Lesson Delivery and Assessment2 PDF
Lesson Delivery and Assessment2 PDF
Lesson Delivery and Assessment2 PDF
Lesson Delivery
For some teachers, the main focus of the teaching and learning process is the
delivery of a lesson; but for others, the delivery is just a reflection of how well
the lesson was planned, and so the focus of the teaching and learning process
is the planning. Some argue that assessment is the most important element
of teaching, because it will measure the effectiveness of the planning and the
delivery. What is universally understood is that critical thinking can be infused
in each one of these three elements.
In spite of the abundant research that shows the limited effectiveness of lec-
turing, this is one of the teaching methods that prevails nowadays in the middle
and high school classrooms in many parts of the world. An attempt to apply
critical thinking methodologies is a great opportunity to change the state of
things and to shift the responsibility of the students learning to the students
themselves.
Video: Watch this video on how teachers are using Project Based Learning in high school (4:54).
http://video.seattletimes.com/3268797387001/
The second part of this toolkit covers four methodologies to develop critical
thinking. These collaborative methodologies are Socratic Seminar, Academic
Conversation Skills, Project Based Learning and Service Learning. We touched
on the appropriate classroom setting for using these methodologies, including
creating a learning environment that is safe and encouraging. But applying
critical thinking methodologies in the classroom cannot be done without re-de-
fining the roles of the teacher and the student.
Critical Thinking Toolkit | Unit III - Teaching to Promote Critical Thinking Skills Page 45
Teaching to Promote Critical Thinking Skills
One such redefinition is to think of the student who has ingrained critical think-
ing skills as what The Critical Thinking Community calls a master student. The
Critical Thinking Community identifies a series of strategies to help students
become a master student, and the strategies are explained in a document you
can find in the complementary readings at the end of this Toolkit.
These strategies should be present in any lesson because they will help
students practice, and acquire the habit of, critical thinking. For this toolkit, we
consider the strategies from the perspective of the teacher, since in the teach-
ing methodologies we explored, teachers are active participants in the learning
community. The strategies are:
Set time aside for questions, or develop your own methodology to handle
students questions.
Critical Thinking Toolkit | Unit III - Teaching to Promote Critical Thinking Skills Page 46
Teaching to Promote Critical Thinking Skills
Lesson Assessment
If the answer is no, you can adapt your assessment tools to evaluate your stu-
dents growth in the area of critical thinking. At any stage of the assessment
process, the tools can be infused with critical thinking principles. Generally,
assessment falls into one of three categories based upon the purpose of the
assessment: diagnostic, formative, and summative assessment.
Critical Thinking Toolkit | Unit III - Teaching to Promote Critical Thinking Skills Page 47
Teaching to Promote Critical Thinking Skills
Diagnostic Assessment
Knowing students strengths and areas of opportunity for growth can help
teachers plan better. Research shows that on average, a teacher asks 400 ques-
tions in a day. But our understanding of critical thinking naturally pushes us to
examine the effectiveness of such questioning. Academic Conversation Skills
can be a great diagnostic tool to assess students breadth and depth of under-
standing -- without bombarding them with questions.
Here are the steps for using Academic Questioning as a diagnostic tool:
1. Talk to your students about the purpose of the activity. Find out what they
know about the topic. Explain they will have the opportunity to ask ques-
tions with their peers and they can take notes.
2. Provide students with a list of questions to guide the conversation, and give
them freedom to create their own questions as they learn.
3. Give students the opportunity to express what would they like to learn about
the topic and share why they are interested.
5. Remember that most of the questions and answers should come from the
students themselves, and the answers may be right or wrong and change
as the lesson unfolds. Note that students will likely change their minds and
opinions as they gather and assess more information. Building knowledge
as a group is a dynamic process, and is more meaningful than getting the
right answers from the teacher.
6. Take notes during the questioning. Use them as you plan your lessons, ad-
dressing those questions that need elaboration or clarification. When the
lesson is finished, students can return to those questions again and again
for reference, repetition, and revision.
Critical Thinking Toolkit | Unit III - Teaching to Promote Critical Thinking Skills Page 48
Teaching to Promote Critical Thinking Skills
Critical Thinking Toolkit | Unit III - Teaching to Promote Critical Thinking Skills Page 49
Teaching to Promote Critical Thinking Skills
Formative assessment
Formative Assessment can be used at any stage of the lesson, and is used to
assess students knowledge as the lesson progresses, rather than just at the
end of a certain period (unit, quarter, semester, year). This allows the teacher to
adjust the lesson plan based on students actual progress.
A rubric is a list or, most often, a matrix that helps teachers and/or students
identify the qualitative level of a students performance, providing the teacher
with an easy way to identify those students that have difficulty with parts of the
lesson, and those parts of the lesson that are challenging for many students.
For example, as students participate in a Socratic Seminar, the teacher will si-
multaneously use the rubric and take notes on the performance level of several
students at a time. The teacher will be able to identify those areas in which
most students need support and will be able to re-address the topic or activity
that was challenging.
For more information about rubrics, watch the following video that explains the
basics of rubric creation (5:32), and in the next section, find a rubric to assess
a Socratic seminar.
Critical Thinking Toolkit | Unit III - Teaching to Promote Critical Thinking Skills Page 50
Teaching to Promote Critical Thinking Skills
Participant offers some analysis, but needs prompting from the sem-
inar leader and/or others
Through his/her comments, participant demonstrates a general
knowledge of the text and the question
Participation
Participant is less prepared, with few notes and no marked/annotat-
is
ed text
satisfactory Participant is actively listening to others, but does not offer clarifica-
tion and/or follow-up to others comments
Participant relies more upon his/her opinion, and less on the text to
drive his/her comments
Participant offers little commentary.
Participation Participant comes to the seminar ill-prepared VVwith little under-
is not standing of the text and question.
satisfactory Participant does not listen to others, offers no commentary to further
the discussion.
Critical Thinking Toolkit | Unit III - Teaching to Promote Critical Thinking Skills Page 51
Teaching to Promote Critical Thinking Skills
It is always a good idea to present students with the rubric in advance, so they
understand the grading range, skill set evaluated, and performance criteria.
Students can also help develop a rubric, or you can create a critical thinking ac-
tivity by showing students the criteria (on the right) and having them categorize
them into the appropriate assessment blocks (on the left). You may ask stu-
dents to use the rubric for self-assessment and/or peer-to-peer assessment.
If possible, avoid the not satisfactory level when creating or adapting your
rubrics, so that students will avoid the temptation to do the bare minimum.
Critical Thinking Toolkit | Unit III - Teaching to Promote Critical Thinking Skills Page 52
Teaching to Promote Critical Thinking Skills
Summative Assessment
Although formative assessment will provide you with useful data about student
learning, most schools require the use of summative assessment tools. Rubrics
can be used for both, but an example of a summative assessment tool that will
promote critical thinking is a portfolio, a collection of a students work created
over the course of a lesson, project, or time period as evidence of the students
learning.
Belgrad, Burke & Fogarty state that portfolios can also be assessed in combina-
tion with a rubric, and the measure for a finished portfolio may include several
of the following criteria which demonstrate critical thinking:
Critical Thinking Toolkit | Unit III - Teaching to Promote Critical Thinking Skills Page 53
Teaching to Promote Critical Thinking Skills
Teachers and students can collaborate to establish and prioritize the criteria
that will be used for assessment, in both modalities: formative assessment and
summative assessment.
Peer evaluations (provide a form and a rubric for objective peer evaluation)
Notes from the parents, other teachers, school community (testifying about
the impact of the project in the community)
Critical Thinking Toolkit | Unit III - Teaching to Promote Critical Thinking Skills Page 54