This presentation described our literature review on: What teachers DO in the classroom when they implement formative assessment practices. It also describes the formative assessment cycle that we used as conceptual and analytical framework to deduce all teacher activities from literature
Teachers' formative assessment practices in the classroom: a literature review using the formative assesssment cycle
1. Teachers’ formative assessment practices
in the classroom: a literature review
20-10-2016. Competence Conference 2016
Judith Gulikers (Wageningen University) &
Liesbeth Baartman (Utrecht University of Applied
Sciences)
3. Many formative assessment frameworks (eg. Antoniou &
James, 2014; Lai & Schildkamp, 2014; Ruiz-Primo & Furtak, 2006;2007;
Wiliam, 2011)
Our focus:
Formative assessment is a cyclic process
Teachers’ concrete activities in the classroom
→
Combining elements of existing framework into “ the
formative assessment cycle” (FA-cycle) as conceptual
and analytical model of our literature review
How to grasp teachers FA activities?
4. FA-cycle
Phase 1
Clarifying
expactation
Phase 2: eliciting
student responses
Phase 3
Analysing and
interpreting
responses
Phase 4:
Communicating
with student about
resulst
Fase 5:
Taking followup
actions: adapting
instruction & learning
Feed up
Feedback
Feedforward
5. (1) What do teachers DO in their classrooms to realize
effective formative assessment practices?
(2) What is the relationship between these formative
assessment practices and student learning?
Research questions
6. Existing NWO literature reviews (Schildkamp et al.,
2014; Sluijsmans et al., 2013) => 34 publications
Systematic database search
Inclusion criteria
1. Peer-reviewed
2. Formative assessment in school context
3. Empirical research
4. Class level
5. Clear description of what teacher DOES
6. Effects on student learning (OPTIONAL)
Method literature search
7. Databases: ERIC, PsychInfo, Web of Science, Scopus
Database search
Total search 304
Delete step 1 68 Title: Non-English, duplicates
Delete step 2 106 Abstract: not empirical, perceptions, grading
Delete step 3 21 Not available
Delete step 4 37 Article: not about teacher practices
Selected
publications
72
TOTAL 106 (-= 72 + 34)
8. General categories:
Country / educational level / educational field
Learning outcome measured
Phases FA cycle
Coding per FA phase
Data analysis Atlas TI
Phase 2
Phase 3
9. USA Europe Singapore /
Asia
Other
61 19 9 18
Results
Primary educ Secondary
educ
Higher educ Teacher educ
47 53 13 8
Science Language Math Other
42 18 15 31
Qualitative Quantitative Mixed
47 17 28
Learning outcome measured: 51 articles
11. Trends in FA phases
Almost never ALL phases
Often a cycle of 2/3/5
Phase 2
Student posters
Quizzes
Models
Phase 3
Compare answers
Whole class discussions
Discuss and elaborate in
small groups
Phase 5:
Decide to re-teach
Change pacing
Differentiation/
adaptation
- Focus on
(mis)understanding
- Active student
involvement
Questioning
12. Trends in FA phases
Phase 1: often studied separately (e.g., learning progressions,
rubrics)
Phase 2: often, elaborate (noticing, questioning)
Phase 3: often, detailed, USA, separate
Phase 4: little attention (feedback)
Phase 5: most often noticed as problematic
− Most difficult
− Most resistant to professional development
− But: most effect on student learning
Communicat
e
expectancies
Elicit
information
Interpret
information
Communicat
e with
students
Adapt
instructio
n
13. The effective FA-teacher ....
(preliminary!)
Goes though the 2/3/5 cycle
Explicates learning goals more often and in various ways.
Is focussed on identifying misconceptions and gauging
understanding (often via interactive classroom discussions)
Is focussed on active student involvement
Has subject matter content knowledge (understands
learning progressions) AND pedagogical content
knowledge (certainly for phase 5) + dealt with in
combination
14. Few of the 106 studies describe student actions/activities
More detailed studies on student actions do not describe
teacher actions
Most effective FA teachers really succeed in actively involving
students in all FA-phases focussing on identifying
understanding and (changing) misconceptions
Most studies that do relate to student learning are about
objectively measurable testing scores → no attention to the
aspired FA learning outcomes
Student learning and action
(preliminary)
15. FA as a cyclic process requires more attention
Diverse teacher strategies to enact formative
assessment in the classroom
Relationships with student learning?
Few connections to research on feedback
Professionalisation
Phase 5
Combination of subject matter and pedagogical content
knowledge
Conclusion / discussion
16. For more information..........
Judith Gulikers, PhD
Wageningen University, the Netherlands
judith.gulikers@wur.nl
Liesbeth Baartman, PhD
Utrecht University of applied sciences, the Netherlands
liesbeth.baartman@hu.nl
This project was financed by NRO under project number 405-15-
722
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