3 What questions do I do to communicate classroom objectives to my students? What is my purpose for setting objectives in the classroom? How do I set.

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Setting Objectives and Providing Feedback

Module 13 -14pg. 175 - 185

Shelita McCadney

Teacher Quality Team

601.863.6399

Research says…

Setting Objectives and Providing Feedback

*Yields a 23 percentile gain

iBelieve, iPractice

3

What questions do I do to

communicate classroom

objectives to my students?

What is my purpose for

setting objectives in the

classroom?

How do I set objectives in my classroom now?

What questions do I have about setting objectives in my classroom?

Marzano says…

Student learn most efficiently when they know the goals or objectives of a specific lesson or learning activity.

Students need a target for their learning. The objectives can be written many different ways.

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Recommendations for classroom practice

1. Setting objectives that are not too specific

2. Personalizing objectives

3. Communicating objectives

4. Negotiating contracts

Standard Vs. ObjectiveSta

ndard

A standard is the overarching idea of knowledge.

Common Core has set the standard (tells us WHAT we should teach).

Obje

cttv

e

The objective is the skill needed to reach the standard and is often time set by the classroom teacher

Standards and Objectives in Basketball Standard: The Miami Heat will win the NBA

Championship.

Objective:

1. Make the playoffs

2. Make the semifinals

3. Advance to the finals

Setting Objectives That Are Not Too Specific

Objective should not constrain student learning

Objective should be clear and concise in a flurry of rich learning

Objective should give student focus

1. trace

2. analyze

3. infer

4. evaluate

5. formulate

6. describe

7. support

8. explain

9. summarize

10. compare

11. contrast

12. predict

Larry Bell’s12 Powerful Words

Great words to include in your objectives: visit: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PE59sLjNVxs&feature=related

CCS

N-Q.2 Define appropriate quantities for the purpose of descriptive modeling

Objective: Given a contextual problem find the critical path using a digraph (N-Q.2)

Objective: Analyze and interpret results; make decisions based on results. (N-Q.2)

Objective: Given contextual problem find the shortest path using a dijkstra’s algorithm. (N-Q.2)

Example

CCS

RL.1.1 – Ask and answer questions about key details in a text.

Objective: Evaluate, compare and contrast characters within the text. (RL.1.1)

Objective: Analyze the story problem and provide and explain possible solutions (RL.1.1)

Example

Classroom Implications

HCSD requires each to visibly post :

1. Classroom OBJECTIVE

2. Common Core reference or complete STANDARD written out in full text.

Personalizing Objectives

Students define their own interests within a topic.

Requires a flexible objective

Ex: Understands basic ideas about networked computers

…..I want to know how the modem works

I want to write more effective introductions with a clear, concise thesis statements.

I want use good paragraph form in my writing and use strong supporting details

Communicate Objectives“ Communicating objectives effectively is probably just

as important as designing them”

Visible

Written in student language

Student time for copying the objective

Communicate objectives to the parent (fig. 13.3)

Types of Objectives

Learner Objectives

• Reflects what the learner should be able to do at the end of the learning period.

Instructional Objectives

• Reflect what the instructor intends to accomplish at the end of the learning period.

Behavioral Objectives

• Reflect what the learner might be expected to do differently.

Negotiate Contracts

“Contracting with students to attain a specific goals is a variation on goal setting.”

Gives the student a great deal of control over learning

Individualizes goal for learning (student action plan)

May meet with students every other week to check student progress.

Ex: teacher may contract with a student to study vocabulary words 20 minutes per week.

Essential Questions

Does the objective reflect the goal of the lesson today?

What will the learner be able to do at the end of the activity?

Is my objective precise, observable, and measurable?

It is realistically obtainable?

*Do my activities and use of time align with my objective?

Assessing the Impact

Rubric Impact on student (fig 13.5) pg. 181

Rubric Assessing myself as a facilitator (13.6) pg. 182

Providing Feedback

Module 14 pg. 185

After 8,000 studies ..

“The most powerful single modification that enhances achievement

is feedback”

It should be given specifically.

Recommendations for Classroom PracticeUsing criterion-referenced feedback and explanations

Using feedback from assessments

Engaging students in peer feedback

Ask students to self-assess

Why feedback

Gap analysis – the disparity between the target and the realities

Criterion Referenced Feedback and Explanations

Feedback

Shou

ld…

Focus on specific types of knowledge and skill

Help students understand how well they are doing compared to the performance standard

Give an explanation how the student exceeds, meets, or misses the standard

How do I rank relative to the performance of other students. H

CSD

….

STAR Reports (Class Summary, Test Record)

MCT2 results

Rubrics (fig. 14.3, pg. 188)

Use Feedback From Assessments

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Give timely feedback

Explain what was correct and incorrect

Help clear up misconceptions

Determine the next steps for to improve learning

Providing FeedbackEng

age S

tudents

in P

eer

Feedback

“Doesn’t mean that the student actually “grade” each other or “score” each other’s papers”

Verbal explanations

Suggestions for improvement (fig 14.4) pg. 189

Ask

stu

dents

to s

elf-

ass

ess

Students rate their work (14.5) pg. 190

Rubrics – leave the surprises for parties

Student-friendly forms

Written response

Strategies for feedback

Give students opportunities to improve, try again, and get it right.

Engage students in review of their own work and others.

Give students time to absorb new ideas. Tests are more effective as opportunities for learning if a day has gone by between learning experiences and the test.

Use rubrics. Rubrics provide criteria against which students can compare their learning. Involve students in developing rubrics. Rubrics help students focus their effort.

Assessing the Impact

Rubric Impact on student (fig 14.7 and 14.8) pg. 194

Rubric Assessing myself as a facilitator (14.9 and 14.10) pg. 185

Fighting the Invisible Tigers: Be a Better You

80/20 Rule

Let go of activities that bog you down.

Give your best where you have your best to give.

Outsource your 80% what you are not good at…yet

Model from others – see what others or doing in your building or youtube/google

Focus on 20% of activities that produce 80% of the

value.

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