Resources
 
Books, Articles
& Videos
Student
Work Sites
Web Picks
Supporting
Materials
|
Guidelines
for
Learning From Student Work
Published in HORACE,
November 1996. p.2, Coalition
of Essential Schools
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .
In
"Learning from Student Work," Eric Buchovecky of the ATLAS
Communities project has described a collaborative process adapted
from the work of Mark Driscoll at Education
Development Center and that of Steve Seidel and other at Harvard University's
Project Zero.
The piece lays out useful reminders for how participants can stay focused
on the evidence before them and on listening to multiple perspectives,
rather than getting bogged down in assumptions or evaluations. Those norms
are summarized here:
When
looking for evidence of students thinking:
- Stay
focused on the evidence that is present in the work.
- Look
openly and broadly; don't let your expectations cloud your vision.
- Look
for patterns in the evidence that provide clues to how and what the
student was thinking.
When
listening to colleagues' thinking:
- Listen
without judging.
- Tune
in to differences in perspective.
- Use
controversy as an opportunity to explore and understand each other's
perspectives.
- Focus
on understanding where different interpretations come from.
- Make
your own thinking clear to others.
- Be patient
and persistent.
When
reflecting on your own thinking:
- Ask
yourself, "Why do I see this student work in this way? What does
this tell me about what is important to me?"
- Look
for patterns in your own thinking.
- Tune
in to the questions that the student work and your colleagues' comments
raise for you.
- Compare
what you see and what you think about the student work with what you
do in the classroom.
When
you reflect on the process of looking at student work:
- What
did you see in this student's work that was interesting or surprising?
- What
did you learn about how this student thinks and learns?
- What
about the process helped you see and learn these things?
- What
did you learn from listening to your colleagues that was interesting
or surprising?
- What
new perspectives did your colleagues provide?
- How
can you make use of your colleagues' perspectives?
- What
questions about teaching and assessment did looking at this student's
work raise for you?
- How
can you pursue these questions further?
- Are
there things you would like to try in your classroom as a result of
looking at the student's work?
|