Sunday, December 16, 2012

Student Work Displays. "If you Build them..."


Student Work Displays

Display to focus on teaching and learning.
Student Work in Phases with Feedback
"I Can" Chart







          




          A great example of a student work display is one that demonstrates the process of reading, language study and writing. The teacher's use of wall space as a portfolio indicates an understanding of how language-based behaviors influence comprehension. The unique approach is worth noting. This display illustrates how a teacher can use the curricular GLEs and 'I Can' statements that weave into a deeper connection of comprehension, persuasion and voice in writing.   This eighth grade example is one which you should find and review.  It clearly outlines the process and the teacher has given specific feedback throughout.  Student work is staged and you will clearly see how students independently uncovered the information to form a persuasive argument.  The work and teaching are authentic and engaging.  I look forward to reading the final pieces once they are displayed.
It would be easy and quite direct to teach the individual skill of comma, equivilency or organelle. However, that would be a surface structure and we are after deep structures!  The students discovered how a writer uses persuasive technique and organization to convince his/her audience of their purpose.

 Student Work  displays that teach and self-regulate
Social Studies Outlining Note Display
         This display can be found in a social studies class.  Student work displays can be an area where students can find answers to questions independently.  The teacher explicitly describes the process through a co-constructed chart and specific description.  The student work to the left of the description has ties to areas of the rubric that demonstrated quality.  It's a clever way to give feedback and point students in the direction to help themselves when taking notes or completing inquiry.

It's the Feedback that makes the difference
Feedback to reinforce and lift

          Feedback can be easily overlooked.  It is the critical ingredient for a student work display.  Students can reflect on the feedback and know what is it that made this piece quality and how can it be improved.     These two examples, 7th grade math and 8th grade science, illustrate that feedback can come in many forms.  These teachers found their own voice and made it work for them and their students.
Answering a feedback question

I've been in every classroom looking at student work.  I found that 100% of the classrooms 6-8 had a display.  Two were under construction and will be finished.  There are sixteen examples that are exemplary.  There are examples to be found in the exploratory classrooms also.  You should find you way to guidance, business and spanish to see them.  They are also a unique representation of the work students do in those classrooms.  If you haven't gotten a display up please remember that we all teach and student work display is how we demonstrate the value and purpose of instruction.

          During professional development you will be asked to look  for the eleven and give the teacher positive feedback.  You will find that you will see that no two are exactly alike but each have their own unique flavor and the teacher made sense of it.  

Don't just tell me; show me!" YOU DID THAT! Congratulations!!  I'm very impressed with the level of implementation.  Thank you.

Reflect on your student work display. Use it as an opportunity to analyze your practices and work to implement at deeper levels during this genre study.

Prompt for response: Reflect on what have you planned this week that demonstrates the integration of strategic learning behaviors and it's influence on curriculum. What evidence are you collecting and how will you know kids are reaching your target?

8 comments:

  1. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  2. I am teaching students to summarize informational text. I modeled and thought aloud about how to keep notes about the big idea, details and main idea so they can be used to summarize the whole piece. As a scaffold at the beginning, the students will use the organizer to practice summarizing in this way. The student organizer is evidence of the stage of acquisition. Soon, summarizing will lead to synthesizing information from multiple sources.

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  3. When working with teachers, we come up with a student centered goal that is based off of the GLE's. We collect baseline data through formative assessments in order to see how the students are doing in relationship to the goal. I then design some instructional practices that are specifically linked to the student centered goal. The teacher and I then reflect on how well the instructional practices are helping us reach the student centered goal. One piece of evidence that I collect is a video analysis piece, where the teacher and I are reflecting on the instructional practice as we watch the video of the lesson. Then finally we collect more student work as a post assessment to measure the student performance in relationship to the student centered goal.

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  4. This week I am giving a preview of what is to come after Christmas. We are starting a unit called Accentuate the Negative - which is difficult because we are also throwing variables and equations into the mix. The GLEs chosen for this unit all revolve around that idea of variables and solving equations. I have chosen to start with positive and negative integers because I think it gives the students a baseline for grasping the abstract concept of a negative number and zero. This should help them when it comes time to put an even more abstract concept on the table - variables.
    Most of the data I collect will be done anecdotally and through observation. I also plan on giving a formative assessment on Thursday before learning recovery to see where I need to go when we return from break.

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  5. Thank you for sharing these wonderful examples of student work walls. These examples are helping me create my student work wall for my classroom.

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  6. This week students are finishing their district writing pieces, and we are learning about the importance of each step in the writing process. It is extremely valuable for my students to see examples of drafting, revising, proofreading, and publishing. I will be evaluating their progress by conferring with them about where they are in the writing process, and analyzing their work.

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  7. We are working on drawings on Autodesk Inventor. I have been taking snapshots of successfully completed drawings and I have posted several completed drawings in my classroom as examples.

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  8. As an 8th grade math team, we have been very deliberate in creating common formative assessments that focus on the "big ideas" of the unit. After I give the formative assessment, I spend most of my energy in the feedback I give to students. This way they will know what ideas are they getting and what do they need to work on before the test. This also gives me a chance to pull some bellringers together that seems to be a common theme that all students could benefit from doing together and sharing their thinking. This seems to be my best "bang for the buck" being in our second year of implementation with this curriculum.

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