Tuesday, January 31, 2017

Why We Stopped Giving Reading Quizzes


Are We Assessing Learning or Compliance?

During a novel study, we began each class with a short 2 or 3 question reading quiz.  This would tell us who had done their reading and who had not. Or did it?   Every teacher has felt the frustration and annoyance of learners failing quizzes because they have not done their homework.  It is hard not to take it personally when a learner did not complete what was assigned. 


What could possibly be more important than their reading homework, right!? We gave them quizzes to motivate learners to complete their reading and be prepared for class. But a pattern emerged; the same learners failed and the same learners did well quiz after quiz. The quizzes were not serving any purpose other than to give out points.  And did these “points” really offer a true reflection of where a learner was at and what they knew? 

It would be different if we used the quizzes as a way to assess which learners were comprehending the reading and implementing strategies; or if we used them to create interventions or changes for those who were struggling.  But back when we taught in a more traditional format, there was not time for this, we kept everyone marching along at the same pace whether they were getting it or not.  Reading quizzes are about compliance, not about learning.

As we started to personalize our instruction we got rid of reading quizzes. First of all, creating quizzes that accurately assess a learner's reading comprehension can be difficult.  Many students could simply read Spark Notes and do well on the quizzes. Other learners, who had actually read the assignment, were unable to recall the details we chose to quiz them on because they had paid attention to other aspects of the story. 

We have since found a much better way to spend that first ten minutes of the class.  We actually let the students have the time to READ their books. Each day we mark or copy off a passage for learners to read during that first ten minutes of class.  This reading gives them the information needed to access the formative work for the day.  It can serve as a review for a learner who struggles to remember what they read the night before, a second close read for someone who is reading ahead, or a first read for a learner who was not able to complete the reading.  This practice has increased engagement, leaves no learner behind, and helps assure that for the 90 or 60 minutes we have them in our class they are going to be learning something.    

Learners have expressed that they find reading this way far more enjoyable.  The anxiety around trying to figure out what will be on the quiz and guessing what the teacher will think is important, vs being able to choose their own focus and pay attention to what strikes them feels more approachable to most learners.  This does not mean all required reading is done in class, learners are still assigned to read outside of class.  Nor does it mean that we don’t provide insight or direct instruction on the reading.
This brings us to the bigger issue that every teacher must ask themselves; what are we really assessing and why are we assessing it?  

We would much rather spend our time documenting a learner's ability to comprehend the novel and use reading strategies as evidence of their progress vs a reading quiz.  For each reading section we ask learners to think about and model a different strategy so they can not only practice, but also discover which strategies work best for them.  We use bookmarks for this process and instruct and model different ways to comprehend, connect, visualize, make inferences, and ask questions while reading. Monitoring the learner's bookmarks allows us to see who is reading, comprehending and executing reading strategies.  See below for some of the strategies we use with the reading bookmarks. 

Because our pacing map is a guide and not a mandate, there is also time to allow for interventions for learners who are struggling, and offer challenges for those learners moving at a faster pace. 

Once again we take this same thought process with all of our assessments.  What LEARNING are we assessing?  What are the different ways we can assess learning?  For every unit of study the learners complete formative work (daily work) that prepares them for summative work (final test, project, paper, presentation, etc).  All of the formative work is directly related to the summative, which can be linked back to standards.  Most formatives can be applied to different content as they are about skills and acquiring information vs completion or “doing”.  When it is not just about the content, personalized learning (self paced, related to passions/areas of interest, voice and choice, etc) is possible. 

Our English class learners can be at different places in the novel, but still complete the same formative work.  As teachers we give them ample feedback on their formative work so they learn from mistakes, vs all the feedback coming after the final test or paper when the learner cannot apply what they learn.  This allows for more than one opportunity to learn the skills or information so they can demonstrate their understanding on the summative.


 
All formative work is connected to standards
Essential Question Board


sample bookmark that is folded into 3 parts
a learner's sample bookmark






Bookmark Ideas:  We print off an image of the setting, learners fold in 3 folds,  and on the backside address one of the following ideas per section of reading.  
-print off an image of the setting:  examples; To Kill a Mockingbird we use this map: Maycomb
Lord of the Flies this map: Island
-For each chapter we ask them to make note of the focus for the next day, usually relating back to themes, example of courage, innocence, racism…
-Write down different connections, text to the world,text to  text, and text to self
-Make a prediction, look for examples of foreshadowing
-Look at last lines of the paragraphs and chapters, and analyze them
-Look for something that is repeated, a lesson learned by a character or a contradiction
-Find evidence of the character development: actions, inner thought and feelings, appearance, speech and what other’s say.
-Write three questions after each chapter
-Draw an image or story board after each section.
-Write down main idea and supporting details (nonfiction reading)
-Note types of conflict: person vs person, person vs self, person vs society


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