In the district where I am an
instructional coach, I am consistently impressed by how many teachers directly
inform their students of the objectives of the day’s lesson. Providing students
with a road map like this is essential; what better way to begin a lesson than
to know what it is you’ll be learning, what it is you’ll be able to do by the
end of the lesson?
Well, with this post, I’d like to take our
thinking about sharing objectives with students one step further. I’ve been
re-reading a favorite educational text of mine lately by Cris Tovani, So What Do They Really Know? Assessment That
Informs Teaching and Learning (2011). In it, she shares what students see
written on the whiteboard as they enter her ELA classroom. Here’s a sample from
p. 48 of this great book:
Learning
Targets
|
Assessments
|
I can show how I am
thinking about a text in a variety of ways.
|
inner-voice sheets
|
Instead of saying, “I
don’t get it,” I can ask a question of the text that might help me build
background knowledge to answer my question.
|
sticky notes
|
The first thing I’ll point out is the
slight difference between what most of us know as lesson objectives (which
usually sound much like standards) and learning targets, which Tovani employs.
Posting learning targets basically has the same function as posting objectives
– it lets students know what they should know or be able to do by the lesson’s
end. I just happen to like how learning targets are student-friendly and are
written from the perspective of the student him- or herself.
The second thing to take from Tovani’s
chart is the real meat and potatoes, though (the difference between objectives
and learning targets was just an appetizer, so I hope you’re hungry!). Tovani
shares with her students how each learning target of the lesson will be
assessed. I won’t go into huge detail explaining what inner-voice sheets or
sticky notes are, but suffice it to say they are useful, if not “unfancy,”
assessments Tovani uses on a regular basis with her students. The important
thing here is that not only has Tovani planned out exactly how she will assess
students on each of her lesson’s learning targets (and what tools she will use
to conduct said assessments) – this is huge enough on its own, honestly! – but that
she is also sharing this information with students. So, when her students begin
filling out that inner-voice sheet or jotting down a question on a sticky note,
they know why Tovani is asking them to do these things. They know what the
tasks relate to in terms of their learning, and they know Tovani will use the
data to determine how they are each doing in terms of that day’s learning
targets (actually, for that matter, the students themselves can also
self-assess whether or not they’ve met the learning targets based on how they
felt they did with the assessments).
If you’re a teacher who regularly posts
daily objectives or learning targets, how hard would it be to take the extra
step and also post the corresponding assessments? How much would this extra
step help you and your students to be aware of the link between instruction and
assessment?
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