In this clip, Trevor Bowen, the deputy head teacher at Almondbury High School and Language College in Huddersfield,
talks about what he sees as being the most important points of assessment for learning, including feedback strategies and
peer assessment.
Trevor Bowen – Deputy Head
My
name is Trevor Bowen, I’m Deputy Head of Almondbury High School and Language College in Huddersfield.
In terms of assessment
for learning I think there are some important things that teachers must do. The most important thing a teacher must do is
plan a lesson really, really, well. In planning a lesson you take in to account the nature of all the children that are in
the room, but also you set out doing two or three key things. One is that you set up what the learning intention for that
lesson is. So the children are sign-posted very, very, early on as to what you intend to do with that lesson.
Once
you have sign-posted what you want to do, you then have to create a climate in the classroom. I have three rules in my classroom
that are used by Professor Dylan Wiliam, and I can tell you I know for a fact make a great deal of difference. One is that
no child is allowed to put their hand up unless they’re asking me a question. In other words I decide which child gets asked
a question. And that’s a really effective way of differentiating the classroom because you ask different children different
questions, but also every child thinks at any moment they’re going to be asked a question so it brings every child into the
lesson and they’re engaged.
The second thing I have is that when they do answer a question they’re not allowed to say
“I don’t know”, they must give an answer. By saying “I don’t know”, sometimes that means “I don’t care”. And by saying “I
don’t know”, they are opting out of the lesson, they’re retreating from it, the pressure’s off them. So if you insist on getting
an answer, and if you have to move to another child and come back to them, that way they know they’re engaged in it all the
time.
The other thing that is more difficult to try and get in a classroom, but I have as well, is it’s ok to get things
wrong. Children are very, very worried about making mistakes and that takes a lot, lot longer to create a climate where they
can make mistakes, and you say to them, “it’s alright to make mistakes”, “learn from your mistakes”, because at this moment
in time you’re not being finally assessed for it and actually when you get to the final assessment, and we do lots of staging
along the way, if you make a mistake then, then that will count towards you final grade, but at this moment in time when you’re
in a classroom and you’re exploring your ideas and your understandings and your misunderstandings, it’s perfectly ok to make
mistakes. And by doing that I think you draw everybody in to the lesson.
Lesson structures are quite important, it’s
very important that there’s not too much teacher talk, you’ve got about five minutes in my opinion to hook children into the
learning that you’re doing that day. They’ve been on the playground, they’ve been playing, now it’s a lesson, you’ve got about
five minutes to draw them in, with either a description of where this lesson sits in the scheme of things, or what the intentions
of that lesson were.
Then if you’re going to give them anymore information, you probably don’t want to go beyond about
ten minutes. Once you go beyond ten minutes children start to become a bit restless, they’re not listening as effectively.
And then you spend the vast majority of the time getting children to demonstrate back to you what they know and understand.
Now this is the difficult bit with what assessment for learning is all about. It’s very draining for a teacher to do this
but it’s absolutely the most important thing you do. You take feedback from the children almost constantly throughout the
lesson and adjust your teaching accordingly. So you reshape the teaching dependant on what the children tell you they understand
or they don’t understand. Simple techniques are things like, they all have a little mini white board, you ask them a question,
that’s why questioning is so important you have to think about the sorts of questions you’re going to ask them before you
start. But you ask them a question and the idea about asking that question is, “do you get this?” Or, “don’t you?” If you
do get it and I get a series of answers, once they have been given the white board and I’ve asked the question I say write
your answer down, it’s usually a one word or two word answer and hold it up for everybody to see. Then as a teacher you can
scan the room very, very, quickly, and make a decision, they’ve either got this or they haven’t.
If they’ve got it,
move on then, even if your lesson plan for that day had lots of other things to do to reinforce the learning, if they’ve got
it, they’ve got it, move on. But if they haven’t got it, then you need to reshape that lesson to reinforce their learning.
All the techniques that he has, in my opinion, engage pupils in an interactive way, simple things like: think about
what the whole lesson is about in one question and give it to them as they walk through the door. Now if they’ve got it, then
that lesson is finished. You know they give you an answer on a piece of paper, you take them in, you read them very quickly,
you choose a child to explain why they’ve written what they’ve written, and the lesson is over. However if they haven’t got
it you can see all the misconceptions in what they’re saying.
Another way that’s probably more powerful is to give
them that lesson as they leave, and then you collect in their answers, you look at what they understand or don’t understand,
and then you use that to shape the lesson following.
I’ll give you a typical example. I am a science teacher, so I
once had a girl who believed that we have day and night because the earth is part of a pivot. The sun is at one end of a seesaw,
the moon is at the other, and during a day the sun rises on this seesaw and falls at night. It’s a model that’s not quite
right but it meets her experience and then when you and when you say to her “have you ever seen the moon and sun in the sky
at the same time?” That model would then collapse and she would then reshape that, no she hadn’t. So at that point you’re
trying to get beneath the learning to where the misconceptions are, because it’s not just about being able to answer an exam
question, it’s about dealing with children’s understanding of the nature of the subject, and that’s quite difficult.
Other
things that are really, really, powerful are things like giving children other children’s work to mark, and asking them to
mark each other’s work in a way where it is based around the exam board and the assessment criteria, so they learn two things.
One is that this is what the examiner is looking for when they’re marking your work, but secondly, I want you to set this
child some targets here next to you, that is based on what you think is good and the strengths of the work and the work that
they need to improve. And we have a little golden rule, which is it’s two stars and wish. Two strengths, one weakness, simple
little thing the children can learn, and then give it out to them. And they write on the bottom of the children’s work two
strengths and something that they could do to improve it.
In terms of written feedback what I’ve found is this, if
you give a child a grade, children are addicted to grades. If you give them a grade they don’t read anything beyond it. So
when you are marking their work you’ve got two choices. If you want to grade their work I would hold back the grade, I would
give out the comments and the comments should be informative about the strengths of the work and how they should improve it,
and give them the grade later. In other words, make them read the comment you’ve made because that will make the biggest difference
to their work. Or another good way of doing it is to get them into a group of children and hand out randomly if you like within
the group your comments for their work and say “which comment matches your work then?” and again you get a discussion around
the strengths and weaknesses of the work.
Written feedback has to be interactive if it’s just a teacher making comments
on the work that the child never reads, then the child does not take that further in terms of assessment for learning.
The
final thing I think is ultimately this, in terms of a hierarchy if you can get children to self-assess, in other words they
can tell you what they think they know and what they understand, self-assessment is really important at the start of the work,
start of a module of work where you learn what you know already, build on that. But also at the end of the work where they
can see the progress they’ve made, so that you say to them “this is what you understood at the start of all this”, “this is
now what you understand at the end of all this”, “can’t you see the progress you’ve made?” and “by the way you say you understand
all of this, but you don’t understand that”, well that then is the target for the work to improve even further. And I think
that’s a really, really important part of what they say.
So questioning is crucial, that you ask good questions that
actually probe for the depth of knowledge and understanding, and that you use your questioning to decide whether or not children
understand something or not. And if they do you move on and if you don’t you reinforce.
With SEN pupils here’s the
key thing, literacy opens the door to begin with for all children. Everywhere in my classroom there are key words displayed,
we will have almost quite old fashioned if you like tests of what those key words mean, children are given those key words
at the start of a unit, regularly tested throughout it all and special needs children particularly you need a match between
what they know and understand, in terms of keywords and then trying to help them to expand their writing throughout the unit.
But the keyword, if you don’t understand the meaning of the word “photosynthesis”, you can’t then answer a question on it.
And there needs to be a lot of time spent by the teacher reinforcing it all the time.
One of the things I have, which
is something I picked up from accelerated learning from Alastair Smith, it’s a brilliantly simple idea, what you do is you
create what they call a learning matt. It has to be coloured because the right hand side of the brain works on colour, it
has to include words, because the left hand side of the brain works on words. And what you do is you draw a diagram or you
write down all of the information that you want the children to learn for that module, and you print it on a coloured mat,
and you laminate it, and stick it on their desk, and every time they come into the lesson ,that mat is there. They then put
their exercise book on top of it, and all the time that they are working they sort of, and you can imagine this, scan off
the page sometimes or sometimes they may be a little distracted and they’re reading all of the information that you want them
to learn over a ten week period and it reinforces that all of the time. And of course down each side of the mat is all of
the words you want them to know right from the very beginning and you can use it in all sorts of different ways.
But
the key thing for special needs for me is about literacy really in terms of my subject area, them knowing what the words mean,
and helping them to answer exam questions fully, by knowing what the marks scheme is, and that’s where the assessment for
learning works.
And you can be very skilful about how you pair children together, or group them. There are all sorts
of ways of grouping them, of similar ability, of very different ability, and often it’s said that you wouldn’t necessarily
put a more-able child with a less-able child, because the more-able child needs to be extended. But actually when you ask
a more-able child to teach a less-able child, because they understand it and they don’t, teaching is one of the ways where
you understand yourself whether or not you’ve got it, and that reinforces it for the more-able learner.
And the final
thing we’ve done a lot of work here on, which works very, very, well for special needs children, but all children, is that
we have a boy, girl, seating policy in the school. A boy must sit next to a girl in every lesson they’re in. And it’s very,
very, simply this: boys and girls are equally descriptive, but girls are more reflective than boys. If you ask a boy how they
feel, they shut up and won’t speak, whereas a girl is more likely to be open. And if you put a boy and a girl together, you
end up with what I describe as a perfect learner, because then finally boy are very speculative, they like to take risks.
Girls don’t take as many risks or don’t like to take risks. So you’ve got the two together, you’ve got a descriptive learner
who’s learning from each other about reflection, and finally learning from each other about risk-taking, and you’ll get girls
to take risks that they ordinarily wouldn’t take if they’re sat next to a boy, because what girls like to do is be quite comfortable,
they like to get all their stuff together and understand what they have to do and then start, and boys don’t like to talk
about feelings, and if you put those two things together, you bring all the children into the learning. That would be assessment
for learning for me.