Mathematics formative assessment : 75 practical strategies for linking assessment, instruction, and learning /
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Author / Creator: | Keeley, Page. |
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Imprint: | Thousand Oaks, Calif. : Corwin Press, c2011. |
Description: | xvi, 234 p. : ill. ; 26 cm. |
Language: | English |
Subject: | |
Format: | Print Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/8530721 |
Table of Contents:
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- About the Authors
- 1. An Introduction to Formative Assessment Classroom Techniques (FACTs)
- What Does a Formative Assessment-Centered Classroom Look Like?
- Why Use FACTs?
- How Does Research Support the Use of FACTs?
- Classroom Environments That Support Formative Assessment
- Connecting Teaching and Learning
- Making the Shift to a Formative Assessment-Centered Classroom
- 2. Integrating FACTs With Instruction and Learning
- Integrating Assessment and Instruction
- Assessment That Promotes Thinking and Learnin
- Linking Assessment, Instruction, and Learning: The Mathematics Assessment, Instruction, and Learning Cycle (MAIL Cycle)
- Stages in the MAIL Cycle
- Engagement and Readiness
- Eliciting Prior Knowledge
- Exploration and Discovery
- Concept and Skill Development
- Concept and Procedure Transfer
- Self-Assessment and Reflection
- Selecting and Using FACTs to Strengthen the Link Between Assessment, Instruction, and Learning
- 3. Considerations for Selecting, Implementing, and Using Data From FACTs
- Selecting FACTs
- Selecting FACTs to Match Learning Goals
- FACTs and the Common Core Standards for Mathematics
- Selecting FACTs to Match Teaching Goals
- The Critical Importance of Classroom Context in Selecting FACTs
- Planning to Use and Implement FACTs
- Starting Off With Small Steps
- Maintaining and Extending Implementation
- Using Data From the FACTs
- 4. Get the FACTs! 75 Mathematics Formative Assessment Classroom Techniques (FACTs)
- #1. A & D Statements
- #2. Agreement Circles
- #3. Always, Sometimes, or Never True
- #4. Card Sorts
- #5. CCC: Collaborative Clued Corrections
- #6. Comments-Only Marking
- #7. Commit and Toss
- #8. Concept Attainment Cards
- #9. Concept Card Mapping
- #10. Concept Cartoons
- #11. Create the Problem
- #12. Every Graph Tells a Story
- #13. Example, Nonexample
- #14. Fact-First Questioning
- #15. Feedback to Feed-Forward
- #16. Fist to Five
- #17. Four Corners
- #18. Frayer Model
- #19. Friendly Talk Probes
- #20. Give Me Five
- #21. Hot Seat Questioning
- #22. Human Scatter Graph
- #23. Is It Fair?
- #24. I Used to Think ... But Now I Know ...
- #25. Justified List
- #26. Justified True-or-False Statements
- #27. K-W-L Variations
- #28. Learning Goals Inventory (LGI)
- #29. Look Back
- #30. Matching Cards
- #31. Mathematician's Ideas Comparison
- #32. More A-More B Probes
- #33. Muddiest Point
- #34. No-Hands Questioning
- #35. Odd One Out
- #36. Opposing Views Probes
- #37. Overgeneralization Probes
- #38. Partner Speaks
- #39. Pass the Problem
- #40. P-E-O Probes (Predict, Explain, Observe)
- #41. Peer-to-Peer Focused Feedback
- #42. A Picture Tells a Thousand Words
- #43. POMS: Point of Most Significance
- #44. Popsicle Stick Questioning
- #45. PVF: Paired Verbal Fluency
- #46. Question Generating
- #47. Response Cards
- #48. Same A-Same B Probes
- #49. Sequencing Cards
- #50. Sticky Bars
- #51. Strategy Harvest
- #52. Strategy Probe
- #53. Student Evaluation of Learning Gains
- #54. Student Interviews
- #55. Terminology Inventory Probe (TIP)
- #56. Ten-Two
- #57. Thinking Log
- #58. Think-Alouds
- #59. Think-Pair-Share
- #60. Thought Experiments
- #61. Three-Minute Pause
- #62. 3-2-1
- #63. Thumbs Up, Thumbs Down
- #64. Traffic Light Cards
- #65. Traffic Light Cups
- #66. Traffic Light Dots
- #67. Two-Minute Paper
- #68. Two or Three Before Me
- #69. Two Stars and a Wish
- #70. Two Thirds Testing
- #71. Volleyball, Not Ping-Pong!
- #72. Wait Time Variations
- #73. What Are You Doing and Why?
- #74. Whiteboarding
- #75. Word Sort
- Appendix: Annotated Resources for Mathematics Formative Assessment
- References
- Index