TeachThought
Forget summative evaluations, mid-terms, final exams, essays, and tests ... talk to your students and listen when they talk. Walk around the room, smile, make conversation and engage them in talk and sprinkle questions in there. Get to know them, how they think, how they see things, and what they're like ... this is part of your Formative Assessment and Diagnostic. Learn what FEEDBACK is all about why it's worth your time.
FEEDBACK IS YOUR NUMBER 1 THING TO DO.
https://www.teachthought.com/pedagogy/20-ways-to-provide-effective-feedback-for-learning
20 Ways to Provide Effective Feedback
1. Feedback should be educative in nature.
Providing feedback
means giving students an explanation of what they are doing correctly and incorrectly. However, the focus of the
feedback should be based essentially on what the students is doing right. It is
most productive to a student’s learning when they are provided with an
explanation and example as to what is accurate and inaccurate about their work.
Consider using the
concept of a ‘feedback sandwich’ to guide your feedback: Compliment, Correct,
Compliment.
2. Feedback should be given in a timely manner.
When feedback is given
immediately after showing proof of learning, the student responds positively
and remembers the experience about what is being learned in a confident manner.
If we wait too long to give feedback, the moment is lost and the student might
not connect the feedback with the action.
3. Be sensitive to the individual needs of the student.
It is vital that we
take into consideration each student individually when giving feedback. Our
classrooms are full of diverse learners. Some students need to be nudged to
achieve at a higher level and others need to be handled very gently so as not
to discourage learning and damage self-esteem. A balance between not wanting to
hurt a student’s feelings and providing proper encouragement is essential.
4. Ask the 4 questions.
Studies of effective
teaching and learning (Dinham, 2002, 2007a; 2007b) have
shown that learners want to know where they stand in regards to their work.
Providing answers to the following four questions on a regular basis will help
provide quality feedback. These four questions are also helpful when providing
feedback to parents:
What can the student
do?
What can’t the student
do?
How does the student’s
work compare with that of others?
How can the student do
better?
5. Feedback should reference a skill or specific knowledge.
This is when rubrics
become a useful tool (single-point rubrics,
for example). A rubric is an instrument to communicate expectations for an
assignment and a useful way to provide effective feedback for learning.
Effective rubrics provide students with very specific information about their
performance, compared to an established range of standards. For younger
students, try highlighting rubric items that the student is meeting or try
using a sticker chart.
6. Give feedback to keep students ‘on target’ for achievement.
Regular ‘check-ins’
with students let them know where they stand in the classroom and with you.
Utilize the ‘4 questions’ to guide your feedback.
7. Host a one-on-one conference.
Providing a one-on-one
meeting with a student is one of the most effective means of providing
feedback. The student will look forward to having the attention and allows the
opportunity to ask necessary questions. A one-on-one conference should be
generally optimistic, as this will encourage the student to look forward to the
next meeting.
As with all aspects of
teaching, this strategy requires good time management. Try meeting with a
student while the other students are working independently. Time the meetings
so that they last no longer than 10 minutes.
8. Feedback can be given verbally, non-verbally, or in written
form.
Be sure to keep your
frowns in check. It is imperative that we examine our non-verbal cues. Facial
expressions and gestures are also means of delivering feedback. This means that
when you hand back that English paper, it is best not to scowl.
9. Concentrate on one ability or skill.
It makes a far greater
impact on the student when only one skill is critiqued versus the entire paper
being the focus of everything that is wrong.
For example, when I taught Writer’s Workshop at the elementary level, I would let students know that for that day I was going to be checking on the indentation of paragraphs within their writing. When I conferenced with a student, that was my focus instead of all the other aspects of their writing. The next day would feature a new focus.
10. Alternate due dates for your students/classes.
Utilize this strategy
when grading papers or tests to provide effective feedback for learning. This
strategy allows you the necessary time to provide quality, written feedback.
This can also include using a rotation chart for students to conference with at
a deeper more meaningful level. Students will also know when it is their turn
to meet with you and are more likely to bring questions of their own to the
conference.
11. Educate students on how to give feedback to each
other.
Model for students
what appropriate feedback looks like and sounds like. As an elementary teacher,
we call this ‘peer conferencing.’ Train students to give each other
constructive feedback in a way that is positive and helpful. Encourage students
to use post-it notes to record the given feedback.
12. Ask another adult to give feedback.
The principal at the
school I taught at would often volunteer to grade history tests or read
student’s writing pieces. You can imagine how the student’s quality of work
increased tenfold! If the principal is too busy (and most are), invite a
‘guest’ teacher or student teacher to critique work.
13. Have the student take notes.
During a conference
over a test, paper, or a general ‘check-in,’ have the student do the writing
while you do the talking. The student can use a notebook to jot down notes as
you provide verbal feedback.
14. Use a notebook to keep track of student progress.
Keep a section of a
notebook for each student. Write daily or weekly, dated comments about each
student as necessary. Keep track of good questions the student asks, behavior
issues, areas for improvement, test scores, etc. Of course, this requires a lot
of essential time management but when it is time to conference with a student
or parent, you are ready to go.
15. Return tests, papers, or comment cards at the beginning of
class.
Returning papers and
tests at the beginning of class, rather than at the end, allows students to ask
necessary questions and to hold a relevant discussion.
16. Use Post-It notes.
Sometimes seeing a
comment written out is more effective than just hearing it aloud. During
independent work time, try writing feedback comments on a post-it note. Place
the note on the student’s desk the feedback is meant for. One of my former
students had a difficult time staying on task but he would get frustrated and
embarrassed when I called him out on his inattentive behaviors in front of the
class.
He would then shut down and refused to do any work because he was mad that I humiliated him. I resorted to using post-it notes to point out when he was on task or not. Although it was not the most effective use of my time, it really worked for him as a way to provide effective feedback for learning.
17. Give genuine praise.
Students are quick to
figure out which teachers use meaningless praise to win approval. If you are
constantly telling your students ‘Good Job’ or ‘Nice Work’ then, over time,
these words become meaningless. Make a big deal out of a student’s A+ on that
vocabulary test. If you are thrilled with a student’s recent on-task behaviors,
go above and beyond with the encouragement and praise.
Make a phone call home
to let mom or dad know how thrilled you are with the student’s behavior.
Comments and suggestions within genuine feedback should also be ‘focused,
practical, and based on an assessment of what the student can do and is capable
of achieving’ (Dinham).
18. “I noticed….”
Make an effort to
notice a student’s behavior or effort at a task. For example; “I noticed when
you regrouped correctly in the hundreds column, you got the problem right.” “I
noticed you arrived on time to class this entire week.” Acknowledging a student
and the efforts they are making goes a long way to positively influence
academic performance.
19. Provide a model or example.
Communicate with your
students the purpose of an assessment and/or feedback. Demonstrate to students
what you are looking for by giving them an example of what an A+ paper looks
like. Provide a contrast of what a C- paper looks like. This is especially
important at the upper learning levels.
20. Invite students to give you feedback.
Remember when you
finished a class in college and you were given the chance to ‘grade’ the
professor? How nice was it to finally tell the professor that the reading
material was so incredibly boring without worrying about it affecting your
grade? Why not let students give you feedback on how you are doing as a
teacher?
Make it so that they
can do it anonymously. What did they like about your class? What didn’t they
like? If they were teaching the class, what would they do differently? What did
they learn the most from you as a teacher? If we are open to it, we will quickly
learn a few things about ourselves as educators.
Courtesy of TeachThought
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