Assessment and the Art of Lazy Teaching
Using learner-centred, formative assessment to develop the expert learner
Available in-person or online. Next open, online session:
- Location Zoom
- Date tbc (please contact for bespoke options)
- Time 13:00 – 16:30
- Cost £39
To book onto this session, please click the Request Invoice (if you are an organisation) or PayPal (if you are an individual). To request an invoice for larger bookings, please drop me a line.
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Typical inspection issues
- Teachers do not effectively check the learning that has taken place. Teachers do not know whether learners have understood or retained prior learning. As a result, not all learners make the progress of which they are capable.
- Staff do not make enough use of the information available about learners to accelerate their progress or help them attain higher grades.
Duration
3.5 hour interactive online training session.
Publicity information for potential delegates
Ask most teachers what the toughest part of teaching is and they’re as likely as not to say: ‘marking work’; particularly if they have to take it home to do it. Other comments might include: ‘Motivating learners to work between lessons’, or ‘Not having enough time between lessons to help learners catch up’.
‘Assessment and the Art of Lazy Teaching’ is a training session aimed at helping to resolve these issues. It will introduce you to wide range of formative assessment strategies, all of which require learners to work differently rather than teachers to work harder. If you would like a bigger bag of tricks that will make your life easier and turn your learners into independent, expert learners, then this could be just the session you’re looking for.
Further information for event organisers
It doesn’t take long to gauge the maturity of pedagogy in a learning provider. Visiting a handful of lessons and reading a selection of lesson plans can give a very strong first impression. Is there a culture of TLA*, TL or just T?
The ideal is that teachers begin their creative lesson planning by stating clearly how they would like learners to be different by the end of the lesson. The rules for these outcomes are that they should focus on what learners will be able to do as a result of the lesson (difference), rather than what they will do in the lesson (stuff). The outcomes should also say what will be ‘visible’, to enable learners and/or teachers to evaluate the extent to which the outcomes are being achieved. Only when these outcomes are written in this transformational way can they inform the planning of creative teaching strategies to achieve them.
But even when this outcome-led planning works well (TL), many teachers miss the final major ingredient. Its omission can have a profound impact on either learning outcomes, the teachers’ work/life balance, or most often, both. The missing ingredient is ‘A’ – Assessment; or more specifically – Formative Assessment – or as I prefer: Informative Assessment.
When reading teachers’ lesson plans or watching them work, it’s clear that for many the completion of the ‘assessment’ column is nothing more than a bureaucratic exercise. Typical text (and typical practice) is just: ‘Q&A’. Sometimes there might be the word: ‘Quiz’, and other times: ‘Completion of handout’, etc.
That this limited pallet is due to a lack of assessment strategies could be easily argued. However, the more likely culprit is simply that for staff, the letter ‘A’ stands for (summative) Assessment. ‘Assessment’ that simply establishes where a learner ‘is’.
‘Informative Assessment’, however, is very different. While it begins with a process to establish where a learner ‘is’, this is only the easy first step. For it to be formative, in must lead to step 2, which is ‘positive change’.
The preferred change is that learners articulate the distance from where they are to where they want to be (i.e. the highest grade criteria), together with the steps needed to get there. A possible additional or alternative change is that the teacher redesigns the very next lesson strategy to mitigate the identified learning issues.
The Assessment and the Art of Lazy Teaching session focuses on the former, and will introduce delegates to the Fifty Shades of Assessment (50 Informative Assessment strategies). These are learner-centred and should not require additional work by the teacher. So they will not look at:
- general questioning techniques
- the giving of feedback, or
- the marking of learners’ work.
If your staff would like a bigger bag of tricks that will make their life easier and turn their learners into independent, expert learners, then this could be just the session they’re looking for.
* TLA
- Set learning outcomes that have ‘visibility’
- Design inventive teaching strategies to produce the desired learning
- Design informative assessment strategies to project manage the journey
This session will enable delegates to:
- use their understanding of the Fifty Shades of Assessment* to select appropriate formative assessment strategies for different types of lesson
- use an effective target-setting strategy to help project manage the development of their assessment work
- review their current lesson plans and, where necessary, add new informative assessment strategies.
These outcomes should also enable delegates to:
- more effectively monitor the progress of learning over time.
What the delegates say
For an overview of feedback on this session, please click here.
These comments can be invaluable when generating curiosity about forthcoming training.
- 50 Shades of Great! Attitude-shifting journey.
- Change is in the air! I am definitely going to implement the strategies learnt in this session.
- Purposeful, creative, engaging.
- [I need to] Reflect and challenge my own pedagogy to ‘reboot’ as sometimes we get lost in all the other noise.
- Really enjoyed the Community Challenge game and the chance to apply the strategies to given scenarios and discuss differing perspectives.
- Refreshing to get back to thinking of assessment for the learner and not assessment for numbers/tick boxes/KPIs.
- [We need to] Create a bank of assessment strategies for use by the whole team.
- Students need to take more control of their learning.
- Some great ideas. Looking forward to having my own 50 Shades as a personal resource.
These comments can be invaluable when generating curiosity about forthcoming training.
Contact
To discuss your requirements in detail, please phone or drop us a line.
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