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Kroog, Heidi; Hess, Kristin King; Ruiz-Primo, Maria Araceli – Educational Leadership, 2016
What are the characteristics of formal formative assessments that are both effective in improving student learning and an efficient use of a teacher's time and efforts? That's the question that the authors explore in this article drawing on a five-year research study. First, formal formative assessment is defined as being planned in advance,…
Descriptors: Formative Evaluation, Evaluation Methods, Teaching Methods, Interviews
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Wiliam, Dylan – Educational Leadership, 2014
According to Dylan Wiliam, the traditional classroom practice in which a teacher asks a question, students raise their hands, and the teacher calls on a volunteer does not actually provide much useful information--and it may even impede learning. When teachers ask questions in this way, they're only engaging the most confident students in the…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Questioning Techniques, Teacher Role, Student Role
Wiliam, Dylan – Educational Leadership, 2015
According to author Dylan Wiliam, because lessons never go exactly as planned, teachers should build plan B into plan A. This involves designing a lesson with a "hinge" somewhere in the middle and using specific kinds of questions--what he calls hinge questions--to quickly assess students' understanding of a concept before moving on.…
Descriptors: Questioning Techniques, Lesson Plans, Teaching Methods, Educational Practices
Rothstein, Dan; Santana, Luz; Minigan, Andrew P. – Educational Leadership, 2015
Getting students to ask questions can feel like pulling teeth. How can teachers transform that feeling and create classrooms that come alive with questions? The authors, developers of the question formulation technique, suggest two simple changes: First, teachers need to give students both a structure and the opportunity to practice generating…
Descriptors: Questioning Techniques, Teacher Response, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Teaching Methods
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Bergmann, Jonathan; Sams, Aaron – Educational Leadership, 2014
What if all students had an opportunity to work through content at their own pace? What if all students had to master content before they moved on? The authors take their flipped-classroom model to the next level by flipping their classroom for mastery. In the flipped-mastery model, the teacher begins by organizing content around specific…
Descriptors: Mastery Learning, Teaching Methods, Educational Objectives, Concept Formation
Robertson, Kristina – Educational Leadership, 2016
Teachers often tend to discuss their English language learners (ELLs) in terms of "level." Writes the author, "But if I were to say to a teacher, 'You have four level 2s in your class,' how does that help us have a common understanding of the students' needs?" One approach that has great potential to increase students' language…
Descriptors: English Language Learners, Student Needs, Elementary School Teachers, Grade 2
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Cummins, Sunday – Educational Leadership, 2013
Frequently, when assigned to read, intermediate and middle grade students engage in a mindless encounter with the text. Or, try as they may to focus and gather information, they're mostly confused and not sure how to repair the breakdown in their meaning-making. With the new focus on close reading--and on engaging students with more rigorous…
Descriptors: Middle School Students, Teaching Methods, Reading Instruction, Independent Study
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Guskey, Thomas R. – Educational Leadership, 2010
Schools are frequently inundated with demands to implement new instructional interventions and teaching methods that are not yet backed up by a solid body of research. Fortunately, many of these innovations include elements of more established strategies for which evidence of positive effects does exist. Guskey describes the core elements of one…
Descriptors: Mastery Learning, Teaching Methods, Response to Intervention, Feedback (Response)
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Chappuis, Stephen; Chappuis, Jan – Educational Leadership, 2008
Varying definitions of formative assessment have blurred the meaning of the term and caused confusion among educators. To determine whether a test is formative or summative, write the authors of this article, we need to ask, "How are the results going to be used? and Who is going to use them? The purpose of summative assessment is to make a…
Descriptors: Formative Evaluation, Educational Improvement, Instructional Effectiveness, Teaching Methods
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Sato, Mistilina; Atkin, J. Myron – Educational Leadership, 2007
Formative assessment has been receiving increasing attention in education. But from a classroom teacher's perspective, changing assessment practices is not always an easy, straightforward process. This article describes the experiences of five middle schools science teachers who met together weekly to exchange ideas about integrating formative…
Descriptors: Science Teachers, Formative Evaluation, Student Evaluation, Teacher Improvement
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Katims, Michael – Educational Leadership, 1979
Chicago's mastery learning program takes into account the complexities of reading and the realities of urban classrooms. Its designers say that if a program does not lead to success, it is not a mastery learning program. (Author/JM)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Criterion Referenced Tests, Elementary Secondary Education, Formative Evaluation
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Sirotnik, Kenneth A.; Oakes, Jeannie – Educational Leadership, 1981
Recommends that schools experiment with a comprehensive formative evaluation system suggested by "A Study of Schooling" by John Goodlad and his associates. The system includes periodic assessment of such things as student achievement, teaching practices, class climates, adult working environments, and parent attitudes. (Author/JM)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Educational Assessment, Educational Environment, Educational Quality