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READING WORKSHOP Using Formative Assessments and Formulating Student Driven Lessons

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Page 1: READING WORKSHOP Using Formative Assessments and Formulating Student Driven Lessons By: Carol Anne Talanges

READING WORKSHOP

Using Formative Assessments

and Formulating Student

Driven LessonsBy: Carol Anne Talanges

Page 2: READING WORKSHOP Using Formative Assessments and Formulating Student Driven Lessons By: Carol Anne Talanges

“Turn and Talk”

Exit Slips/Socrative

Running Log/ Daily Journals

Charting/Venn Diagrams

Literacy Stations—

accountability sheets

Personal Dry Erase Boards

Hand-held Clickers-Active Votes

WHAT FORMATIVE ASSESSMENTS DO YOU USE IN

THE CLASSROOM?

Games

Green Light, Yellow

Light, Red Light for

posting sticky note

reflections/reactions to the

lesson

Bell Ringers

Annotations

Page 3: READING WORKSHOP Using Formative Assessments and Formulating Student Driven Lessons By: Carol Anne Talanges

MY ROADBLOCK

As a second year teacher of English Language Arts I have

tried numerous methods of lesson formations within the

Reading Workshop style of teaching.

I always find myself spending countless hours making

elaborate lesson plans and being discourage every week,

when I can not reach all of the activities or students do not

do well on the final summative assessments.

The reason I do not finish my elaborate plans is because,

even though I do think of my students needs, those highly

structured plans do not leave the flexibility that all students

need.

Page 4: READING WORKSHOP Using Formative Assessments and Formulating Student Driven Lessons By: Carol Anne Talanges

S O W H AT C A N I D O T O A LWAY S F U L LY M E E T M Y S T U D E N T S E V E R Y D AY N E E D S ?

Page 5: READING WORKSHOP Using Formative Assessments and Formulating Student Driven Lessons By: Carol Anne Talanges

STUDENT DRIVEN LESSONS

The teacher needs to use student independent or group

work time as assessment data to formulate what students

need for further instructional needs.

The teacher must release the traditional weekly plan

where every lesson and activity is planned weeks ahead of

time and really focus on targeted goals and using students

feedback to formulate how to assist them in reaching their

targeted goal.

Use student pre-assessment and formative assessments

to drive mini-lesson planning.

Page 6: READING WORKSHOP Using Formative Assessments and Formulating Student Driven Lessons By: Carol Anne Talanges

Turn and TalkQuick journal response

Board Graffiti/ Chalk Talk

Observations/ Verbal Discussions

Anticipation Guides/ Four Corner

Debates—active involvement

Edmodo/ Poll Everywhere/

Socrative/ Clickers

WHAT ARE SOME EXAMPLES OF PRE-ASSESSMENTS THAT

TEACHERS CAN USE?

Interest/ Knowledge

Inventory

KWL/ RAN Charts

List Making—competition

“I Wonder…” Charts

Immersion Tables

Page 7: READING WORKSHOP Using Formative Assessments and Formulating Student Driven Lessons By: Carol Anne Talanges

“Mini-lesson link to best practices in assessment: Should be based on students’ work the previous day—targeted specifically to patterns of student understanding—and what they need next to go deeper or to clarify misconceptions and clear up confusion.”

~Samantha Bennett and Cris Tovani

Page 8: READING WORKSHOP Using Formative Assessments and Formulating Student Driven Lessons By: Carol Anne Talanges

“Effective assessors are always asking themselves, How will students show me their thinking so I can better plan for their needs tomorrow?”

~Cris Tovani

Page 9: READING WORKSHOP Using Formative Assessments and Formulating Student Driven Lessons By: Carol Anne Talanges

Goal Setting

Unit Goals: Standards driven goals broken down into targeted tasks.Begin mini-lessons on overall targeted task and allow student work, with difficulties and success, then drive the following days instruction.

Individual Goals: Keeping and logging a running record of students overall reading growth.Mastery of content areas and individual goals, such as comprehension growth and increasing text complexity.

Page 10: READING WORKSHOP Using Formative Assessments and Formulating Student Driven Lessons By: Carol Anne Talanges

Formal and Informal Reading Records and

Goal Tracking

Page 11: READING WORKSHOP Using Formative Assessments and Formulating Student Driven Lessons By: Carol Anne Talanges

So what will my Reading Workshop look

like?

Page 12: READING WORKSHOP Using Formative Assessments and Formulating Student Driven Lessons By: Carol Anne Talanges

Targeted Goal: For students to be able to identify the narrator’s or speaker’s point of view and influence it has on the events

Mini-Lesson: Teacher will open with a model of one story told from different points of view. Teacher will tell the same story of a bulling incident from the perspective of the victim, witness, and narrator. Students will then draw “noticings” about how the story was the same but totally influenced by the point of view.

Read Aloud / Shared Reading: Narrative story telling by the teacher leading to discussion

Whole Group Practice: Small groups will be given written text that is written about the same topic or an identical story that is told from multiple view points. Small groups will have to write down “noticings” and pull quotes from text that support the point of view and how it influences the writing.

Individual Practice: Students will read their independent book choices and complete the Double-Entry Diary to illustrate their thinking as they are reading.

Teacher: Use conversation chart to quickly assess students needs and assist with activity Group Share / Evaluation: Students will get with their groups and share their Double- Entry Diary and application of how the author's point of view is influencing the events in the story.

Reader Workshop Plan

Standard: Craft and Structure 6 – Describe how a narrator’s or speaker’s point of view influences how events are described.

Page 13: READING WORKSHOP Using Formative Assessments and Formulating Student Driven Lessons By: Carol Anne Talanges

“Assessment has more to do with helping students grow than with cataloging their mistakes.”

-Carol Ann Tomlinson

Page 14: READING WORKSHOP Using Formative Assessments and Formulating Student Driven Lessons By: Carol Anne Talanges

Making the Change…..

Starts with our weekly plans and how we view student assessments.

Student feedback from formative assessments should not simply show data results, but be our tool to base instruction on our students needs.

We must give ourselves permission to change from the traditional “Lesson Plan” .

Page 15: READING WORKSHOP Using Formative Assessments and Formulating Student Driven Lessons By: Carol Anne Talanges

NOW YOU TRY!

Think about your assessment and

weekly lesson planning.

How can you develop either

assessments or daily plans to better fit

students needs.

Page 16: READING WORKSHOP Using Formative Assessments and Formulating Student Driven Lessons By: Carol Anne Talanges

References:

Tomlinson, Carol Ann. The Differentiated Classroom: Responding to the Needs of All Learners. Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development, 1999. Print.

Tovani, Cris. Do I Really Have to Teach Reading? Portland: Stenhouse Publishers, 2004. Print.

Tovani, Cris. So What Do They Really Know? Assessment That Informs Teaching and Learning. Portland: Stenhouse Publishers; Markham: Pembroke Publishers, 2011. Print.

Walker, April. The Idea Backpack. 10 March 2012. Web. 11 July 2013. <http://ideabackpack.blogspot.com/2012/03/how-to-organize-time-in-reading-and.html>