SlideShare a Scribd company logo
3
Most read
9
Most read
10
Most read
Direct Instruction: Methods for Closure and Evaluation Kellie Delmonico Emily Egan Susan Gunther
In the last 24 hours, if you have...  
What is Closure? Closure in a lesson is provided when the teacher is ready to begin the next lesson or activity in the school day and wants to 'tie the bow' on the previous lesson Closure brings any lesson to a satisfying finish both cognitively and aesthetically In a  Direct Instruction  lesson, closure will occur  after  the  independent practice  period and  before  instructions are given for the  next activity Chapter 4 - Direct Instruction
How Should I Approach Closure? The teacher should give a signal for attention, then ask for a quick review of what was learned during the lesson. While the teacher can provide the review, it is  ideal   for the   students to summarize  or comment on what was accomplished during the lesson. Teachers can highlight students'  metacognitive  abilities by asking questions that not only reflect content concerns but also reinforce the value of the lesson: Chapter 4 - Direct Instruction
Student Reflection WHAT did you learn in today's lesson that you did not know yesterday? WHY is that learning important to you? Some teachers complete closure by previewing what will be happening in class the next day. Chapter 4 - Direct Instruction
What is Assessment and Why do we need it? Educational assessment is the process of documenting in measurable terms knowledge and skills. It determines whether or not  goals  and  objectives  are being met. Assessments should bring about  benefits for students  either in direct services to the student or in improved quality of educational programs. Assessments should be  reliable, valid, fair and  age and linguistically appropriate . www.education.com/reference/.../why-assessment-important
Assessment & Evaluation Formative (Daily Successes) Teacher: Checks student work each day and offers corrective instruction as necessary Student: Complete independent work at or above a given level of proficiency Summative (Mastery) Teacher: Checks student work at the end of each unit of instruction Student: demonstrate knowledge and application of concepts and skills at or above a given level of proficiency http://www.edpsycinteractive.org/topics/instruct/instevnt.html
Types of Assessment Standardized Assessment : state-mandated standardized tests.  Some examples include: SAT, ACT, Stanford Achievement Test, TerraNova, LSAT, GMAT, GRE Alternative or Authentic Assessment : usually designed by the teacher to gauge the level of student understanding. Some examples include: portfolios, journals, performance tasks, interviews, essays, self  and peer evaluations.  
Formative Assessments Examples: Criteria and goal setting:  establish and define quality work together; determine what should be included in criteria for success Observations:  assist teachers in gathering evidence of student learning to inform instructional planning; this evidence can be recorded and used as feedback about their learning Questioning strategies:  should be embedded in lesson/unit planning Self and peer assessment:  helps create a learning community within a classroom; students who can reflect while engaged in  metacognitive  thinking are involved in their learning Student record keeping:  helps students better understand their own learning as evidence by their classroom work; this process engages students as well as allows them to see where they started and the progress they're making towards the learning goal http://www.nmsa.org/Publications/WebExclusive/Assessment/tabid/1120/Default.aspx
Formative Assessments (continued) Formative assessments takes place  during  the lesson and provides the teacher with information regarding how the learning objectives of a given activity are being reached. It provides valuable information as to what  modifications  need to be made  while the learning is happening . Below is a clip that demonstrates formative assessment.  Note how  the students are directly involved in the formative assessment process .  These students are  highly engaged and act as resources for their peers.   The teacher is also providing much descriptive  feedback . http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RxfvCtmiDhI
Examples: State assessments District benchmark or interim assessments End-of-unit or chapter tests End-of-term or semester exams Scores that are used for accountability for schools (AYP) and students (report card grades) Summative Assessments http://www.nmsa.org/Publications/WebExclusive/Assessment/tabid/1120/Default.aspx The key is to think of summative assessments as a means to gauge, at a particular point in time, student learning relative to content standards
Balancing Assessment As teachers gather information/data about student learning, several catergories may be included In order to better understand student learning, teachers need to consider information about the  products  (paper or otherwise) students create and  tests they take ,  observational notes , and  reflections  on the communication that occurs between teacher and student or among students When a  comprehensive assessment program  at the classroom level  balances   formative  and  summative  student learning/achievement information, a clear picture emerges of where a student is relative to learning targets and standards http://www.nmsa.org/Publications/WebExclusive/Assessment/tabid/1120/Default.aspx
The More We (They) Know... The more we know about  individual students   as they engage in the  learning process, the better we can  adjust instruction to ensure that all students continue to  achieve  by moving forward in their learning.
Your turn! Use your whiteboards to answer the following: 1.  The purpose of closing a lesson is:      a.) To help "cement" the key ideas of the lesson.      b.) To foreshadow or to check for foundational skills            for the next lesson.      c.) a and b.      d.) To use as a filler when you have extra time. Correct! The answer is C!   2. At the elementary level,       a.) Formative assessments are more important than summative            assessments.      b.) Formative are just as important as summative assessments.      c.) Summative assessments are more important than formative            assessments. Correct! The answer is B!
3. Which statement is false?      a.) Like the rest of the lesson, the closure portion of a DI               lesson is also teacher directed.      b.) Closure in a DI lesson only addresses lower cognitive skills           such as knowledge.      c.) Students can do their own formative assessments by          self-monitoring by keeping records of their progress. Correct! The answer is B! 4. Which of the following is a formative assessment?      a.) Ten division problems for homework.      b.) The "L" in a KWL chart.      c.) A student's oral retelling of a story he just listened to in a            listening center. Correct! Tricky - the answer is any of the above!
Ticket out the door On your whiteboards: Write what you think is the  most   important benefit of formative assessments.  Hand in your whiteboards on the way out of the room.

More Related Content

PPTX
Student centered teaching strategies
PPTX
Instructional approaches
PPTX
Mathematical Investigation and Modelling
PPTX
Authentic Assessment, its three modes and Project Based Learning.pptx
PDF
32 teaching strategies in math
PPTX
Principles Underlying Drill and Review Methods
PPT
Methods of teaching Mathematics
PPT
Diana Laurillard: The Conversational Framework - an approach to Evaluating e-...
Student centered teaching strategies
Instructional approaches
Mathematical Investigation and Modelling
Authentic Assessment, its three modes and Project Based Learning.pptx
32 teaching strategies in math
Principles Underlying Drill and Review Methods
Methods of teaching Mathematics
Diana Laurillard: The Conversational Framework - an approach to Evaluating e-...

What's hot (20)

PPTX
Item analysis presentation
PPT
Art of Questioning
PPT
Curriculum development
PPTX
MG DLP.pptx
PDF
1001-Bullets (1).pdf
PPTX
The art of questioning
PDF
Maths,teaching,methods
PPTX
Principles and Strategies of Teaching
DOCX
Color Lesson Plan
PPTX
Categories of curriculum change(report in curr d ev)
PDF
Constructivist approach of learning mathematics thiyagu
PDF
Dep ed order do-s2016_55 k-12 assessment policy
PPTX
Guidelines in Preparing Different Types of Tests
PPTX
Assessment of Learning
PPTX
Facilitating Human Learning Module 1 & 2
PDF
Lesson guide gr. 3 chapter i -division v1.0
PDF
M3_Performance Standard, Competency and Learning Targets.pdf
PDF
Language Strategies in Teaching Mathematics
PPT
Week 4 Concepts of Learning
PPSX
Assessing knowledge and simple understandObjectively Scored Assessments of Kn...
Item analysis presentation
Art of Questioning
Curriculum development
MG DLP.pptx
1001-Bullets (1).pdf
The art of questioning
Maths,teaching,methods
Principles and Strategies of Teaching
Color Lesson Plan
Categories of curriculum change(report in curr d ev)
Constructivist approach of learning mathematics thiyagu
Dep ed order do-s2016_55 k-12 assessment policy
Guidelines in Preparing Different Types of Tests
Assessment of Learning
Facilitating Human Learning Module 1 & 2
Lesson guide gr. 3 chapter i -division v1.0
M3_Performance Standard, Competency and Learning Targets.pdf
Language Strategies in Teaching Mathematics
Week 4 Concepts of Learning
Assessing knowledge and simple understandObjectively Scored Assessments of Kn...
Ad

Viewers also liked (20)

PPTX
Direct Instruction - PowerPoint Presentation
PPTX
Powerpoint-Direct Instruction
PPTX
Direct instruction
PPT
Direct instruction
PPTX
Formative evaluation
PPT
Evaluating lessons
PPT
Summative and formative evaluation
PPT
Chapter 5 Direct Instruction
PPTX
Evaluation of educational programs in nursing
PPT
Evaluation in Education
PPTX
Direct Instruction Sample Lesson
PPTX
Evaluation – concepts and principles
PPTX
Deductive and inductive method of teching
PPTX
Different approaches and methods
PPT
Methods for Closure and Evaluation
PPT
9.2.2011 pd on formative assessments
PDF
BEST: Dynamic simulation tools for evaluation of biomass supply systems. Olli...
PPT
Designing and Conducting Summative Evaluations
Direct Instruction - PowerPoint Presentation
Powerpoint-Direct Instruction
Direct instruction
Direct instruction
Formative evaluation
Evaluating lessons
Summative and formative evaluation
Chapter 5 Direct Instruction
Evaluation of educational programs in nursing
Evaluation in Education
Direct Instruction Sample Lesson
Evaluation – concepts and principles
Deductive and inductive method of teching
Different approaches and methods
Methods for Closure and Evaluation
9.2.2011 pd on formative assessments
BEST: Dynamic simulation tools for evaluation of biomass supply systems. Olli...
Designing and Conducting Summative Evaluations
Ad

Similar to Direct Instruction: Methods for Closure and Evaluation (20)

PPTX
K to 12 Classroom Assessment (Revised).pptx
PPT
Spaulding 5 11-25 presentation stofanak
PPT
Ubd Edi Soh Presentation
PPTX
MY_PORTFOLIO.pptxdjff5uihfgykkjgdyiikihf
PPTX
MY_PORTFOLIO.pptx my portfolio during intern
PPT
EVALUATION AND ASSESSEMENT IN ESP
DOCX
Objective and subjective performance measures
PDF
continous assessment (LH) for Jinela Teachers.pdf
PDF
“Performance Analytics and Assessment for Learning” - Edu 3.4
PPTX
ASSESSEMENT-AND-TYPES.pptx
PPTX
ASSESSEMENT-AND-TYPES.pptx
PPTX
Classroom AssessmentS - An Overview.pptx
PPTX
week 1-CLassroom Assessment Presentation (1).pptx
PPT
Students' Assessment for learning classroom activities.ppt
PPTX
Assessment Formative vs Summative.pptx
PPTX
Module 4: School Based Assessment
PPT
Lesson planning
PPTX
Active learning & classroom assessment practices
PPTX
Educational assessment
K to 12 Classroom Assessment (Revised).pptx
Spaulding 5 11-25 presentation stofanak
Ubd Edi Soh Presentation
MY_PORTFOLIO.pptxdjff5uihfgykkjgdyiikihf
MY_PORTFOLIO.pptx my portfolio during intern
EVALUATION AND ASSESSEMENT IN ESP
Objective and subjective performance measures
continous assessment (LH) for Jinela Teachers.pdf
“Performance Analytics and Assessment for Learning” - Edu 3.4
ASSESSEMENT-AND-TYPES.pptx
ASSESSEMENT-AND-TYPES.pptx
Classroom AssessmentS - An Overview.pptx
week 1-CLassroom Assessment Presentation (1).pptx
Students' Assessment for learning classroom activities.ppt
Assessment Formative vs Summative.pptx
Module 4: School Based Assessment
Lesson planning
Active learning & classroom assessment practices
Educational assessment

More from mlegan31 (19)

PPT
The Constructivism Approach To Learning: Reforming the
PPT
Research in Literacy Teaching For Diverse Learners:FieldWork Summ
DOC
Emily Egan IPM lesson plan
PPT
The Constructivism Approach To Learning: Reforming the
DOC
Social Interaction Model/Cooperative Learning Group
PPT
Constructivism in the classroom
DOC
Direct Instruction Lesson- The Solar System: To Infinity and Beyond
DOC
Team TechSavy 21st Century Classroom Newsletter
PPT
Untitled Presentation
DOC
concept mapx
DOC
ap_DI_Lesson_V3
PPT
Internet Safety: I
PPT
Collaboration: General and Special Education Teachers
PPT
TORC-3 Test of Reading Comprehension- Third Edition
DOC
Untitled document
DOC
J.H_DI_Lesson_Planx
PPT
Project Based Learning
DOC
Emily Egan's SIM Lesson Plan
PPT
Three Blind Mice
The Constructivism Approach To Learning: Reforming the
Research in Literacy Teaching For Diverse Learners:FieldWork Summ
Emily Egan IPM lesson plan
The Constructivism Approach To Learning: Reforming the
Social Interaction Model/Cooperative Learning Group
Constructivism in the classroom
Direct Instruction Lesson- The Solar System: To Infinity and Beyond
Team TechSavy 21st Century Classroom Newsletter
Untitled Presentation
concept mapx
ap_DI_Lesson_V3
Internet Safety: I
Collaboration: General and Special Education Teachers
TORC-3 Test of Reading Comprehension- Third Edition
Untitled document
J.H_DI_Lesson_Planx
Project Based Learning
Emily Egan's SIM Lesson Plan
Three Blind Mice

Recently uploaded (20)

PPTX
Introduction_to_Human_Anatomy_and_Physiology_for_B.Pharm.pptx
PPTX
Institutional Correction lecture only . . .
PDF
Saundersa Comprehensive Review for the NCLEX-RN Examination.pdf
PDF
2.FourierTransform-ShortQuestionswithAnswers.pdf
PPTX
Pharma ospi slides which help in ospi learning
PPTX
master seminar digital applications in india
PDF
STATICS OF THE RIGID BODIES Hibbelers.pdf
PDF
Physiotherapy_for_Respiratory_and_Cardiac_Problems WEBBER.pdf
PDF
RMMM.pdf make it easy to upload and study
PDF
The Lost Whites of Pakistan by Jahanzaib Mughal.pdf
PDF
Anesthesia in Laparoscopic Surgery in India
PDF
ANTIBIOTICS.pptx.pdf………………… xxxxxxxxxxxxx
PDF
Abdominal Access Techniques with Prof. Dr. R K Mishra
PDF
Insiders guide to clinical Medicine.pdf
PDF
BÀI TẬP BỔ TRỢ 4 KỸ NĂNG TIẾNG ANH 9 GLOBAL SUCCESS - CẢ NĂM - BÁM SÁT FORM Đ...
PPTX
Final Presentation General Medicine 03-08-2024.pptx
PPTX
Cell Types and Its function , kingdom of life
PPTX
GDM (1) (1).pptx small presentation for students
PDF
Complications of Minimal Access Surgery at WLH
PDF
O5-L3 Freight Transport Ops (International) V1.pdf
Introduction_to_Human_Anatomy_and_Physiology_for_B.Pharm.pptx
Institutional Correction lecture only . . .
Saundersa Comprehensive Review for the NCLEX-RN Examination.pdf
2.FourierTransform-ShortQuestionswithAnswers.pdf
Pharma ospi slides which help in ospi learning
master seminar digital applications in india
STATICS OF THE RIGID BODIES Hibbelers.pdf
Physiotherapy_for_Respiratory_and_Cardiac_Problems WEBBER.pdf
RMMM.pdf make it easy to upload and study
The Lost Whites of Pakistan by Jahanzaib Mughal.pdf
Anesthesia in Laparoscopic Surgery in India
ANTIBIOTICS.pptx.pdf………………… xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Abdominal Access Techniques with Prof. Dr. R K Mishra
Insiders guide to clinical Medicine.pdf
BÀI TẬP BỔ TRỢ 4 KỸ NĂNG TIẾNG ANH 9 GLOBAL SUCCESS - CẢ NĂM - BÁM SÁT FORM Đ...
Final Presentation General Medicine 03-08-2024.pptx
Cell Types and Its function , kingdom of life
GDM (1) (1).pptx small presentation for students
Complications of Minimal Access Surgery at WLH
O5-L3 Freight Transport Ops (International) V1.pdf

Direct Instruction: Methods for Closure and Evaluation

  • 1. Direct Instruction: Methods for Closure and Evaluation Kellie Delmonico Emily Egan Susan Gunther
  • 2. In the last 24 hours, if you have...  
  • 3. What is Closure? Closure in a lesson is provided when the teacher is ready to begin the next lesson or activity in the school day and wants to 'tie the bow' on the previous lesson Closure brings any lesson to a satisfying finish both cognitively and aesthetically In a Direct Instruction lesson, closure will occur after the independent practice period and before instructions are given for the next activity Chapter 4 - Direct Instruction
  • 4. How Should I Approach Closure? The teacher should give a signal for attention, then ask for a quick review of what was learned during the lesson. While the teacher can provide the review, it is ideal for the students to summarize or comment on what was accomplished during the lesson. Teachers can highlight students' metacognitive abilities by asking questions that not only reflect content concerns but also reinforce the value of the lesson: Chapter 4 - Direct Instruction
  • 5. Student Reflection WHAT did you learn in today's lesson that you did not know yesterday? WHY is that learning important to you? Some teachers complete closure by previewing what will be happening in class the next day. Chapter 4 - Direct Instruction
  • 6. What is Assessment and Why do we need it? Educational assessment is the process of documenting in measurable terms knowledge and skills. It determines whether or not goals and objectives are being met. Assessments should bring about benefits for students either in direct services to the student or in improved quality of educational programs. Assessments should be reliable, valid, fair and  age and linguistically appropriate . www.education.com/reference/.../why-assessment-important
  • 7. Assessment & Evaluation Formative (Daily Successes) Teacher: Checks student work each day and offers corrective instruction as necessary Student: Complete independent work at or above a given level of proficiency Summative (Mastery) Teacher: Checks student work at the end of each unit of instruction Student: demonstrate knowledge and application of concepts and skills at or above a given level of proficiency http://www.edpsycinteractive.org/topics/instruct/instevnt.html
  • 8. Types of Assessment Standardized Assessment : state-mandated standardized tests.  Some examples include: SAT, ACT, Stanford Achievement Test, TerraNova, LSAT, GMAT, GRE Alternative or Authentic Assessment : usually designed by the teacher to gauge the level of student understanding. Some examples include: portfolios, journals, performance tasks, interviews, essays, self  and peer evaluations.  
  • 9. Formative Assessments Examples: Criteria and goal setting:  establish and define quality work together; determine what should be included in criteria for success Observations:  assist teachers in gathering evidence of student learning to inform instructional planning; this evidence can be recorded and used as feedback about their learning Questioning strategies:  should be embedded in lesson/unit planning Self and peer assessment:  helps create a learning community within a classroom; students who can reflect while engaged in metacognitive thinking are involved in their learning Student record keeping:  helps students better understand their own learning as evidence by their classroom work; this process engages students as well as allows them to see where they started and the progress they're making towards the learning goal http://www.nmsa.org/Publications/WebExclusive/Assessment/tabid/1120/Default.aspx
  • 10. Formative Assessments (continued) Formative assessments takes place during the lesson and provides the teacher with information regarding how the learning objectives of a given activity are being reached. It provides valuable information as to what modifications need to be made while the learning is happening . Below is a clip that demonstrates formative assessment.  Note how the students are directly involved in the formative assessment process .  These students are highly engaged and act as resources for their peers.  The teacher is also providing much descriptive feedback . http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RxfvCtmiDhI
  • 11. Examples: State assessments District benchmark or interim assessments End-of-unit or chapter tests End-of-term or semester exams Scores that are used for accountability for schools (AYP) and students (report card grades) Summative Assessments http://www.nmsa.org/Publications/WebExclusive/Assessment/tabid/1120/Default.aspx The key is to think of summative assessments as a means to gauge, at a particular point in time, student learning relative to content standards
  • 12. Balancing Assessment As teachers gather information/data about student learning, several catergories may be included In order to better understand student learning, teachers need to consider information about the products (paper or otherwise) students create and tests they take , observational notes , and reflections on the communication that occurs between teacher and student or among students When a comprehensive assessment program at the classroom level balances formative and summative student learning/achievement information, a clear picture emerges of where a student is relative to learning targets and standards http://www.nmsa.org/Publications/WebExclusive/Assessment/tabid/1120/Default.aspx
  • 13. The More We (They) Know... The more we know about individual students   as they engage in the learning process, the better we can adjust instruction to ensure that all students continue to achieve by moving forward in their learning.
  • 14. Your turn! Use your whiteboards to answer the following: 1.  The purpose of closing a lesson is:      a.) To help "cement" the key ideas of the lesson.      b.) To foreshadow or to check for foundational skills            for the next lesson.      c.) a and b.      d.) To use as a filler when you have extra time. Correct! The answer is C!   2. At the elementary level,       a.) Formative assessments are more important than summative            assessments.      b.) Formative are just as important as summative assessments.      c.) Summative assessments are more important than formative            assessments. Correct! The answer is B!
  • 15. 3. Which statement is false?      a.) Like the rest of the lesson, the closure portion of a DI              lesson is also teacher directed.      b.) Closure in a DI lesson only addresses lower cognitive skills          such as knowledge.      c.) Students can do their own formative assessments by          self-monitoring by keeping records of their progress. Correct! The answer is B! 4. Which of the following is a formative assessment?      a.) Ten division problems for homework.      b.) The "L" in a KWL chart.      c.) A student's oral retelling of a story he just listened to in a            listening center. Correct! Tricky - the answer is any of the above!
  • 16. Ticket out the door On your whiteboards: Write what you think is the  most important benefit of formative assessments.  Hand in your whiteboards on the way out of the room.

Editor's Notes

  • #2: Hey guys, do we all have availability around the same time either later today (Sun), Monday or Tuesday? Maybe we could all get online around the same time so we can coordinate everything!
  • #15: maybe for the quiz section, we can get the lines to do a reveal one by one? then we can have students raise their hands to answer and go over the other answer together... this way we don't have to go through the trouble of designing a separate white board design or anything...