbers
Sometimes
I can solve one-step equations that include rational numbers.
(fractions, decimals, and
integers)
I
mostly recognize which operation to “undo” first
|
1
|
I
am still working to solve one-step equations that include whole numbers
I
get stuck on which operation to “undo” first
|
Language Arts:
Learning Target: I can summarize a story
Success Criteria (How I will know that I hit the Learning
Target?)
4 ~ Exceeds the Target
My summary includes ALL of the following:
Written
in paragraph form
Setting
Main
Characters
The
Problem
Four
important details from the beginning, middle, and end of the story that lead
to the resolution of the main character’s problem
Resolution
|
3 ~ Meets the Target
My summary includes ALL of the following:
Setting
Main
Characters
The
Problem
Three
important details from the beginning, middle, and end of the story that lead
to the resolution of the main character’s problem
Resolution
|
2 ~ Close to meeting the Target
I included at least three of the requirements above
|
1 ~ Not close enough to meeting the Target
I included less than three of the requirements above
|
Let us know if you experiment with writing your Success Criteria in rubric form. It would be wonderful to have more examples to share out with colleagues.
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