SlideShare a Scribd company logo
A guide to whole class feedback including:
- Introduction
- Rationale
- Further Reading
- 25 examples of how to get whole class feedback
Contents
                                   Introduction
                                   Rationale
                                   Further Reading



25 ideas for whole class feedback:
Post-It Notes     Mini-Whiteboards             Exit Pass        True-False Cards
ABCD Cards        Thumbs                       Traffic Lights   Stand-Crouch-Sit
Post-It Divider   Continuum                    Partnering       Whiteboard Words
Voting Pods       Question? Answer             Objectives       Random Feedback
Txt Msg           Play-Doh                     Silent Debate    Evaluation Tree
Smiley Faces      Muddiest Point               Seed to Tree     Forum   Fingers
Back to Con

                         Introduction
Whole class feedback is a crucial part of assessment for learning (AfL). It is a means to
assess the understanding of all students in a way that is efficient and time effective.
‘Whole class feedback’ refers to any method which allows the teacher to gain
information concerning the knowledge and understanding of all the students in a class.
A concern sometimes raised by teachers is that whole class feedback can make
teaching and learning somewhat mechanical, whereby the transmission of knowledge
is prized above critical and creative thinking. Certainly the techniques have the
potential to be used in this way, however their non-prescriptive nature means the
teacher is always in control of how students engage with them.
A second fear for some teachers is that whole class feedback may lead to a heavier
workload in an already time-consuming job, with mountains of feedback needing to be
sifted through. Precise and considered use of the techniques eliminates these worries;
good planning on behalf of the teacher affords a deep understanding of where students
are at without increasing workload.
The techniques covered have frequently helped teachers to ‘work smarter’, allowing
them to deal with misconceptions on-the-go and en masse. Many also enable peers to
aid one another’s learning, decreasing reliance on the teacher and increasing
awareness of the learning process.
Back to Con
                                          Rationale
Whole class feedback is a crucial part of assessment for learning (AfL). As such, the
rationale concerns AfL as a whole, of which whole class feedback is a part.
Assessment for learning differs from assessment of learning as coaching differs from a
fitness test.
Assessment for learning involves the teacher and student becoming aware of how
learning can be improved, how technique can be better mastered, how knowledge and
understanding can accord more closely with reason, logic, that which is already
known; how the gap can be closed between where the student is and where the
teacher, curriculum, school can help them to get. Assessment of learning tests what a
student knows.
The first is formative, the latter summative. The first informs, the latter sums up. The
first is open and cumulative, the latter is closed and definitive.
“Assessment for Learning (AfL) means using evidence and dialogue to identify where
pupils are in their learning, where they need to go and how best to get there.”
(http://www.standards.dfes.gov.uk/research/themes/assessment_for_learning/)



Assessment for learning, embedded in teaching, improves pupil attainment. Many
teachers do it without calling it by such a moniker; all teachers, at all levels and in all
subjects are able to do it. By no means is it reserved for the few or applicable only in
specific situations.
Back to Con

                             Further Reading


Assessment for Learning: Putting it into Practice,
Paul Black, Chris Harrison, Clare Lee, Bethan Marshall, Dylan Wiliam
This book sums up the extensive research review on which the assertions concerning AfL
are made. It details how formative assessment can improve pupils’ learning and has a
series of case studies from English schools. It is practical, realistic and explicitly tied to the
classroom.


Black Box Subject Series,
Paul Black, Christine Harrison, Bethan Marshall & Dylan Wiliam (eds.)
These booklets precede the book. They include subject specific guidance on how to work
with AfL. ‘Inside the Black Box’ and ‘Working Inside the Black Box’ are general guides.
Post It
                   Notes
Give students post-it notes on which to write answers or
   reflections.

These could be collected in, placed on the board or held up.




                                                           Back to Con
Mini-
             Whiteboards
Students write their answers on mini-whiteboards. These can
   be held up to show the teacher and peers.

Extend by asking students to assess each other, correct
   misconceptions or analyse answers.




                                                          Back to Conte
Exit
                     Pass
Students are given a slip of paper on which they must write the
   answer to a question, or series of questions.

These are then deposited on the way out, giving the teacher
  feedback from all students.

              No exiting if you haven’t got a pass!




                                                          Back to Cont
True/False
                  Cards
Laminate a set of cards with true on one side and false on the other.

Plan questions around common misconceptions or difficult ideas for
   students to wave their cards for. Questioning, peer assessment
   and the like can grow from there.




                                                            Back to Conte
ABCD cards
Laminate a set of different coloured cards with A,B,C and D on
  them.

Show students questions related to the topic with four possible
  answers. Reasons for choices can be followed up, questioned
  and so on.




                                                            Back to Cont
Thumbs
   Ask students to show you with their thumbs how well they feel
      they understand the work.

   It may be useful to have a display or key such as…




I feel confident       I understand           I do not feel happy
with the work and      some of the            that I understand
could explain it to    work, but still        what we are doing.
someone else.          have questions         I would like more
                       or am unsure.          help.
                                                              Back to Conte
Traffic Lights
Students have a set of traffic lights they can use to indicate
   whether they fully understand (green), are in the middle
   (amber) or are struggling (red).

Different materials can be used e.g. Planner pages, pieces of
   card, plastic cups (students can stack all three and change
   what is on top), lollipop sticks.




                                                          Back to Conte
Stand-Crouch-
                Sit
Students stand, crouch or sit depending on whether they feel
   comfortable with the learning, in the middle or unsure.

Students who are standing can be asked to go around the
   room and explain to crouchers, who in turn explain to
   sitters until, hopefully, everyone in the room is happy to
   stand up.




                                                           Back to Conte
Post It
                    Divider
A variation on the use of post-it notes.

Hand them out to students and divide the board or a large piece of
  paper into categories –

What have I learnt; What am I not sure about; What questions do I
  have

Or questions –

What is the answer to X?; Where might you use Y?

The students reflect on these on the post-its.
                                                              Back to Cont
Continuu
                    m
Ask students to come and stand on a continuum indicating
   where they are at from ‘Understand and can explain’ to
   ‘Need more help to get to grips with it’.

If you feel students may be uneasy about standing where they
    want to, you could use post-its with names on or totally
    blank (you’ll still get an idea of where the class are at).




                                                            Back to Conte
Partnering
Hand out half question cards and half answer cards. Students
must then match themselves up in silence.




                                                                                              Back to Conten
                Follow up by questioning or peer assessment

Develop by having a third questions and two thirds answers, with two answers being correct for every
one question; sticking questions and answers on students’ backs; questions find questions that lead to
the same answer and answers find answers that could be from the same question
Whiteboard
               Words
Here’s a variation on the mini-whiteboard theme. Give students
  a limited number of words with which to explain the key
  points of the lesson or ask them to identify the most
  important piece of learning.

The results may allow you to judge in what directions pupils are
  taking their learning and how everyone is interacting with
  the concepts and ideas.




                                                         Back to Conten
Voting
               Pods
Voting pods allow students to input their answers to the
  computer, these then being accessible on an interactive
  whiteboard.
                        Simple!




                                                   Back to Conte
Question? Answer

Put a question on the board and have different answers around
the room. Students go to the one they think is right and justify
their decision.
Make this easier by having A,B,C,D points or posters in your
room. Then you can have the answers on the board as well to
save faffing.


Develop by getting one member from each answer area to try and convince the others
that their answer is right (good for encouragIng use of reason and uncovering of
fallacy, misconceived reasoning etc.)

                                                                       Back to Content
Objective Traffic Lights

How do you feel about the lesson objectives?


Red = don’t think I have grasped this
Amber = feeling OK about this, have just about got there
Green = Confident I have achieved this


Being specific to the lesson objectives is an alternative way of using
the traffic light technique. It sacrifices an holistic, qualitative
assessment for a precise, quantitative one.                         Back to Conten
Random Feedback

Use dice, short straws, roulette wheel, tombola, guess the
number of sweets in the jar, to pick a group (or two) at
random to feedback to the whole class on the lesson.
This is not whole class feedback per se, but with the
random aspect could be used over a number of lessons to
achieve the same ends in a slightly different manner.




                                                      Back to Conten
Txt
                       Msg
Depends if you have the facility. Perhaps you could ask IT to sort
   it out…
… LOL.

Set up a class mobile number on the computer and ask students
   to text in the plenary (or answers to questions, reflections
   etc.)

You could then look at these or show the whole class and
  analyse together.

                                                         Back to Content
Play-Doh
Ask students to model answers to questions using Play-
  Doh. These will be clearly visible, if potentially esoteric.

You could also ask students to model their feeling towards
  the learning – happy, OK, unsure etc.




                                                        Back to Conten
Silent
                  Debate
Write a question or statement on 3-5 sheets of sugar paper.
  Place these around the room and tell students they must
  debate them in writing, in silence. Anyone caught talking
  has 30 seconds out.

Students write their own comments and can comment on what
   their peers write as well.

The information on the paper offers an insight into class
  thinking and could even be tracked by giving out different
  coloured pens.
                                                       Back to Conten
Evaluation Tree
Ask students where they feel
they are on the tree in
relation to the lesson or topic.
Make the tree into a whole-
class feedback tool by asking
students to put a post-it note
on the board for where they
are at.
Or, print off a large copy get
students to write where they
are.
Could be used subsequently
to pair students/make
groups.
                     Back to Content
Smiley
                           Faces
Students draw smiley faces to indicate how comfortable they are with the topic.




   Ready to move on           Understand some            Do not understand
                               parts but not all        and need to look at it
                                                               again
  You could spend a session with students where they make these, perhaps
        exaggerating the expressions, and then use them repeatedly. Back to Conte
Muddiest
                      Point
Another variation on mini-whiteboards.

Students write down one or two
points on which they are least clear.

This could be from the previous
lesson, the rest of the unit, the
preceding activity etc.

The teacher and class can then seek
to remedy the muddiness.



                                         Back to Conten
Seed to Tree
This technique draws on drama and asks students to imagine their
   learning is like the life-cycle of a tree. The tree starts off very small,
   as a seed, and grows to be very big, as a full tree.

Students consider where their learning is at and make the shape
   appropriate. Full trees can then be sent round to help seeds and
   saplings develop.




                                                                    Back to Conten
Forum
Set up a forum on the computer (easy to do if you have a
   managed learning environment or use Edmodo) and
  ask students to comment either in the lesson or for
   homework.

The comments they leave can be used to assess what
  students are having difficulties with and so forth.




                                                  Back to Conte
Fingers
      A nuanced version of thumbs and traffic lights.
          Students hold up fingers accordingly:

1 – I am fully confident with the learning
2 – I am confident with most of the learning
3 – Some parts I am confident with, other bits I am not sure
4 – I am only happy with a few parts of the learning
5 – I am having difficulty understanding any part




                                                    Back to Conten
Web Cams
   A sure fire way to engage students is
having their own work displayed – great for
        peer and self assessment.

More Related Content

PPT
Whole class feedback_guide(1)[1]
PDF
22 formative assessment techniques
PDF
40 ways to leave a lesson
PPTX
Effective Questioning
PDF
15 reflection strategies to help students retain what you just taught them ...
PPT
No Hands Up Presentation
Whole class feedback_guide(1)[1]
22 formative assessment techniques
40 ways to leave a lesson
Effective Questioning
15 reflection strategies to help students retain what you just taught them ...
No Hands Up Presentation

What's hot (20)

PPTX
Questioning Techniques
DOCX
ITL516 Week One Assignment One
PPTX
Effective questioning - abridged version
PPT
Math anxiety 2 hr
DOCX
ITL516 Learning Map
PPTX
5 Simple Strategies for Working with Gifted
PPTX
Authentic Learning - Teaching Methods that Engage Students
PPTX
Teaching (and Learning) with Peer Instruction
PDF
Preparing to Teach 3: Supporting expert-like thinking
PPTX
TESTA, Southampton Feedback Champions Conference (April 2015)
PPTX
Asking questions
PPTX
Stereotype Threats’ Influence on Elementary Pre-service Teachers\' Attitude T...
PPT
Descriptive Feedback & Sound Grading
PPTX
TESTA, AHE Conference Masterclass (June 2015)
PDF
Best practices for running peer instruction
PPTX
TESTA, Presentation to the SDG Course Leaders, University of West of Scotlan...
PPTX
Dispelling myths; challenging traditions: TESTA evidence
PPT
Questioning techniques: helping learners develop higher prder thinking skills
PPT
Learning Success Center - Supplemental Education Service Training 2011-12
DOCX
Teacher Centered Clinical Lesson Plan
Questioning Techniques
ITL516 Week One Assignment One
Effective questioning - abridged version
Math anxiety 2 hr
ITL516 Learning Map
5 Simple Strategies for Working with Gifted
Authentic Learning - Teaching Methods that Engage Students
Teaching (and Learning) with Peer Instruction
Preparing to Teach 3: Supporting expert-like thinking
TESTA, Southampton Feedback Champions Conference (April 2015)
Asking questions
Stereotype Threats’ Influence on Elementary Pre-service Teachers\' Attitude T...
Descriptive Feedback & Sound Grading
TESTA, AHE Conference Masterclass (June 2015)
Best practices for running peer instruction
TESTA, Presentation to the SDG Course Leaders, University of West of Scotlan...
Dispelling myths; challenging traditions: TESTA evidence
Questioning techniques: helping learners develop higher prder thinking skills
Learning Success Center - Supplemental Education Service Training 2011-12
Teacher Centered Clinical Lesson Plan
Ad

Similar to Whole class feedback_guide (20)

PPT
Gudie to whole class feedback
PDF
Informal Formative Assessment Strategies
DOC
Differentiated Instruction Toolbox
PPTX
Fall%202018%20 pdd%20presentation%20kids%20today
PDF
Newsletter marapril2021.docx
PDF
Formative assessment
PDF
Formative assessment
PPT
The plenary producer
PPT
The Plenary Producer
PPT
The plenary producer
PPT
Planning Obe Lessonwith Bloom
PDF
20 Best Interactive Teaching Activities | CIO Women Magazine
PPT
Blended Learning: Feedback and Assessment
PPTX
Developing an effective case study
PPT
Teacher Connect Slide Share Version
PDF
The College Classroom (Fa14) Session 5: Alternatives to lecture
PDF
CLC_YoungLearners_activity cards_2022.pdf
PPTX
Effective Teaching & Learning Process in the Classroom
PPTX
INNOVATIVE TECHNIQUES IN THE CLASSROOM-DR.DEEPIKA KOHLI
PPT
T&L Assessment for Learning Tools
Gudie to whole class feedback
Informal Formative Assessment Strategies
Differentiated Instruction Toolbox
Fall%202018%20 pdd%20presentation%20kids%20today
Newsletter marapril2021.docx
Formative assessment
Formative assessment
The plenary producer
The Plenary Producer
The plenary producer
Planning Obe Lessonwith Bloom
20 Best Interactive Teaching Activities | CIO Women Magazine
Blended Learning: Feedback and Assessment
Developing an effective case study
Teacher Connect Slide Share Version
The College Classroom (Fa14) Session 5: Alternatives to lecture
CLC_YoungLearners_activity cards_2022.pdf
Effective Teaching & Learning Process in the Classroom
INNOVATIVE TECHNIQUES IN THE CLASSROOM-DR.DEEPIKA KOHLI
T&L Assessment for Learning Tools
Ad

More from rvhstl (20)

PDF
‘What’s going on in ukraine ’
PDF
Drop everything and write spring term 2021 accessible
PPTX
Drop everything and write spring term 2021
PDF
3 0-coping-with-self-harm-guide
PPTX
Curriculum implementation of skills in science
PPTX
Deaw april to june 2020 accessible
PPTX
Drop Everything and Write April to June
PPTX
Year 7 revision workshop presentation parents
PPTX
Revision workshop session
PPTX
Twilight delivered on 26th February 2019
PPTX
Mapping skills in English
PPTX
Sports Award 2019
PPTX
Year 9 transition evening 2019
PPTX
Year 8 transition evening 2019
PPTX
Drop everything and write updated
PPTX
Malta parents information evening
PDF
Extra curricular-autumn-term-2019
PPTX
Sixth form transition evening hand out
PDF
RVHS revision techniques explained
PDF
GCSEs an emotionally healthy approach for parents
‘What’s going on in ukraine ’
Drop everything and write spring term 2021 accessible
Drop everything and write spring term 2021
3 0-coping-with-self-harm-guide
Curriculum implementation of skills in science
Deaw april to june 2020 accessible
Drop Everything and Write April to June
Year 7 revision workshop presentation parents
Revision workshop session
Twilight delivered on 26th February 2019
Mapping skills in English
Sports Award 2019
Year 9 transition evening 2019
Year 8 transition evening 2019
Drop everything and write updated
Malta parents information evening
Extra curricular-autumn-term-2019
Sixth form transition evening hand out
RVHS revision techniques explained
GCSEs an emotionally healthy approach for parents

Whole class feedback_guide

  • 1. A guide to whole class feedback including: - Introduction - Rationale - Further Reading - 25 examples of how to get whole class feedback
  • 2. Contents Introduction Rationale Further Reading 25 ideas for whole class feedback: Post-It Notes Mini-Whiteboards Exit Pass True-False Cards ABCD Cards Thumbs Traffic Lights Stand-Crouch-Sit Post-It Divider Continuum Partnering Whiteboard Words Voting Pods Question? Answer Objectives Random Feedback Txt Msg Play-Doh Silent Debate Evaluation Tree Smiley Faces Muddiest Point Seed to Tree Forum Fingers
  • 3. Back to Con Introduction Whole class feedback is a crucial part of assessment for learning (AfL). It is a means to assess the understanding of all students in a way that is efficient and time effective. ‘Whole class feedback’ refers to any method which allows the teacher to gain information concerning the knowledge and understanding of all the students in a class. A concern sometimes raised by teachers is that whole class feedback can make teaching and learning somewhat mechanical, whereby the transmission of knowledge is prized above critical and creative thinking. Certainly the techniques have the potential to be used in this way, however their non-prescriptive nature means the teacher is always in control of how students engage with them. A second fear for some teachers is that whole class feedback may lead to a heavier workload in an already time-consuming job, with mountains of feedback needing to be sifted through. Precise and considered use of the techniques eliminates these worries; good planning on behalf of the teacher affords a deep understanding of where students are at without increasing workload. The techniques covered have frequently helped teachers to ‘work smarter’, allowing them to deal with misconceptions on-the-go and en masse. Many also enable peers to aid one another’s learning, decreasing reliance on the teacher and increasing awareness of the learning process.
  • 4. Back to Con Rationale Whole class feedback is a crucial part of assessment for learning (AfL). As such, the rationale concerns AfL as a whole, of which whole class feedback is a part. Assessment for learning differs from assessment of learning as coaching differs from a fitness test. Assessment for learning involves the teacher and student becoming aware of how learning can be improved, how technique can be better mastered, how knowledge and understanding can accord more closely with reason, logic, that which is already known; how the gap can be closed between where the student is and where the teacher, curriculum, school can help them to get. Assessment of learning tests what a student knows. The first is formative, the latter summative. The first informs, the latter sums up. The first is open and cumulative, the latter is closed and definitive. “Assessment for Learning (AfL) means using evidence and dialogue to identify where pupils are in their learning, where they need to go and how best to get there.” (http://www.standards.dfes.gov.uk/research/themes/assessment_for_learning/) Assessment for learning, embedded in teaching, improves pupil attainment. Many teachers do it without calling it by such a moniker; all teachers, at all levels and in all subjects are able to do it. By no means is it reserved for the few or applicable only in specific situations.
  • 5. Back to Con Further Reading Assessment for Learning: Putting it into Practice, Paul Black, Chris Harrison, Clare Lee, Bethan Marshall, Dylan Wiliam This book sums up the extensive research review on which the assertions concerning AfL are made. It details how formative assessment can improve pupils’ learning and has a series of case studies from English schools. It is practical, realistic and explicitly tied to the classroom. Black Box Subject Series, Paul Black, Christine Harrison, Bethan Marshall & Dylan Wiliam (eds.) These booklets precede the book. They include subject specific guidance on how to work with AfL. ‘Inside the Black Box’ and ‘Working Inside the Black Box’ are general guides.
  • 6. Post It Notes Give students post-it notes on which to write answers or reflections. These could be collected in, placed on the board or held up. Back to Con
  • 7. Mini- Whiteboards Students write their answers on mini-whiteboards. These can be held up to show the teacher and peers. Extend by asking students to assess each other, correct misconceptions or analyse answers. Back to Conte
  • 8. Exit Pass Students are given a slip of paper on which they must write the answer to a question, or series of questions. These are then deposited on the way out, giving the teacher feedback from all students. No exiting if you haven’t got a pass! Back to Cont
  • 9. True/False Cards Laminate a set of cards with true on one side and false on the other. Plan questions around common misconceptions or difficult ideas for students to wave their cards for. Questioning, peer assessment and the like can grow from there. Back to Conte
  • 10. ABCD cards Laminate a set of different coloured cards with A,B,C and D on them. Show students questions related to the topic with four possible answers. Reasons for choices can be followed up, questioned and so on. Back to Cont
  • 11. Thumbs Ask students to show you with their thumbs how well they feel they understand the work. It may be useful to have a display or key such as… I feel confident I understand I do not feel happy with the work and some of the that I understand could explain it to work, but still what we are doing. someone else. have questions I would like more or am unsure. help. Back to Conte
  • 12. Traffic Lights Students have a set of traffic lights they can use to indicate whether they fully understand (green), are in the middle (amber) or are struggling (red). Different materials can be used e.g. Planner pages, pieces of card, plastic cups (students can stack all three and change what is on top), lollipop sticks. Back to Conte
  • 13. Stand-Crouch- Sit Students stand, crouch or sit depending on whether they feel comfortable with the learning, in the middle or unsure. Students who are standing can be asked to go around the room and explain to crouchers, who in turn explain to sitters until, hopefully, everyone in the room is happy to stand up. Back to Conte
  • 14. Post It Divider A variation on the use of post-it notes. Hand them out to students and divide the board or a large piece of paper into categories – What have I learnt; What am I not sure about; What questions do I have Or questions – What is the answer to X?; Where might you use Y? The students reflect on these on the post-its. Back to Cont
  • 15. Continuu m Ask students to come and stand on a continuum indicating where they are at from ‘Understand and can explain’ to ‘Need more help to get to grips with it’. If you feel students may be uneasy about standing where they want to, you could use post-its with names on or totally blank (you’ll still get an idea of where the class are at). Back to Conte
  • 16. Partnering Hand out half question cards and half answer cards. Students must then match themselves up in silence. Back to Conten Follow up by questioning or peer assessment Develop by having a third questions and two thirds answers, with two answers being correct for every one question; sticking questions and answers on students’ backs; questions find questions that lead to the same answer and answers find answers that could be from the same question
  • 17. Whiteboard Words Here’s a variation on the mini-whiteboard theme. Give students a limited number of words with which to explain the key points of the lesson or ask them to identify the most important piece of learning. The results may allow you to judge in what directions pupils are taking their learning and how everyone is interacting with the concepts and ideas. Back to Conten
  • 18. Voting Pods Voting pods allow students to input their answers to the computer, these then being accessible on an interactive whiteboard. Simple! Back to Conte
  • 19. Question? Answer Put a question on the board and have different answers around the room. Students go to the one they think is right and justify their decision. Make this easier by having A,B,C,D points or posters in your room. Then you can have the answers on the board as well to save faffing. Develop by getting one member from each answer area to try and convince the others that their answer is right (good for encouragIng use of reason and uncovering of fallacy, misconceived reasoning etc.) Back to Content
  • 20. Objective Traffic Lights How do you feel about the lesson objectives? Red = don’t think I have grasped this Amber = feeling OK about this, have just about got there Green = Confident I have achieved this Being specific to the lesson objectives is an alternative way of using the traffic light technique. It sacrifices an holistic, qualitative assessment for a precise, quantitative one. Back to Conten
  • 21. Random Feedback Use dice, short straws, roulette wheel, tombola, guess the number of sweets in the jar, to pick a group (or two) at random to feedback to the whole class on the lesson. This is not whole class feedback per se, but with the random aspect could be used over a number of lessons to achieve the same ends in a slightly different manner. Back to Conten
  • 22. Txt Msg Depends if you have the facility. Perhaps you could ask IT to sort it out… … LOL. Set up a class mobile number on the computer and ask students to text in the plenary (or answers to questions, reflections etc.) You could then look at these or show the whole class and analyse together. Back to Content
  • 23. Play-Doh Ask students to model answers to questions using Play- Doh. These will be clearly visible, if potentially esoteric. You could also ask students to model their feeling towards the learning – happy, OK, unsure etc. Back to Conten
  • 24. Silent Debate Write a question or statement on 3-5 sheets of sugar paper. Place these around the room and tell students they must debate them in writing, in silence. Anyone caught talking has 30 seconds out. Students write their own comments and can comment on what their peers write as well. The information on the paper offers an insight into class thinking and could even be tracked by giving out different coloured pens. Back to Conten
  • 25. Evaluation Tree Ask students where they feel they are on the tree in relation to the lesson or topic. Make the tree into a whole- class feedback tool by asking students to put a post-it note on the board for where they are at. Or, print off a large copy get students to write where they are. Could be used subsequently to pair students/make groups. Back to Content
  • 26. Smiley Faces Students draw smiley faces to indicate how comfortable they are with the topic. Ready to move on Understand some Do not understand parts but not all and need to look at it again You could spend a session with students where they make these, perhaps exaggerating the expressions, and then use them repeatedly. Back to Conte
  • 27. Muddiest Point Another variation on mini-whiteboards. Students write down one or two points on which they are least clear. This could be from the previous lesson, the rest of the unit, the preceding activity etc. The teacher and class can then seek to remedy the muddiness. Back to Conten
  • 28. Seed to Tree This technique draws on drama and asks students to imagine their learning is like the life-cycle of a tree. The tree starts off very small, as a seed, and grows to be very big, as a full tree. Students consider where their learning is at and make the shape appropriate. Full trees can then be sent round to help seeds and saplings develop. Back to Conten
  • 29. Forum Set up a forum on the computer (easy to do if you have a managed learning environment or use Edmodo) and ask students to comment either in the lesson or for homework. The comments they leave can be used to assess what students are having difficulties with and so forth. Back to Conte
  • 30. Fingers A nuanced version of thumbs and traffic lights. Students hold up fingers accordingly: 1 – I am fully confident with the learning 2 – I am confident with most of the learning 3 – Some parts I am confident with, other bits I am not sure 4 – I am only happy with a few parts of the learning 5 – I am having difficulty understanding any part Back to Conten
  • 31. Web Cams A sure fire way to engage students is having their own work displayed – great for peer and self assessment.