Picture Talk: This Strategy Can
Picture Talk: This Strategy Can
Picture Talk: This Strategy Can
assess students prior knowledge, current values and level of focus/engagement at the start of a
lesson
assess students feelings and comfort levels at the end of a lesson (helping to 'square things
away' before moving on to other lessons).
Examples:
https://gdhr.wa.gov.au/learning/teaching-strategies/tuning-in/picture-talk
20 Simple
Assessment
Strategies You Can
Use Every Day
by TeachThought Staff
February 7, 2020
3. Use quizzes
Give a short quiz at the end of class to check for comprehension.
4. Ask students to summarize
Have students summarize or paraphrase important concepts and lessons. This can be
done orally, visually, or otherwise.
5. Hand signals
Hand signals can be used to rate or indicate students’ understanding of content.
Students can show anywhere from five fingers to signal maximum understanding to one
finger to signal minimal understanding. This strategy requires engagement by all
students and allows the teacher to check for understanding within a large group.
6. Response cards
Index cards, signs, whiteboards, magnetic boards, or other items are simultaneously
held up by all students in class to indicate their response to a question or problem
presented by the teacher. Using response devices, the teacher can easily note the
responses of individual students while teaching the whole group.
7. Four corners
A quick and easy snapshot of student understanding, Four Corners provides an
opportunity for student movement while permitting the teacher to monitor and assess
understanding.
The teacher poses a question or makes a statement. Students then move to the
appropriate corner of the classroom to indicate their response to the prompt. For
example, the corner choices might include “I strongly agree,” “I strongly disagree,” “I
agree somewhat,” and “I’m not sure.”
8. Think-pair-share
Students take a few minutes to think about the question or prompt. Next, they pair with
a designated partner to compare thoughts before sharing with the whole class.
9. Choral reading
Students mark text to identify a particular concept and chime in, reading the marked text
aloud in unison with the teacher. This strategy helps students develop fluency;
differentiate between the reading of statements and questions; and practice phrasing,
pacing, and reading dialogue.
10. One question quiz
Ask a single focused question with a specific goal that can be answered within a minute
or two. You can quickly scan the written responses to assess student understanding.
12. 3-2-1
Students consider what they have learned by responding to the following prompt at the
end of the lesson: 3) things they learned from your lesson; 2) things they want to know
more about; and 1) questions they have. The prompt stimulates student reflection on the
lesson and helps to process the learning.
13. Ticket out the door
Students write in response to a specific prompt for a short period of time. Teachers
collect their responses as a “ticket out the door” to check for students’ understanding of
a concept taught. This exercise quickly generates multiple ideas that could be turned
into longer pieces of writing at a later time.
Both student and teacher can quickly assess whether the student acquired the intended
knowledge and skills. This is a formative assessment, so a grade is not the intended
purpose.