7 Best Practices for Mid-Year Formative Assessments
If you’re not looking smart enough, it will be missed. Isn’t that the key when it comes to formative assessments, looking smartly at ways to extract what students have learned over a short length of time? That student assessment should be taking place daily in classes goes without question. There are a myriad number of ways to get this done. For example, you can insert questions of various difficulty throughout the lesson. You can have a set time within the lesson for a quick assessment of one to three written responses. An “Exit Slip” (written reflection at the end of class prompted by a question) is yet another example of a daily assessment.
Rightly so, teachers make mid-year formative assessments more of an emphasis. As I observed for ten years as an administrator, these often take the shape of a long test. The mid-year formative assessment is more summative than formative. Sure, in a year-long course, the halfway point “final” evaluation could be both formative and summative in nature. More often than not, the mid-year assessment is a culmination, summary type of assessment, of what has been taught for several months. Unfortunately, rarely do mid-year assessments (because of the ensuing break or vacation) shape the beginning of the subsequent semester. This then becomes the first best practice for mid-year assessments out of the seven total provided below; namely, using the results of the mid-year assessment as a tool to guide instruction on the first week of school when school is back in session.
- Do not let the information gathered about your students’ learning from the mid-year assessment go to waste. Re-teach concepts students struggled with, as evidenced by exam results, at the start of the new semester. Intuitively it may seem more natural to start “fresh.” But with learning gaps, teaching (and learning) could prove to be more difficult at semester two. Indeed, many students fare worse after mid-year exactly because they began learning the more challenging material with gaps in their learning.
- Traditional mid-year assessments should be combined with an alternative type of assessments. Expecting all students to ace their 100 points, fifty question, multiple choice test is foolish. No matter the quality of your teaching, you are simply not going to get the results you imagine. There are students who do well on these type of tests, and then there are those that don’t, even when they know the material! Consider having students do an alternative assessment, like a portfolio, in addition to a traditional assessment.
- Preview your mid-year assessment. This involves preparing students at least a week and a half out by giving them “final exam” type test questions as warm-ups at the start of class or as concept review homework worksheets.
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