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PROVIDING
EFFECTIVE STUDENT
FEEDBACK
For Graders,
Teachers, and
Tutors
INTRODUCTION
Effective feedback and the difference between
feedback, advice, and evaluation.
INTRODUCTION
Effective feedback and the difference between
feedback, advice, and evaluation.
You will be given a model for effectively
praising student strengths while using an
appropriate ratio of feedback to advice.
INTRODUCTION
Effective feedback and the difference between
feedback, advice, and evaluation.
You will be given a model for effectively
praising student strengths while using an
appropriate ratio of feedback to advice.
 Often, too much advice and too little feedback
RESOURCES
Grant Wiggins, You Probably Misunderstand
Feedback for Learning or Seven Keys to
Effective Feedback
Laura Reynolds, 20 Ways To Provide Effective
Feedback For Learning
Susan M. Brookhart, How to Give Effective
Feedback to Your Students
VOCABULARY
What is feedback?
VOCABULARY
What is feedback?
 Goal-oriented information re: something the student is
doing or has done.
VOCABULARY
What is feedback?
 Goal-oriented information re: something the student is
doing or has done.
VOCABULARY
What is feedback?
 Goal-oriented information re: something the student is
doing or has done.
 E.g., martial arts:
VOCABULARY
What is feedback?
 Goal-oriented information re: something the student is
doing or has done.
 E.g., martial arts:
 “A good fighting stance protects as many areas of your body at
once as possible  You’re standing with your chin out in the air 
You need to hunch your shoulders and lower your chin.”
VOCABULARY
What is feedback?
 Goal-oriented information re: something the student is
doing or has done.
 E.g., martial arts:
 “A good fighting stance protects as many areas of your body at
once as possible  You’re standing with your chin out in the air 
Your need to hunch your shoulders and lower your chin.”
 Model  Feedback  Advice
VOCABULARY
What is feedback?
 Goal-oriented information re: something the student is
doing or has done.
 E.g., martial arts:
 “A good fighting stance protects as many areas of your body at
once as possible  You’re standing with your chin out in the air 
Your need to hunch your shoulders and lower your chin.”
 Model  Feedback  Advice
 “This is how X is done  This is how you’re doing X  This is what
you need to do to perform X correctly.
VOCABULARY
What is advice?
 A recommendation for improving performance of a
task.
VOCABULARY
What is advice?
 A recommendation for improving performance of a
task.
 Rule of thumb: Don’t provide advice without first giving
feedback.
VOCABULARY
What is advice?
 A recommendation for improving performance of a
task.
 Rule of thumb: Don’t provide advice without first giving
feedback.
 Often unwelcome or annoying. May seem “nagging” to the student.
VOCABULARY
What is advice?
 A recommendation for improving performance of a task.
 Rule of thumb: Don’t provide advice without first giving
feedback.
 Often unwelcome or annoying. May seem “nagging” to the student.
• Better yet: praise students’ strengths, provide
feedback, then give advice.
VOCABULARY
What is advice?
 A recommendation for improving performance of a task.
 Rule of thumb: Don’t provide advice without first giving
feedback.
 Often unwelcome or annoying. May seem “nagging” to the student.
• Better yet: praise students’ strengths, provide
feedback, then give advice.
− Note: advice isn’t always necessary. Don’t
underestimate a student’s ability to self-correct, given
thorough and attentive feedback.
VOCABULARY
What is evaluation?
VOCABULARY
What is evaluation?
 The making of a value judgment; in grading, comes in the
form of praise or criticism:
VOCABULARY
What is evaluation?
 The making of a value judgment; in grading, comes in the
form of praise or criticism:
 “Great job!”
 “Too vague.”
 “Very good!”
 “This does not seem like your own wording.”
 “You should give an example here.”
 “Very entertaining story!”
VOCABULARY
What is evaluation?
 “There is little or no feedback here, i.e. actionable
information about what occurred. As performers, we only
know that someone is either pleased or not, or that
someone places a high or low value on what we did. Praise
(and sometimes, blame) may motivate us in the short term
but neither can get us better. Over time, both praise and
blame have a corrosive effect, in fact (as Dweck [2008]
shows in her research on the attitudes of achievers): such
performers often become too extrinsically motivated.”
- Grant Wiggins, You Probably
Misunderstand Feedback for Learning
VOCABULARY
What is evaluation?
 “There is little or no feedback here, i.e. actionable
information about what occurred. As performers, we only
know that someone is either pleased or not, or that
someone places a high or low value on what we did. Praise
(and sometimes, blame) may motivate us in the short term
but neither can get us better. Over time, both praise and
blame have a corrosive effect, in fact (as Dweck [2008]
shows in her research on the attitudes of achievers): such
performers often become too extrinsically motivated.”
- Grant Wiggins, You Probably
Misunderstand Feedback for Learning
VOCABULARY
What is evaluation?
 Actionable information: concrete, specific, and useful; offers
neutral, goal-related facts.
VOCABULARY
What is evaluation?
 Actionable information: concrete, specific, and useful; offers
neutral, goal-related facts.
 With too much praise, blame, or criticism, students can
become approval-seeking, stunting their development as
autonomous learners.
VOCABULARY
What is evaluation?
 Actionable information: concrete, specific, and useful; offers
neutral, goal-related facts.
 With too much praise, blame, or criticism, students can
become approval-seeking, stunting their development as
autonomous learners.
 Use evaluative language and advice sparingly and only with
effective feedback.
GOOD V. BAD FEEDBACK
Which of the following are NOT examples of
good feedback?
GOOD V. BAD FEEDBACK
Which of the following are NOT examples of
good feedback?
 “Well done! I can tell you put a lot of work into this
essay. I really enjoyed it – you’re a natural writer.”
GOOD V. BAD FEEDBACK
Which of the following are NOT examples of
good feedback?
 “Well done! I can tell you put a lot of work into this
essay. I really enjoyed it – you’re a natural writer.”
 Good feedback?
GOOD V. BAD FEEDBACK
Which of the following are NOT examples of
good feedback?
 “Well done! I can tell you put a lot of work into this
essay. I really enjoyed it – you’re a natural writer.”
 Good feedback? NO. This isn’t feedback to begin with; it is
praise – a form of evaluation.
GOOD V. BAD FEEDBACK
Which of the following are NOT examples of
good feedback?
 “Although your thesis was well stated in your
introductory paragraph, you need to work on
developing that thesis with relevant details.”
GOOD V. BAD FEEDBACK
Which of the following are NOT examples of
good feedback?
 “Although your thesis was well stated in your
introductory paragraph, you need to work on
developing that thesis with relevant details.”
 Good feedback?
GOOD V. BAD FEEDBACK
Which of the following are NOT examples of
good feedback?
 “Although your thesis was well stated in your
introductory paragraph, you need to work on
developing that thesis with relevant details.”
 Good feedback? NO. Once again, this isn’t feedback at
all. This is brief praise followed by advice.
GOOD V. BAD FEEDBACK
Which of the following are NOT examples of
good feedback?
 “Although your thesis was well stated in your
introductory paragraph, you need to work on
developing that thesis with relevant details.”
 Suggested revision: “Your thesis was stated clearly, well
done! However, you provided details in paragraph 1
that were not relevant to or supportive of that thesis.”
GOOD V. BAD FEEDBACK
Which of the following are NOT examples of
good feedback?
 “Your previous progress report indicates that you had a
B- in U.S. History. This month, you’ve received an A+.
Well done! You have obviously spent more time on your
Social Studies this month, and it shows.”
GOOD V. BAD FEEDBACK
Which of the following are NOT examples of
good feedback?
 “Your previous progress report indicates that you had a
B- in U.S. History. This month, you’ve received an A+.
Well done! You have obviously spent more time on your
Social Studies this month, and it shows.”
 Good feedback?
GOOD V. BAD FEEDBACK
Which of the following are NOT examples of
good feedback?
 “Your previous progress report indicates that you had a
B- in U.S. History. This month, you’ve received an A+.
Well done! You have obviously spent more time on your
Social Studies this month, and it shows.”
 Good feedback? NO. Your turn: why not?
GOOD V. BAD FEEDBACK
Which of the following are NOT examples of good
feedback?
 “Your previous progress report indicates that you had a B-
in U.S. History. This month, you’ve received an A+. Well
done! You have obviously spent more time on your Social
Studies this month, and it shows.”
 Good feedback? NO. Your turn: why not?
• Key point: feedback must provide information
geared toward improved performance. Grades
are not informative in this sense.
GOOD V. BAD FEEDBACK
Which of the following are NOT examples of good
feedback?
 “In this essay, you presented a concise thesis statement and
several lines of evidence to support it. Your argument
committed a few minor fallacies (I have pointed them out)
but, overall, it was well organized. Your conclusion
summarized your main ideas nicely, clarifying their logical
relationship to the thesis.”
GOOD V. BAD FEEDBACK
Which of the following are NOT examples of good
feedback?
 “In this essay, you presented a concise thesis statement and
several lines of evidence to support it. Your argument
committed a few minor fallacies (I have pointed them out)
but, overall, it was well organized. Your conclusion
summarized your main ideas nicely, clarifying their logical
relationship to the thesis.”
 Good feedback?
GOOD V. BAD FEEDBACK
Which of the following are NOT examples of good
feedback?
 “In this essay, you presented a concise thesis statement and
several lines of evidence to support it. Your argument
committed a few minor fallacies (I have pointed them out)
but, overall, it was well organized. Your conclusion
summarized your main ideas nicely, clarifying their logical
relationship to the thesis.”
 Good feedback? ALMOST. Effective feedback is made for the
express purpose of eliciting some future result. While the
commentary is informative, it lacks any reference to future
expectations. While students are expected to satisfy present
performance standards, feedback should invoke future
expectations.
GOOD V. BAD FEEDBACK
Which of the following are NOT examples of good
feedback?
 “In this essay, you presented a concise thesis statement and
several lines of evidence to support it. Your argument
committed a few minor fallacies (I have pointed them out)
but, overall, it was well organized. Your conclusion
summarized your main ideas nicely, clarifying their logical
relationship to the thesis.”
 So what’s missing here?
GOOD V. BAD FEEDBACK
Which of the following are NOT examples of good
feedback?
 “In this essay, you presented a concise thesis statement and
several lines of evidence to support it. Your argument
committed a few minor fallacies (I have pointed them out)
but, overall, it was well organized. Your conclusion
summarized your main ideas nicely, clarifying their logical
relationship to the thesis.”
 So what’s missing here? An explanation of what the student
can do better, not just what they already do well.
HOMEWORK PROGRAM
What important challenge do you face as providers
of feedback for Homework Program students?
HOMEWORK PROGRAM
What important challenge do you face as providers
of feedback for Homework Program students?
 Answer: your feedback is not immediate.
HOMEWORK PROGRAM
What important challenge do you face as providers
of feedback for Homework Program students?
 Answer: your feedback is not immediate.
 Types of feedback: (1) feedback about the task
HOMEWORK PROGRAM
What important challenge do you face as providers
of feedback for Homework Program students?
 Answer: your feedback is not immediate.
 Types of feedback: (1) feedback about the task (2) feedback
about the processing of the task
HOMEWORK PROGRAM
What important challenge do you face as providers
of feedback for Homework Program students?
 Answer: your feedback is not immediate.
 Types of feedback: (1) feedback about the task (2) feedback
about the processing of the task (3) feedback about self-
regulation
HOMEWORK PROGRAM
What important challenge do you face as providers
of feedback for Homework Program students?
 Answer: your feedback is not immediate.
 Types of feedback: (1) feedback about the task (2) feedback
about the processing of the task (3) feedback about self-
regulation (4) feedback about the student as a person
HOMEWORK PROGRAM
What important challenge do you face as providers
of feedback for Homework Program students?
 Answer: your feedback is not immediate.
 Types of feedback: (1) feedback about the task (2) feedback
about the processing of the task (3) feedback about self-
regulation (4) feedback about the student as a person
HOMEWORK PROGRAM
What important challenge do you face as providers
of feedback for Homework Program students?
 Answer: your feedback is not immediate.
• While you can’t be there to motivate, regulate, strategize with or
provide any kind of real-time feedback to students, you can make
their process of self-directed learning easier.
HOMEWORK PROGRAM
What important challenge do you face as providers
of feedback for Homework Program students?
 Answer: your feedback is not immediate.
• How?
HOMEWORK PROGRAM
What important challenge do you face as providers
of feedback for Homework Program students?
 Answer: your feedback is not immediate.
• How?
• Assigned Students
HOMEWORK PROGRAM
What important challenge do you face as providers
of feedback for Homework Program students?
 Answer: your feedback is not immediate.
• How?
• Assigned Students
• Notebook to monitor student progress
HOMEWORK PROGRAM
What important challenge do you face as providers
of feedback for Homework Program students?
 Answer: your feedback is not immediate.
• How?
• Assigned Students
• Notebook to monitor student progress
• Grading rubrics
CHARACTERISTICS OF…
GOOD feedback should be:
CHARACTERISTICS OF…
GOOD feedback should be:
 (1) Informative
CHARACTERISTICS OF…
GOOD feedback should be:
 (1) Informative
 Make an effort to explain what the student is doing well and what they
are doing not-so-well. Only provide information relevant to the learning-
objectives of the assignment
CHARACTERISTICS OF…
GOOD feedback should be:
 (1) Informative
 (2) Timely
CHARACTERISTICS OF…
GOOD feedback should be:
 (1) Informative
 (2) Timely
 (3) Skill-specific
CHARACTERISTICS OF…
GOOD feedback should be:
 (1) Informative
 (2) Timely
 (3) Skill-specific
 DON’T try to critique everything all at once. Hone in on a particular skill,
set of skills or specific knowledge.
CHARACTERISTICS OF…
GOOD feedback should be:
 (1) Informative
 (2) Timely
 (3) Skill-specific
 DON’T try to critique everything all at once. Hone in on a particular skill,
set of skills or specific knowledge.
 Rubrics! (for students, teachers, and graders)
CHARACTERISTICS OF…
GOOD feedback should be:
 (1) Informative
 (2) Timely
 (3) Skill-specific
 (4) Formative
CHARACTERISTICS OF…
GOOD feedback should be:
 (1) Informative
 (2) Timely
 (3) Skill-specific
 (4) Formative
 Questions to ask yourself: “What should the student already know how to
do?”
CHARACTERISTICS OF…
GOOD feedback should be:
 (1) Informative
 (2) Timely
 (3) Skill-specific
 (4) Formative
 Questions to ask yourself: “What should the student already know how to
do?”
 “What should the student be able to do next?”
CHARACTERISTICS OF…
GOOD feedback should be:
 (1) Informative
 (2) Timely
 (3) Skill-specific
 (4) Formative
 Questions to ask yourself: “What should the student already know how to
do?”
 “What should the student be able to do next?”
 “What information can I provide the student so that they do better?”
CHARACTERISTICS OF…
GOOD feedback should be:
 (1) Informative
 (2) Timely
 (3) Skill-specific
 (4) Formative
 Questions to ask yourself: “What should the student already know how to
do?”
 “What should the student be able to do next?”
 “What information can I provide the student so that they do better?”
 Student is therefore given the opportunity to adjust their performance to
better accomplish long term objectives
CHARACTERISTICS OF…
GOOD feedback should be:
 (1) Informative
 (2) Timely
 (3) Skill-specific
 (4) Formative
 (5) Visible BEFORE the grade
CHARACTERISTICS OF…
GOOD feedback should be:
 (1) Informative
 (2) Timely
 (3) Skill-specific
 (4) Formative
 (5) Visible BEFORE the grade
 Feedback should be written on the cover page/front of student work;
mark the grade in the very back.
CHARACTERISTICS OF…
GOOD feedback should be:
 (1) Informative
 (2) Timely
 (3) Skill-specific
 (4) Formative
 (5) Visible BEFORE the grade
 Feedback should be written on the cover page/front of student work;
mark the grade in the very back.
 Comment sheets?
CHARACTERISTICS OF…
GOOD feedback should be:
 (1) Informative
 (2) Timely
 (3) Skill-specific
 (4) Formative
 (5) Visible BEFORE the grade
 (6) Comprehensible to the student
CHARACTERISTICS OF…
GOOD feedback should be:
 (1) Informative
 (2) Timely
 (3) Skill-specific
 (4) Formative
 (5) Visible BEFORE the grade
 (6) Comprehensible to the student
 Be aware of your audience
A GENERAL MODEL OF GOOD
FEEDBACK
Try:
praise student strengths  description of how to
do X correctly  description of how student does X
 advice for doing X
What kind of feedback might you
give for the first part of this
essay?
I can tell you’ve certainly
done your homework, Sam.
Well done!
Remember that the
MAIN IDEA of an essay
should be stated in its
Introduction, or the
opening paragraph. At
the end of paragraph
two, you say your
essay is about whether
or not the U.S. should
get involved in the
Crimean Crisis.
However, you did not
introduce this as your
thesis statement at the
beginning of the
essay. Instead, you
provided a little
historical background
and raised the
question of whether
Crimea’s annexation
by Russia was
legitimate.
Remember that the
MAIN IDEA of an essay
should be stated in its
Introduction, or the
opening paragraph. At
the end of paragraph
two, you say your
essay is about whether
or not the U.S. should
get involved in the
Crimean Crisis.
However, you did not
introduce this as your
thesis statement at the
beginning of the
essay. Instead, you
provided a little
historical background
and raised the
question of whether
Crimea’s annexation
by Russia was
legitimate.
Your second
paragraph would
make a better
introductory
paragraph than your
first one! Consider
flipping them around.

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Providing Effective Student Feedback

  • 2. INTRODUCTION Effective feedback and the difference between feedback, advice, and evaluation.
  • 3. INTRODUCTION Effective feedback and the difference between feedback, advice, and evaluation. You will be given a model for effectively praising student strengths while using an appropriate ratio of feedback to advice.
  • 4. INTRODUCTION Effective feedback and the difference between feedback, advice, and evaluation. You will be given a model for effectively praising student strengths while using an appropriate ratio of feedback to advice.  Often, too much advice and too little feedback
  • 5. RESOURCES Grant Wiggins, You Probably Misunderstand Feedback for Learning or Seven Keys to Effective Feedback Laura Reynolds, 20 Ways To Provide Effective Feedback For Learning Susan M. Brookhart, How to Give Effective Feedback to Your Students
  • 7. VOCABULARY What is feedback?  Goal-oriented information re: something the student is doing or has done.
  • 8. VOCABULARY What is feedback?  Goal-oriented information re: something the student is doing or has done.
  • 9. VOCABULARY What is feedback?  Goal-oriented information re: something the student is doing or has done.  E.g., martial arts:
  • 10. VOCABULARY What is feedback?  Goal-oriented information re: something the student is doing or has done.  E.g., martial arts:  “A good fighting stance protects as many areas of your body at once as possible  You’re standing with your chin out in the air  You need to hunch your shoulders and lower your chin.”
  • 11. VOCABULARY What is feedback?  Goal-oriented information re: something the student is doing or has done.  E.g., martial arts:  “A good fighting stance protects as many areas of your body at once as possible  You’re standing with your chin out in the air  Your need to hunch your shoulders and lower your chin.”  Model  Feedback  Advice
  • 12. VOCABULARY What is feedback?  Goal-oriented information re: something the student is doing or has done.  E.g., martial arts:  “A good fighting stance protects as many areas of your body at once as possible  You’re standing with your chin out in the air  Your need to hunch your shoulders and lower your chin.”  Model  Feedback  Advice  “This is how X is done  This is how you’re doing X  This is what you need to do to perform X correctly.
  • 13. VOCABULARY What is advice?  A recommendation for improving performance of a task.
  • 14. VOCABULARY What is advice?  A recommendation for improving performance of a task.  Rule of thumb: Don’t provide advice without first giving feedback.
  • 15. VOCABULARY What is advice?  A recommendation for improving performance of a task.  Rule of thumb: Don’t provide advice without first giving feedback.  Often unwelcome or annoying. May seem “nagging” to the student.
  • 16. VOCABULARY What is advice?  A recommendation for improving performance of a task.  Rule of thumb: Don’t provide advice without first giving feedback.  Often unwelcome or annoying. May seem “nagging” to the student. • Better yet: praise students’ strengths, provide feedback, then give advice.
  • 17. VOCABULARY What is advice?  A recommendation for improving performance of a task.  Rule of thumb: Don’t provide advice without first giving feedback.  Often unwelcome or annoying. May seem “nagging” to the student. • Better yet: praise students’ strengths, provide feedback, then give advice. − Note: advice isn’t always necessary. Don’t underestimate a student’s ability to self-correct, given thorough and attentive feedback.
  • 19. VOCABULARY What is evaluation?  The making of a value judgment; in grading, comes in the form of praise or criticism:
  • 20. VOCABULARY What is evaluation?  The making of a value judgment; in grading, comes in the form of praise or criticism:  “Great job!”  “Too vague.”  “Very good!”  “This does not seem like your own wording.”  “You should give an example here.”  “Very entertaining story!”
  • 21. VOCABULARY What is evaluation?  “There is little or no feedback here, i.e. actionable information about what occurred. As performers, we only know that someone is either pleased or not, or that someone places a high or low value on what we did. Praise (and sometimes, blame) may motivate us in the short term but neither can get us better. Over time, both praise and blame have a corrosive effect, in fact (as Dweck [2008] shows in her research on the attitudes of achievers): such performers often become too extrinsically motivated.” - Grant Wiggins, You Probably Misunderstand Feedback for Learning
  • 22. VOCABULARY What is evaluation?  “There is little or no feedback here, i.e. actionable information about what occurred. As performers, we only know that someone is either pleased or not, or that someone places a high or low value on what we did. Praise (and sometimes, blame) may motivate us in the short term but neither can get us better. Over time, both praise and blame have a corrosive effect, in fact (as Dweck [2008] shows in her research on the attitudes of achievers): such performers often become too extrinsically motivated.” - Grant Wiggins, You Probably Misunderstand Feedback for Learning
  • 23. VOCABULARY What is evaluation?  Actionable information: concrete, specific, and useful; offers neutral, goal-related facts.
  • 24. VOCABULARY What is evaluation?  Actionable information: concrete, specific, and useful; offers neutral, goal-related facts.  With too much praise, blame, or criticism, students can become approval-seeking, stunting their development as autonomous learners.
  • 25. VOCABULARY What is evaluation?  Actionable information: concrete, specific, and useful; offers neutral, goal-related facts.  With too much praise, blame, or criticism, students can become approval-seeking, stunting their development as autonomous learners.  Use evaluative language and advice sparingly and only with effective feedback.
  • 26. GOOD V. BAD FEEDBACK Which of the following are NOT examples of good feedback?
  • 27. GOOD V. BAD FEEDBACK Which of the following are NOT examples of good feedback?  “Well done! I can tell you put a lot of work into this essay. I really enjoyed it – you’re a natural writer.”
  • 28. GOOD V. BAD FEEDBACK Which of the following are NOT examples of good feedback?  “Well done! I can tell you put a lot of work into this essay. I really enjoyed it – you’re a natural writer.”  Good feedback?
  • 29. GOOD V. BAD FEEDBACK Which of the following are NOT examples of good feedback?  “Well done! I can tell you put a lot of work into this essay. I really enjoyed it – you’re a natural writer.”  Good feedback? NO. This isn’t feedback to begin with; it is praise – a form of evaluation.
  • 30. GOOD V. BAD FEEDBACK Which of the following are NOT examples of good feedback?  “Although your thesis was well stated in your introductory paragraph, you need to work on developing that thesis with relevant details.”
  • 31. GOOD V. BAD FEEDBACK Which of the following are NOT examples of good feedback?  “Although your thesis was well stated in your introductory paragraph, you need to work on developing that thesis with relevant details.”  Good feedback?
  • 32. GOOD V. BAD FEEDBACK Which of the following are NOT examples of good feedback?  “Although your thesis was well stated in your introductory paragraph, you need to work on developing that thesis with relevant details.”  Good feedback? NO. Once again, this isn’t feedback at all. This is brief praise followed by advice.
  • 33. GOOD V. BAD FEEDBACK Which of the following are NOT examples of good feedback?  “Although your thesis was well stated in your introductory paragraph, you need to work on developing that thesis with relevant details.”  Suggested revision: “Your thesis was stated clearly, well done! However, you provided details in paragraph 1 that were not relevant to or supportive of that thesis.”
  • 34. GOOD V. BAD FEEDBACK Which of the following are NOT examples of good feedback?  “Your previous progress report indicates that you had a B- in U.S. History. This month, you’ve received an A+. Well done! You have obviously spent more time on your Social Studies this month, and it shows.”
  • 35. GOOD V. BAD FEEDBACK Which of the following are NOT examples of good feedback?  “Your previous progress report indicates that you had a B- in U.S. History. This month, you’ve received an A+. Well done! You have obviously spent more time on your Social Studies this month, and it shows.”  Good feedback?
  • 36. GOOD V. BAD FEEDBACK Which of the following are NOT examples of good feedback?  “Your previous progress report indicates that you had a B- in U.S. History. This month, you’ve received an A+. Well done! You have obviously spent more time on your Social Studies this month, and it shows.”  Good feedback? NO. Your turn: why not?
  • 37. GOOD V. BAD FEEDBACK Which of the following are NOT examples of good feedback?  “Your previous progress report indicates that you had a B- in U.S. History. This month, you’ve received an A+. Well done! You have obviously spent more time on your Social Studies this month, and it shows.”  Good feedback? NO. Your turn: why not? • Key point: feedback must provide information geared toward improved performance. Grades are not informative in this sense.
  • 38. GOOD V. BAD FEEDBACK Which of the following are NOT examples of good feedback?  “In this essay, you presented a concise thesis statement and several lines of evidence to support it. Your argument committed a few minor fallacies (I have pointed them out) but, overall, it was well organized. Your conclusion summarized your main ideas nicely, clarifying their logical relationship to the thesis.”
  • 39. GOOD V. BAD FEEDBACK Which of the following are NOT examples of good feedback?  “In this essay, you presented a concise thesis statement and several lines of evidence to support it. Your argument committed a few minor fallacies (I have pointed them out) but, overall, it was well organized. Your conclusion summarized your main ideas nicely, clarifying their logical relationship to the thesis.”  Good feedback?
  • 40. GOOD V. BAD FEEDBACK Which of the following are NOT examples of good feedback?  “In this essay, you presented a concise thesis statement and several lines of evidence to support it. Your argument committed a few minor fallacies (I have pointed them out) but, overall, it was well organized. Your conclusion summarized your main ideas nicely, clarifying their logical relationship to the thesis.”  Good feedback? ALMOST. Effective feedback is made for the express purpose of eliciting some future result. While the commentary is informative, it lacks any reference to future expectations. While students are expected to satisfy present performance standards, feedback should invoke future expectations.
  • 41. GOOD V. BAD FEEDBACK Which of the following are NOT examples of good feedback?  “In this essay, you presented a concise thesis statement and several lines of evidence to support it. Your argument committed a few minor fallacies (I have pointed them out) but, overall, it was well organized. Your conclusion summarized your main ideas nicely, clarifying their logical relationship to the thesis.”  So what’s missing here?
  • 42. GOOD V. BAD FEEDBACK Which of the following are NOT examples of good feedback?  “In this essay, you presented a concise thesis statement and several lines of evidence to support it. Your argument committed a few minor fallacies (I have pointed them out) but, overall, it was well organized. Your conclusion summarized your main ideas nicely, clarifying their logical relationship to the thesis.”  So what’s missing here? An explanation of what the student can do better, not just what they already do well.
  • 43. HOMEWORK PROGRAM What important challenge do you face as providers of feedback for Homework Program students?
  • 44. HOMEWORK PROGRAM What important challenge do you face as providers of feedback for Homework Program students?  Answer: your feedback is not immediate.
  • 45. HOMEWORK PROGRAM What important challenge do you face as providers of feedback for Homework Program students?  Answer: your feedback is not immediate.  Types of feedback: (1) feedback about the task
  • 46. HOMEWORK PROGRAM What important challenge do you face as providers of feedback for Homework Program students?  Answer: your feedback is not immediate.  Types of feedback: (1) feedback about the task (2) feedback about the processing of the task
  • 47. HOMEWORK PROGRAM What important challenge do you face as providers of feedback for Homework Program students?  Answer: your feedback is not immediate.  Types of feedback: (1) feedback about the task (2) feedback about the processing of the task (3) feedback about self- regulation
  • 48. HOMEWORK PROGRAM What important challenge do you face as providers of feedback for Homework Program students?  Answer: your feedback is not immediate.  Types of feedback: (1) feedback about the task (2) feedback about the processing of the task (3) feedback about self- regulation (4) feedback about the student as a person
  • 49. HOMEWORK PROGRAM What important challenge do you face as providers of feedback for Homework Program students?  Answer: your feedback is not immediate.  Types of feedback: (1) feedback about the task (2) feedback about the processing of the task (3) feedback about self- regulation (4) feedback about the student as a person
  • 50. HOMEWORK PROGRAM What important challenge do you face as providers of feedback for Homework Program students?  Answer: your feedback is not immediate. • While you can’t be there to motivate, regulate, strategize with or provide any kind of real-time feedback to students, you can make their process of self-directed learning easier.
  • 51. HOMEWORK PROGRAM What important challenge do you face as providers of feedback for Homework Program students?  Answer: your feedback is not immediate. • How?
  • 52. HOMEWORK PROGRAM What important challenge do you face as providers of feedback for Homework Program students?  Answer: your feedback is not immediate. • How? • Assigned Students
  • 53. HOMEWORK PROGRAM What important challenge do you face as providers of feedback for Homework Program students?  Answer: your feedback is not immediate. • How? • Assigned Students • Notebook to monitor student progress
  • 54. HOMEWORK PROGRAM What important challenge do you face as providers of feedback for Homework Program students?  Answer: your feedback is not immediate. • How? • Assigned Students • Notebook to monitor student progress • Grading rubrics
  • 56. CHARACTERISTICS OF… GOOD feedback should be:  (1) Informative
  • 57. CHARACTERISTICS OF… GOOD feedback should be:  (1) Informative  Make an effort to explain what the student is doing well and what they are doing not-so-well. Only provide information relevant to the learning- objectives of the assignment
  • 58. CHARACTERISTICS OF… GOOD feedback should be:  (1) Informative  (2) Timely
  • 59. CHARACTERISTICS OF… GOOD feedback should be:  (1) Informative  (2) Timely  (3) Skill-specific
  • 60. CHARACTERISTICS OF… GOOD feedback should be:  (1) Informative  (2) Timely  (3) Skill-specific  DON’T try to critique everything all at once. Hone in on a particular skill, set of skills or specific knowledge.
  • 61. CHARACTERISTICS OF… GOOD feedback should be:  (1) Informative  (2) Timely  (3) Skill-specific  DON’T try to critique everything all at once. Hone in on a particular skill, set of skills or specific knowledge.  Rubrics! (for students, teachers, and graders)
  • 62. CHARACTERISTICS OF… GOOD feedback should be:  (1) Informative  (2) Timely  (3) Skill-specific  (4) Formative
  • 63. CHARACTERISTICS OF… GOOD feedback should be:  (1) Informative  (2) Timely  (3) Skill-specific  (4) Formative  Questions to ask yourself: “What should the student already know how to do?”
  • 64. CHARACTERISTICS OF… GOOD feedback should be:  (1) Informative  (2) Timely  (3) Skill-specific  (4) Formative  Questions to ask yourself: “What should the student already know how to do?”  “What should the student be able to do next?”
  • 65. CHARACTERISTICS OF… GOOD feedback should be:  (1) Informative  (2) Timely  (3) Skill-specific  (4) Formative  Questions to ask yourself: “What should the student already know how to do?”  “What should the student be able to do next?”  “What information can I provide the student so that they do better?”
  • 66. CHARACTERISTICS OF… GOOD feedback should be:  (1) Informative  (2) Timely  (3) Skill-specific  (4) Formative  Questions to ask yourself: “What should the student already know how to do?”  “What should the student be able to do next?”  “What information can I provide the student so that they do better?”  Student is therefore given the opportunity to adjust their performance to better accomplish long term objectives
  • 67. CHARACTERISTICS OF… GOOD feedback should be:  (1) Informative  (2) Timely  (3) Skill-specific  (4) Formative  (5) Visible BEFORE the grade
  • 68. CHARACTERISTICS OF… GOOD feedback should be:  (1) Informative  (2) Timely  (3) Skill-specific  (4) Formative  (5) Visible BEFORE the grade  Feedback should be written on the cover page/front of student work; mark the grade in the very back.
  • 69. CHARACTERISTICS OF… GOOD feedback should be:  (1) Informative  (2) Timely  (3) Skill-specific  (4) Formative  (5) Visible BEFORE the grade  Feedback should be written on the cover page/front of student work; mark the grade in the very back.  Comment sheets?
  • 70. CHARACTERISTICS OF… GOOD feedback should be:  (1) Informative  (2) Timely  (3) Skill-specific  (4) Formative  (5) Visible BEFORE the grade  (6) Comprehensible to the student
  • 71. CHARACTERISTICS OF… GOOD feedback should be:  (1) Informative  (2) Timely  (3) Skill-specific  (4) Formative  (5) Visible BEFORE the grade  (6) Comprehensible to the student  Be aware of your audience
  • 72. A GENERAL MODEL OF GOOD FEEDBACK Try: praise student strengths  description of how to do X correctly  description of how student does X  advice for doing X
  • 73.
  • 74. What kind of feedback might you give for the first part of this essay?
  • 75. I can tell you’ve certainly done your homework, Sam. Well done!
  • 76. Remember that the MAIN IDEA of an essay should be stated in its Introduction, or the opening paragraph. At the end of paragraph two, you say your essay is about whether or not the U.S. should get involved in the Crimean Crisis. However, you did not introduce this as your thesis statement at the beginning of the essay. Instead, you provided a little historical background and raised the question of whether Crimea’s annexation by Russia was legitimate.
  • 77. Remember that the MAIN IDEA of an essay should be stated in its Introduction, or the opening paragraph. At the end of paragraph two, you say your essay is about whether or not the U.S. should get involved in the Crimean Crisis. However, you did not introduce this as your thesis statement at the beginning of the essay. Instead, you provided a little historical background and raised the question of whether Crimea’s annexation by Russia was legitimate. Your second paragraph would make a better introductory paragraph than your first one! Consider flipping them around.