assessANDfeedback
(0) Introduction and links to the other teacher training topics
Assessment before teaching with timely practice, enables the teacher to teach on firm learning foundations (see planTeaching) and the app to keep what the learner can already remember fresh (see retrievalPracticeTheory). Feedback of the type - tick or not - will strengthen the chunks in the learners' long term memory (see chunk-basedTheory).
Assessment during the teach part of the lesson enables the teacher to teach more effectively i.e. give instant feedback. Self assessment by the learner during the practice part of the lesson enables the learner to know to seek help from a teacher or their peers i.e. feedback-dialogue.
Assessment the next lesson, after teaching, enables the teacher, app and learner to work together to keep the learning fresh and gradually stretch the durability of recall-ability of new and existing learning. The time set aside for pre assess and retrieval practice additionally gives the teacher and learner the time and ability to do feedback-dialogue when errors are made. After a couple of months, the retrieval practice, scheduled by the app, means the teacher will almost always find the teaching of each lesson has become deeply embedded in long term memory and the teacher can teach more on the topic on the firm learning foundations.
- 1 (0) Introduction and links to the other teacher training topics
- 2 (1) Always teach on firm learning foundations = mastery learning
- 3 (2) Assess Pre-Assess Only Assignments
- 4 (3) Absent Learner List - ensures a maximum of 1 open assignment per learner
- 5 (4) Assess last lesson’s teaching + Decide between FOA, FOB and BELL:
- 6 (5) Teachers Assess (but don’t Mark) the timely practice assignments
- 7 (6) Assess t.p. Retrieval Practice part of the assignment
- 8 (7) Get the most from feedback by remembering it's better called feedback-dialogue
- 9 (8) Feedback-dialogue is best after a good night's sleep
(1) Always teach on firm learning foundations = mastery learning
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 learners skills 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.
(2) Assess Pre-Assess Only Assignments
The 3 pre assess assessment options in pre assess are tick, bell and reset
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).
Assess the first pre-assess assignment
Read about the process, rather than watch the mp4s
(3) Absent Learner List - ensures a maximum of 1 open assignment per learner
For the second and subsequent Warmup assignments, we need to make sure that each learner has a maximum of one open assignment. In this mp4, we see how learner F (who was absent last lesson), didn’t have their assignment assessed (because they didn’t complete it, because they were absent) and the teacher makes a list/remembers who the absent learners were and unticks these learners' names, before pressing the Create button in the Create t.p. section of the planning and preparation session.
(4) Assess last lesson’s teaching + Decide between FOA, FOB and BELL:
Once we begin to use timely practice for teaching, we will create a tpTeach style of Planning and Preparation session.
Using the Absent Learner List in Edit Taught
If a learner has been absent from a lesson, then we don’t want to add the layer we wanted them to teach them, into their 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 learners. We aren’t going to judge whether we think the learner learned what was taught last lesson (as it won’t be accurate), we are going to leave the timely practice app to find out whether the learner has retained until the next lesson, what they were taught last lesson.
Principles to Decide between FOA, FOB and BELL
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, the symbol is a speech bubble with writing inside,
FOB: feedback on blank, the learner hasn’t made an attempt but the teacher still thinks it’s worthwhile to give feedback, the symbol is an empty speech bubble,
BELL: BEst Learned Later, the teacher and/or the learner think that feedback isn’t working, the symbol is a bell.
(5) Teachers Assess (but don’t Mark) the timely practice assignments
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
(6) Assess t.p. Retrieval Practice part of the assignment
The 3 pre assess and 5 retrieval practice assessment options
| tick | FOA | FOB | BELL | reset |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Speech bubble with writing inside | Empty speech bubble. | |||
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. If this happens semi-regularly, reduce the Pace for Practice |
retrieval practice | independent and accurate answer | question attempted, and feedback might work | question not answered, but feedback might work | feedback isn’t working |
(7) Get the most from feedback by remembering it's better called feedback-dialogue
Every time we help a learner fix a chunk in long term memory - when they otherwise would be left having learned no chunk or an imperfect chunk - we are ensuring the learner will make more progress when they otherwise would.
Feedback should be done after some teaching has become embedded learning, so sometimes reteaching - especially after a long gap between lessons - will be more efficient than giving feedback. If the long gap between lessons can be foreseen, consider planning a cooldown.
Feedback can be more properly thought of as feedback-dialogue, a dialogue between the learner and the teacher - it should be more personalised than reteaching e.g.
help the learner add the bit they have forgotten of a skill or process, to the bit that they have remembered of the skill or process,
if accuracy is an issue - help the learner to check though their workings out - with the ultimate goal that the learner begins to be able to do this for themselves,
adapt the learner's past thinking to influence the learner's future thinking,
use the opportunity to train the learner to figure out what strategy or knowledge will ensure the learner can solve similar problems in the future,
help the learner to better deal with the emotions brought up by errors e.g. to move on from self-criticism or making excuses or blaming others and instead help the learner reflect about their question reading or process or problem solving skills, without fear of feeling a failure or a fool,
sometimes feedback gives the teacher and or learner the opportunity to realise that the layer is best learned later.
Additionally, the process of feedback-dialogue makes excellent, non threatening, feedback for the teacher on the fine details for future teaching.
Examples of feedback-dialogue are given within the questions for this layer (ask if you would like this training).
(8) Feedback-dialogue is best after a good night's sleep
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 chunk-basedTheory(2) - 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.