Wednesday, February 12, 2014

The Most Dangerous Phrase

The most dangerous phrase a person can say is, "We've always done it that way."

Today the students will sit down to an exam that has been given to students since the 90's.  The review worksheet is a copy of a copy of a copy and only mostly legible.  The multiple choice part of the exam has been literally cut and pasted together before being sent to the copy center.



I have been rather surprised at the lack of reflection from a lot of seasoned teachers.  When students do poorly on an assessment, teachers are quick to say, "Well, they just need to study more."  This may be the case, but conversation about reevaluating a quiz or ensuring the material delivered in class match questions on a quiz has been anathema.

Naturally, students are scared of exams.  Some do well and some do poorly.  The part that concerns me is that students are surprised.  Even worse, teachers are surprised.  If assessments given during a unit are well-planned, and if the teacher has done a good job communicating with the students, the results of a unit exam or other summative assessment should not be a surprise.

Fear and poor grades kill a students' interest in a subject.  If we're serious about our subject, we must improve on the things we've always done.

Here are a few ideas I have now:
  1. Rewrite test questions that students repetitively ask about.  
  2. Develop instructional plans directly from the summative assessment.  
  3. Teach test-taking skills during the unit.
  4. Analyze common mistakes on formative assessments and make sure to change future instruction.
  5. Ensure questions accurately assess what you want the students to know.  
  6. Heavily comment on formative assessments.  Communication, though it takes a lot of time, is something the students deserve.
  7. Do a review of an assessment after the quiz or test with the students.  All assessments should help students understand the content.
  8. Do an evaluation of all assessments, making sure the assessment was an accurate portrayal of students' understanding.  If not, change something.  
That's a lot, but making improvements, even small ones, has the potential to increase student understanding.  That's what we're here for, right?



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