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1 © 2006 Curriculum K-12 Directorate, NSW Department of Education and Tra English K-6 Syllabus Using the syllabus for consistency of assessment
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1 © 2006 Curriculum K-12 Directorate, NSW Department of Education and Training English K-6 Syllabus Using the syllabus for consistency of assessment.

Apr 01, 2015

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Page 1: 1 © 2006 Curriculum K-12 Directorate, NSW Department of Education and Training English K-6 Syllabus Using the syllabus for consistency of assessment.

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© 2006 Curriculum K-12 Directorate, NSW Department of Education and Training

English K-6 Syllabus

Using the syllabus for consistency of

assessment

Page 2: 1 © 2006 Curriculum K-12 Directorate, NSW Department of Education and Training English K-6 Syllabus Using the syllabus for consistency of assessment.

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Assessment

Why does this learning matter?

What are you going to get the students to do (or to produce)?

How well do you expect them to do it?

What do you want the students to learn?

Assessment and Quality Teaching

Quality teaching in NSW public schools: An assessment practice guide (2004) DET

Page 3: 1 © 2006 Curriculum K-12 Directorate, NSW Department of Education and Training English K-6 Syllabus Using the syllabus for consistency of assessment.

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Assessment

What do you want the students to learn?

Assessing is the process of collecting, analysing and recording information about student progress towards achievement of syllabus outcomes. An important purpose of assessment is to design appropriate learning programs for all students.

p87 English K–6 syllabus (1998) Board of Studies NSW, Sydney.

Page 4: 1 © 2006 Curriculum K-12 Directorate, NSW Department of Education and Training English K-6 Syllabus Using the syllabus for consistency of assessment.

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Assessment

What do you want the students to learn?

Policy guidelinesSchools plan assessment so that:

-students can demonstrate achievement for the relevant stage of learning-valid and reliable assessment strategies are used-assessment processes are time efficient and manageable

Getting the balance right (2005) DET

Page 5: 1 © 2006 Curriculum K-12 Directorate, NSW Department of Education and Training English K-6 Syllabus Using the syllabus for consistency of assessment.

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Assessment

What do you want the students to learn?

Student achievement of the syllabus outcomes is the goal of planning, programming and assessing.

Reporting is the communication of that achievement.

As students participate in a range of English learning experiences, teachers make judgements about student progress.

Evaluating is the process of making judgements about the effectiveness of teaching programs, policies and procedures.

p.86 English K–6 syllabus (1998) Board of Studies NSW, Sydney.

Page 6: 1 © 2006 Curriculum K-12 Directorate, NSW Department of Education and Training English K-6 Syllabus Using the syllabus for consistency of assessment.

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Assessment

Informing judgement

What parts of the syllabus do you currently draw on to inform your planning, teaching and assessing?

Foundation Statements

Syllabus outcomes and indicators

Content

Scope and Sequence

Why does this learning matter?

Page 7: 1 © 2006 Curriculum K-12 Directorate, NSW Department of Education and Training English K-6 Syllabus Using the syllabus for consistency of assessment.

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Assessment

Teacher judgement

How do you determine the standard required of your students?

Shared professional expectations and discussion aroundthese sources of information:

syllabus expectationswork samples from: -across your stage-English Modules

-Board of Studies English K-6 work samples-Assessment Resource Centre

-BST Marking Guidelines

Why does this learning matter?

Page 8: 1 © 2006 Curriculum K-12 Directorate, NSW Department of Education and Training English K-6 Syllabus Using the syllabus for consistency of assessment.

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Assessment

Discussion

Selecting appropriate outcomes

Deciding on a teaching focus

Planning learning experiences

Teaching

Monitoring, recording students’ progress

Reviewing, replanning teaching and learning

Making judgements

Collecting evidence

Where does assessment fall within the teaching learning cycle?

Why does this learning matter?

Page 9: 1 © 2006 Curriculum K-12 Directorate, NSW Department of Education and Training English K-6 Syllabus Using the syllabus for consistency of assessment.

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Assessment

Selecting appropriate outcomes

Deciding on a teaching focus

Planning learning experiences

Teaching

Monitoring, recording students’ progress

Reviewing, replanning teaching and learning

Making judgements

Collecting evidence

Why does this learning matter?

Assessment Tracking and monitoring examples:Systematic observation of students,questioning, contribution to joint construction, discussion.

Checklist, notes, record on program,anecdotal records, profiles.

Starting with AssessmentClassroom assessment resourceEnglish K-6 Syllabus

How does assessment fit into the teaching learning cycle?An example using Talking and Listening.

State Literacy Strategy Documents

Page 10: 1 © 2006 Curriculum K-12 Directorate, NSW Department of Education and Training English K-6 Syllabus Using the syllabus for consistency of assessment.

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Assessment

Talking and Listening

Outcomes for learning to talk and listen

Talking and Listening•Purpose•Audience and Subject Matter

Skills and strategies•Listening Skills•Interaction skills•Oral Presentation Skills

Outcomes for learning about talking and listening

Context and text•Purpose•Audience•Channels of Communication•Language Varieties

Language structures and features•Text Structure and Features•Grammar•Expression

Reflection

Assessment

Remember:assessment

processes need to be time efficient and

manageable

Think of a recent talking and listening learning experience used in your classroom. Use pp 20 -27 of the syllabus to answer these questions.

Does the learning experience have direct links with

outcomes?

Does the learning experience assess more than one

aspect of an outcome? (indicator organisers)

Does the learning experience assess more than one

outcome?

Does the learning experience assess more than one

strand?

Is the learning experience part of your teaching and

learning? (Does the learning matter?)

Does the learning experience recognise individual

achievement and progress?

What are you going to get the students to do (or to produce)?

Page 11: 1 © 2006 Curriculum K-12 Directorate, NSW Department of Education and Training English K-6 Syllabus Using the syllabus for consistency of assessment.

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Assessment

Discussion

How can we assess student achievement in planned teaching learning experiences?

Example 1 – Stage 2

Think about:

Open your syllabus to pp 21-27 – which Talking and Listening outcomes does this learning experience address?

Look at the indicator organisers. What aspects of these outcomes did you observe?

Are there any aspects of these outcomes that you could not observe in this sample?

(next slide)

How well do you expect them to do it?

DiscussChoose a sample from the NSW Board of Studies ARC website.

Sample suggested:Stage 2 Oral presentations(go to either ‘Jules’ or ‘Kendall’http://arc.boardofstudies.nsw.edu.au/go/stage-2/english/activities/oral-presentations/)

* look at any grading or commentary AFTER looking at the outcomes yourself first.

Page 12: 1 © 2006 Curriculum K-12 Directorate, NSW Department of Education and Training English K-6 Syllabus Using the syllabus for consistency of assessment.

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AssessmentHow might you modify this task to assess more aspects of Talking and Listening? Reflection

Remember:Indicators are not ordered by level of complexity, therefore can be taught at any or several times during a stage.

Is this an effective assessment task?

Page 13: 1 © 2006 Curriculum K-12 Directorate, NSW Department of Education and Training English K-6 Syllabus Using the syllabus for consistency of assessment.

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Assessment

The previous Talking and Listening assessment strategy was an ‘end product’ task.

Talking and Listening can be assessed during teaching and learning experiences.

How well do you expect them to do it?

Page 14: 1 © 2006 Curriculum K-12 Directorate, NSW Department of Education and Training English K-6 Syllabus Using the syllabus for consistency of assessment.

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Assessment

When planning learning experiences to be used as assessment for students it is important to Remember:

Reflection

At any point, you can look at what your students have had the opportunity to learn and how well they have achieved.

The learning experience needs to allow the student to demonstrate all of their knowledge and understanding.

Page 15: 1 © 2006 Curriculum K-12 Directorate, NSW Department of Education and Training English K-6 Syllabus Using the syllabus for consistency of assessment.

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Assessment

Discussion

How can we assess student achievement in planned teaching learning activities?

Example 2 – Stage 3

Open your syllabus to pp 21-27 – which Talking and Listening outcomes does this learning experience address?

Look at the indicator organisers. What aspects of these outcomes did you observe?

Are there any aspects of these outcomes that you could not observe in this sample?

What could the teacher do to make this a more effective assessment task?

Does this learning experience cover outcomes from another strand?

How well do you expect them to do it?

Choose a sample from the NSW Board of Studies ARC website.

Sample suggested:Stage 3 Oral presentations(go to either ‘Jo’ or ‘Lee’http://arc.boardofstudies.nsw.edu.au/go/stage-3/english/activities/oral-presentation-discussion/)

* look at any grading or commentary AFTER looking at the outcomes yourself first.

Page 16: 1 © 2006 Curriculum K-12 Directorate, NSW Department of Education and Training English K-6 Syllabus Using the syllabus for consistency of assessment.

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Assessment

Were your judgements consistent?

How did discussing with others assist you in making a judgement?

Remember:Consistency in relation to assessment occurs when teachers are able to make judgements about student learning that are not dependent on the individual teacher, student, location or time and are based on a shared understanding of standards of learning.

Reporting Back