Effective pre assess, finding out what learners "already know" means we can make best use of lesson time. We won't teach learners what they "already know", nor attempt to teach them work for which they have insufficiently firm learning foundations, instead we can teach in the "sweet spot" between. So teaching and learning become more efficient i.e. we can increase the output (retained learning) per hour (of lesson time).
With timely practice, teachers only need to pre assess a topic once, before they teach the topic for the first time. Next time the teacher spirals around to teach the topic, the teacher will be able to see in fine detail what the learners already know/don't know yet from the assessment of retrieval practice data the app collects.
Of course it is no good collecting robust assessment for learning data, unless the teacher uses it to plan teaching.
A traditional pre assess process which asks all the learners the same questions at the same time - whether they answer within a test, selecting from multiple choice options or using mini white boards - makes many learners uncomfortable. “Our cohort” are often especially uncomfortable, so they often undermine its effectiveness by quietly not engaging, copying or otherwise avoiding answering, perhaps by claiming they know everything or nothing or perhaps by asking - when will I use this in life? |
timely practice ensures that
pre assess and retrieval practice are "low stakes". Learners, over time, learn their assessment is formative (to help their learning) not summative (to judge them against a standard). We need to teach our cohort - who no matter what the standard was, have learned that they won’t meet that standard - that when they use timely practice we are in the business of assessing them to help them learn better. (We probably won’t be able to avoid summative testing entirely.)
it may take some time for learners to begin to feel comfortable, what the teacher can do to help is keep sticking with the message: “I’m finding out what will be easiest and most valuable to teach next” and “I’m finding out how well you can recall recent learning, so that you can recall it more easily in the future”
How do we pre assess? - we use a trial and improvement process - please read this if you are curious to know more about how this works.
How do we schedule retrieval practice? - please read this about how we do it in the app and this if you want to know about the research.
tick | bell | reset |
---|---|---|
![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
tick is for a fully independent and accurate answer
bell, stands for best learned later. It is used for an almost (but not fully correct answer) or for a one part correct answer or for a question not answered (but the teacher assumes that the learner has had a chance to read and try to answer the question).
reset is for when the teacher assumes the learner hasn’t had a chance to answer the question e.g. the last few questions of the assignment are all left blank (the learner seems to have run out of time) or e.g. a blank answer line, when a short question is sandwiched between longer questions (the teacher thinks that the learner may not have seen the question). This assessment option can also be used if the teacher can’t quite read the learners answer e.g. a 3 has been changed to a 5 (the pre assess process is not a test, the purpose is to find out what the learner already knows, later the teacher can train the learner in good exam skills).
After every lesson where learners completed a warm up assignment,
|
When the teacher finds each learners firm learning foundations on a topic and uses that data to decide where to start teaching that topic, the teacher can be confident that the learners will retain new teaching because
|
It’s easy to teach too much and/or too hard and if we do
The pre assess process is set up so that the teacher can create and set
After this, the timely practice app can show the teacher firm foundations for the first few topics. The app is intended to hold the teacher back from teaching too much and/or too hard, meaning
|
unknown | in pre assess | in pre assess | doesn’t know | fragile | improving | mastered | covered |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
Of course teacher’s don’t need to use timely practice to plan teaching, but if the teacher wants to use the power of the timely practice app to
then the teacher must wait until the app has finished pre assessing the topic. (There is nothing stopping a teacher teaching a layer to a learner whose pre assess on the topic is incomplete, but the app won’t schedule retrieval practice and the teacher may not be teaching on firm learning foundations.) |
A learner’s column in the Plan Teaching topic dashboard
|
(apart from homework)
If a learner has been absent from a lesson, then we don’t want to add the layer we wanted them to learn into retrieval practice (as we know they haven’t learned it). So using the Absent Learner List, tab the yellow squares of the layers of the absent learenrs.
In a nutshell the question is
Will the learner, in the next week or two, “need too much help” to embed this learning?
and the answer to this question depends on the learning context.
FOA: feedback on attempt, the learner has made an attempt and the teacher thinks it’s worthwhile to give feedback
FOB: feedback on blank, the learner hasn’t made an attempt but the teacher still thinks it’s worthwhile to give feedback
BELL: BEst Learned Later, the teacher and/or the learner think that feedback isn’t working
The decision between feedback (FOB or FOA) and bell (best learned later) can be complex, as we are deciding on the best use of the teacher’s and learner’s lesson time.
|
|
The purpose of marking may be thought to be
Although each outcome of marking may sometimes be effective, the probability that any of these will be effective at embedding learning is low, and the cost to the teacher is high. |
If the teacher finds, when assessing an assignment, that a learner is unable to independently and accurately answer a question, and the teacher decides to give feedback the next lesson, then this feedback-dialogue in the classroom has multiple benefits over marking (These are described in Top Tip 2).
The assessment outcome for each question should be communicated to the learner and the app. The most efficient way to do this is
This saves the teacher a little time for each question. Teacher’s may find suppressing their urge/habits to write more a little difficult at first - but stick with it - not only will it reduce the teacher work load in non-directed time, it will also make retrieval practice more effective at embedding learning. |
The only exception to this rule, is for example, if the learner makes an error in a complex multistage word problem, the teacher might want to write down the numerical answer (on the learner's page, or on the teacher’s lesson plan page) to save the teacher having to work out the answer to check the learner's correction. If the assessment outcome is a tick or best learned later or reset: there is no need for feedback in the next lesson. If the assessment outcome is FOA feedback on attempt or FOB feedback on blank: then we expect the learner to try and self correct or get peer to peer help or initiate a feedback-dialogue with the teacher, within the rules of the classroom. By assessing and where necessary, engaging in personalised feedback dialogue in the lesson, we gain multiple advantages:
The main disadvantage (such as it is) is that there is very little in the way of an easy to follow paper trail of the efforts the teacher has put in. There is the record that feedback dialogue has been requested, and possibly the corrected workings by the learner. In future assignments we usually see the learner being able to answer correctly similar questions and there is the record of the subsequent progress on the layer within the timely practice app. If the teacher must be checked up on, then the “checker-upper” must do the work to find out if the teaching is successful or not. This counterposes with a marking trail - where the teacher is doing the work of demonstrating that they have tried - but cannot possibly demonstrate that they have been successful - in enabling the learner to embed the learning. |
Not giving hints etc will pay dividends, as the answer space can be used to answer the question
** or other symbol used to show that the answer is not fully correct but that the teacher wishes the learner to try and self correct/get peer help/get feedback |
Even though many questions will take the teacher "next to no time" to work out the correct answer, the teacher should use the answers provided by the app, because
|
Planning the order and manner of teaching the layers of a topic is more of an art than a science. As the teacher gets to know how the learners within the class learn, the teacher will become more skilled at this.
tick | feedback on attempt | feedback on blank | bell | reset | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ||||
pre assess | independent and accurate answer | N/A | N/A | not fully accurate | the learner ran out of time or seems to have not seen the question.
| |
retrieval practice | question attempted, and feedback might work | question not answered, but feedback might work | feedback isn’t working |
Contrary to our expectations, feedback is better given after one sleep, than directly after an error. It seems that if we give feedback on the day of the error, we may not be as effectively triggering reconsolidation - see (2) above - that is we are not as effectively triggering the brain to change chunks in long-term memory. On the other hand, if we leave feedback for too many days, then feedback is not as effective as it could be, because forgetting has further deteriorated the learning our feedback is trying to fix.
I wish I could say that is why timely practice expects the teacher to assess assignments between one lesson and the next, so that feedback is delayed by at least one sleep. However the main reasons for this fundamental decision are:
|
There are number of general problems that feedback needs to overcome.
The learner has built an incomplete chunk in long-term memory - despite timely practice layers being small and therefore easier to learn, sometimes the learner will need more support to build a chunk - the teacher, via feedback-dialogue, should work with the learner to find what is missing and help the learner fix it. See also (5) fading scaffolding, for more about this. We recommend assessing rather than marking of assignments, to assist with this. With marking, the teacher might write a note to the learner, showing the missing bits, but with feedback-dialogue, we help the learner add the missing bits to the chunk, ideally via questioning rather than telling.
The learner has not replaced/adapted an incorrect chunk built some time ago, with a new/adapted chunk in long-term memory. This is different from 1. in that the chunk to do the old incorrect method hasn’t been overwritten, despite perhaps a new chunk being built in the lesson. So here we are working on changing the trigger i.e. the learner choosing the new correct chunk, rather than the old incorrect one. The best way to do this, is to offer a reason why the old incorrect one is incorrect or inefficient which chimes with the learner’s understanding.
The learner is still reliant on some of the “unacknowledged scaffolding'' of the lesson e.g. placement of workings out on the page or use of a diagram etc. See (5) fading scaffolding for more about this.
The learner has misread the question or poorly applied their numeracy skills when answering the question. This is likely to be due to working memory overload - all learners, even the most able A level maths learners experience it. As they are learning and working through something new and hard, they are unable to accurately apply skills which are usually easy for them. I sometimes describe this effect to students as their brain isn’t very good at easy thinking and hard thinking at the same time. The best we can offer learners as they practise, is that they can look through their workings out for accuracy periodically. Sometimes I suggest they write “check for accuracy” on the answer line, as an aide memoire, for when they think they have solved the problem. We need to encourage learners to realise that making “silly mistakes” is often a sign of hard learning going on, not a sign that “they can’t even do the easy maths”.