Unlocked. Katie While

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Unlocked - Katie While страница 3

Автор:
Серия:
Издательство:
Unlocked - Katie While

Скачать книгу

Critical Actions for Teachers and Students When Unlocking Reflection and Response

       The Role of the Teacher

       Assessment and Reflection and Response

       Final Thoughts

       Unlocking Reflection and Response: Observation and Self-Assessment

       Reflection and Response Self-Assessment

       Comparing Creative Work

       My Portfolio

       Appendix A

       Appendix B

       References and Resources

       Index

      ABOUT THE AUTHOR

      Katie White is coordinator of learning for the North East School Division in Saskatchewan, Canada, and an educational consultant. With more than twenty years in education, she has been a district and in-school administrator, a learning coach, and a K–12 classroom teacher.

      Katie was an integral part of her school division’s multiyear journey through renewed curricula and standards-based assessment and reporting. She helps develop and utilize strong assessment and grading practices that support teaching and learning in classrooms. Her focus is on helping educators develop a personalized understanding of the connections between curriculum, assessment, and instruction. Katie has developed multiple supports for teachers and administrators as well as facilitators of school-based professional learning. She is a co-moderator of the All Things Assessment (#ATAssess) Twitter chat and a frequent contributor to the All Things Assessment blog (http://allthingsassessment.info/blog).

      Katie received a bachelor of education and master of education in curriculum studies from the University of Saskatchewan.

      To learn more about Katie’s work, visit www.kwhiteconsulting.com, or follow her @KatieWhite426 on Twitter.

      To book Katie White for professional development, contact [email protected].

      INTRODUCTION

      Early in my career as a teacher of senior art, when I had large classes, I talked myself out of using one-on-one formative assessment and feedback strategies, such as conferencing, to advance creative thinking, because I figured I simply did not have the time. Furthermore, I wondered what the other students would do when I was speaking with individuals about their work. How could I make sure all students completed my assignments and cared for my art materials when I was working with a single student? So, in the beginning, I skipped conferences, simply assigned student artwork a summative grade, and called it a day. However, I began to change my mind as the years progressed.

      The turning point happened in a senior art class. I sensed that some of my quieter and more reluctant students were connecting with a painting unit I was teaching on watercolor painting. As they built confidence and technique, I had the urge to speak to some of them about what they were experiencing. So, I began to conference with my students. I structured an activity that invited independent exploration, and I let the learners know that I wanted to speak with them individually about their ongoing efforts. I made sure every student was able to work on his or her own and then I began calling students, one at a time, out into the hallway, where I had hung their work.

      I began by asking them which aspect of their work gave them the most pride, based on the skills we had been practicing. I followed with a question about which part of their work most surprised them. I then asked them what they might do differently if they could have another try at the painting on the wall. The conversations were organic, productive, and criterion referenced. I learned so much about my students and their thinking. I also found the space and time to honor their learning. This was so powerful.

      I especially remember a session I had with a particular student. He was definitely one of the quietest in my class, and he was a year older than the other students in the room. School was not a place where he experienced tremendous success, and I had the sense that he was just trying to graduate so he could get on with “real life.” I believe he enrolled in my elective course because he thought it would get him one credit closer to graduation (and it did). He was always unfailingly polite but very reserved. I am not sure I could have told you much about him as a person, even after having him in my class for a month.

      When he joined me in the hallway for his conference, he looked a little terrified, unsure of what was going to happen. I began by expressing how grateful I was for his efforts in trying a new kind of painting. He honestly looked as if hearing a positive comment like this was a completely foreign experience—he immediately smiled and began to talk about how interested he was in the quality of watercolor paint. Our conversation flowed from that point on, and he easily reflected on his processes and set goals for his next piece. What struck me the most was the power of a formative assessment and feedback session when in the hands of this learner. He shared more in those ten minutes than I heard from him in the preceding month, and our conversation ignited his creativity as he began to plan his next art piece. It completely confirmed my suspicion that assessment’s role is to motivate and inspire. Most of all, it reminded me of the importance of student voice in the learning and assessment process. It is a lesson that has never left me.

      Too many classrooms stifle, push down, or lock up creativity. Students receive assignments with little or no room to express themselves or explore their options; this lack of options locks them into stagnant routines. The implications of this stagnation in a classroom setting are immense. Without creativity and assessment processes that truly nurture inquiry and growth, we end up with systems filled with compliance and “right” answers. We run the risk of eliminating multiple viewpoints, critical thinking, and deep connections by rewarding the systematic movement of learners through prescriptive content. Teachers want more for students—we want students to feel the grit of learning; the struggle and challenge; the recursive nature of rich, authentic learning. We want them to feel the power of making their own decisions, the challenges when those decisions do not yet yield the hoped-for results, and the pride when they give students exactly what they wanted. We want students to recognize the power of revision, of returning to ideas more than once in order to deepen and extend thinking.

      When we introduce creativity into all classroom settings, we unlock the potential for profound learning and development of valuable life skills. We can use creativity to teach resilience, to foster imagination, and to nurture stamina. We can invite students into processes that encourage them to see problems and topics from multiple perspectives. We can use creativity to reinforce critical thinking alongside curiosity and wonder. Creativity, and the assessment that supports it, encourages students to broaden their idea generation and revisit assumptions. Pete Hall and Alisa Simeral (2015) remind us, “The most successful

Скачать книгу