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  Educator's Resource Guide to the Alaska Standards: Curriculum Frameworks Project


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Writing Assessment

Assessment (by standards)

Examples of Instruction and Assessment by Standard

The following charts have examples of classroom tasks that address the five Language Arts standards and fulfill both instructional and assessment purposes simultaneously. The charts are intentionally incomplete. No instruction or assessment strategy is necessarily better than any other. Tasks should be selected or designed to fit the purpose and content for your particular grade and purpose.

Language Arts Standards:

  1. Speak and Write
  2. Read, Listen and View
  3. Complete Independent Projects
  4. Present and Explain Positions
  5. Understand and Respect Others' Perspectives

 

Standard A: A student should be able to speak and write well for a variety of purposes and audiences.
Task
What is the student doing?
Purpose
Why is it performed?
Supportive Instruction / Scaffolding
How do we as teachers and students get there?
Assessment Tool
How is it measured?
Instruction Assessment
Using a journal or learning log

To clarify thinking and prepare for discussion

To apply elements of effective writing

To evaluate language proficiency and clarity

To evaluate student attitudes

Guided practice

*Modeling

Checklist

Rubric

Self-evaluation

Peer response checklist

Discussing a video

To comprehend content

To extend thinking

To evaluate ability to apply to life

To evaluate analytical and oral skills

Preview discussion

Viewing and stopping video, modeling discussion

Note taking

Venn diagram

Anecdotal record

Note taking rubric

Observational checklist

Preparing exhibitions To read effectively / thoroughly To evaluate synthesis of information Guided practice

Strategy checklist

Anecdotal notes

Running records

Writing a descriptive essay

To clarify thinking

To apply elements of effective writing

To evaluate writing skills

Guided practice

Writing process practice

Modeling application of rubric to one's own and others' writing

Self / peer analysis

Checklist

Rubric

 

 

Standard B: A student should be a competent and thoughtful reader, listener, and viewer of literature, technical materials, and a variety of other information.
Task
What is the student doing?

Purpose
Why is it performed?

Supportive Instruction / Scaffolding
How do we as teachers and students get there?
Assessment Tool
How is it measured?
Instruction Assessment
Viewing and discussing a video

To develop listening skills

To gain information

To evaluate viewing skills

To evaluate comprehension and analysis of information

Reflecting on prior knowledge

Stopping video periodically and modeling discussion

Note taking during viewing

Fast write practice

Checklist of listening skills

Anecdotal map on fishbowl discussion

Quiz

Selecting and reading aloud a piece of fiction in a small discussion group

To develop reading strategies

To develop ability to respond orally to literature

To evaluate use of reading strategies

To evaluate skill to respond to literature, both literally and inferentially

Teacher reads aloud and models personal use of reading strategies

Student analysis of tape recording of own reading and discussion

Coaching during reading

Fishbowl

Checklist of reading strategies

Analysis of student response journal

Running record

Reciprocal reading &
teaching

To develop listening skills

To develop note taking ability

To formulate questions

To comprehend while reading

To evaluate use of reading strategies

To evaluate skills of responding to literature both literally and inferentially

To evaluate listening skills

Reviewing and modeling listening skills

Questioning during reading

Note taking during reading and listening

Guided practice

Peer observation with anecdotal notes

Checklist of reading strategies

 

 

Standard C: A student should be able to identify and select from multiple strategies in order to complete projects independently and cooperatively.
Task
What is the student doing?
Purpose
Why is it performed?
Supportive Instruction / Scaffolding
How do we as teachers and students get there?
Assessment Tool
How is it measured?
Instruction Assessment
As a group, developing a rubric to evaluate an independent project

To use task analysis skills

To select and use appropriate decision making process

To learn cooperative group skills

To set high standards for project quality

To evaluate task analysis skills, selection and use appropriate decision making processes and/or standards for project quality

Guided practice in rubrics

Definition of quality

Analysis of projects

Task analysis

Practice in self/peer evaluation

Cooperative skills

Checklist

Peer review rubric

Panel of experts from community

Selecting a project To make meaningful choices To evaluate how student selects from among many choices

Brainstorming

Prioritizing

Evaluating resources

Time management

Teacher observation

Conferencing

Parental involvement

Rubric

Developing a plan for independent project

To understand and execute directions

To make and keep deadlines

To seek, select, and use relevant resources

To evaluate understanding and execution of directions, ability to set and keep deadlines, and/or ability in seeking, selecting, and using relevant resources

Note taking skills

Library/research technology

Problem solving

Keeping deadlines

Following directions

Teacher observation with mental notes

Conferencing

Community involvement

Project rubric

Peer response

Completing an independent project

To make choices about projects after examining a range of possibilities

To organize a project by understanding directions, making and keeping deadlines, and seeking, selecting, and using relevant resources

To set high standards for project quality

To evaluate self

To select and use appropriate decision-making processes

To evaluate choices, organization, self evaluation, ability to set high standards, and/or decision-making processes

Guided practice and modeling in

  • Time management
  • Evaluating resources
  • Interview techniques
  • Library/research
  • Technology
  • Problem solving
  • Goal setting

Response form completed by

  • Community member,
  • Parent,
  • Self,
  • Mentor,
  • Teacher, and/or
  • Independent boards

 

 

Standard D: A student should be able to think logically and reflectively in order to present and explain positions based on relevant and reliable information.
Task
What is the student doing?
Purpose
Why is it performed?
Supportive Instruction / Scaffolding
How do we as teachers and students get there?
Assessment Tool
How is it measured?
Instruction Assessment
Writing a persuasive essay based on research

To use logic to persuade

To apply research skills

To evaluate ability to reason

To evaluate how students do and use research

Model the steps necessary to write the piece

Note taking

Use of research library

Conducting of an interview

Practice web, map, fishbone

Writing rubric

Interview checklist

Peer response scoring form

Debating a topic based on above research

To learn to support one’s position orally

To use research and realistic evidence

To construct a persuasive argument

To evaluate ability to state their position and support it

To evaluate ability to select reliable information

To evaluate persuasive skills

Teacher/peer modeling

Watching a debate or video

Tutoring on debate techniques

Cross - age coaching models

Class vote

Peer/self evaluation based on rubric

Group fishbowl discussing an author’s purpose in a text To work with texts to determine author’s purpose To evaluate thinking and listening skills for outer circle

Practice finding appropriate evidence or support

Practice fishbowl discussion

Practice writing observations

Listeners’ written observations

Teacher rubric

Anecdotal map

Taking a position on a controversial issue and writing a letter to a policy maker to explain position

To develop a position by:

  • reflecting on personal experiences, prior knowledge, and new information; formulating and refining questions;
  • identifying a variety of pertinent sources of information;
  • analyzing and synthesizing information
To evaluate the validity, objectivity, reliability, and quality of information read, heard, and seen Guided practice working with elements listed in column two
Model letters to editors and legislators
Rubric to assess logical position, appropriate support, evidence, and explanation

 

 

Standard E: A student should understand and respect the perspectives of others in order to communicate effectively.
Task
What is the student doing?
Purpose
Why is it performed?
Supportive Instruction / Scaffolding
How do we as teachers and students get there?
Assessment Tool
How is it measured?
Instruction Assessment
Students creating and presenting a skit that illustrates communication styles in different cultures

To recognize communication styles in different cultures and their possible effects on others

To evaluate awareness of styles

Use guided practice with Venn diagrams

Brainstorm commonalties in cultures

Applause meter

Rubric

Given an example of a culture other than their own, students brainstorming a list of communication style elements which are different from their own To recognize communication styles in different cultures and their possible effects on others To verify recognition

Use guided practice in analysis of one's own communication style

Making generalizations

Recognizing exceptions to generalization

The list generated by the group

Outside expert to provide feed back

Read a newspaper editorial, identify the bias, and support it with examples in the text

To recognize bias in a written editorial

To verify recognition Comparing an editorial and news story for identifying bias

Checklist

Peer review

Rubric

Reading a non-fiction article set in a different culture and completing a Venn diagram of cultural values To use information and literature of many types and cultures, both oral and written, to understand self and others To verify understanding Guided practice with applying to an article or video

Checklist

Rubric

Using the diagram above, writing a letter to yourself as if you were the narrator of the article and describing how your cultures are alike and different To explore speaker’s or author’s point of view To evaluate ability to determine point of view Letter writing practice

Rubric for evaluation of ideas and content

Response to letter by peers

Writing and dramatizing first person narratives of unpopular characters To express oneself from another’s point of view To assess student’s understanding and application of point of view Dramatization practice
Guided practice in character analysis using a smaller piece

Teacher observation

Peer evaluation

Rubric