3. If Rip Van Winkle were to wake up today, he
would be awestruck by the multimedia
messages and the world around him.
But if he were to wake up in a classroom,
the only thing that would have changed is
the colour of the blackboard!!!
• Einstein said “ We cannot solve problems using
the same kind of thinking that we used when we
created them.” Applied to education, we cannot
educate today's children using the same
methods we used yesterday.
3
4. In education, most of the change has
focused on Teaching-Learning. The
focus now is shifting to
assessment, which is believed to be
the driving change in education.
• The challenge lies in reformulating
curriculum, reformatting standards, developing
instructional strategies to deliver them and
designing assessments that measure these
skills.
4
5. Using the data driven approach
towards assessment, teachers and
students would have multiple ways
to measure competencies. A balance
of formative, summative and
alternate assessment would be the
norm.
• Tests would be taken over time as students show
readiness and mastery of content. Test scores
would show growth rather than merely
comparisons to others.
5
6. •Fundamental skills include core
skills of
Reading, Writing, Math, Science
and Social studies.
Once the foundations are
built, 21st century skills
support, enable and facilitate the
fundamental skills.
6
7. WHAT THEN ARE THESE 21st
CENTURY SKILS?
1) THINKING
Critical thinking
Problem solving
Creating
Metacognition
7
9. 3) LIVING IN THE WORLD
Civic responsibility and
Citizenship
Global understanding
Leadership and Responsibility
College and career readiness
9
10. 21st CENTURY ASSESSMENT
FUNDAMENTALS
• 21st century assessment will be part of a
larger system that supports student
learning, and is incorporated at all levels.
10
11. ASSESSMENT SHOULD BE
RESPONSIVE
• Visible performance based work generates
data that can inform curriculum and
instruction.
• Assessments are developed keeping
incorporating best practices in feedback and
formative assessment.
• Feedback is to be targeted to the goal and
outcome.
11
12. ASSESSMENT SHOULD BE
FLEXIBLE
• Lesson design, curriculum and
assessment require flexibility.
• Assessment needs to be adaptable to
students and settings.
• Students‟ decisions, actions, applications
vary, thus making assessment flexible too.
12
13. ASSESSMENT SHOULD BE
INTEGRATED
• Assessment needs to be incorporated on a
day to day basis, rather than a once a year
activity.
• Assessments are informed by awareness of
meta cognition. Students consider their
choices, identify alternative strategies and
represent knowledge through different means.
11/24/2013
13
14. ASSESSMENT SHOULD BE
INFORMATIVE
• The desired 21st Century goals and
objectives should be clearly stated and
explicitly taught.
• Learning objectives, Instructional
strategies and assessment methods
should be clearly aligned.
• Students build on prior learning in a logical
sequence.
14
15. ASSESSMENT SHOULD BE
USING MULTIPLE METHODS.
• Assessment continuum should include a
spectrum of strategies.
• Students should be able to demonstrate
knowledge and skills through relevant
tasks, projects and performances.
• Authentic performance based assessment
should be emphasized.
15
16. ASSESSMET SHOULD BE
COMMUNICATED
• Results should be routinely posted on a
database along with standard based
commentary.
• Students receive routine feedback of their
progress
• Educational community recognizes
achievement of students beyond standardized
tests.
16
17. ASSESSMENT SHOULD BE
TECHNICALLY SOUND.
• It should be precise and technically
sound, so that use are consistent with their
administration and interpretation.
• It should measure stated objectives and
21st century skills with legitimacy and
integrity.
• Assessment should be fair to all.
17
18. BLENDING OF FORMATIVE AND
SUMMATIVE ASSESSMENTS
• Formative assessment requires a systematic
and planned approach. Evidence is gathered
throughout the instructional process and
teaching is responsive to that evidence.
• Summative assessments are administered at
the end of the instruction. It provides a
snapshot of a student‟s knowledge at that
particular time.
18
19. CHALLENGES AHEAD
• There is little consensus on what 21st century skills
are.
• Complex thinking is difficult to express. Assessing it
will require explicit processes and measures.
• Need to alter the perception that 21st century skills
are an add on. Instead they need to be integrated
into the teaching learning system.
• Intensive professional development is required for
students, teachers, school leaders and policy
makers.
19
20. THE GRASSHOPPER AND
THE ANT
If instruction involves the business
of conveying knowledge, then
assessment is sometimes the
languid grasshopper.
20
21. ASSESSMENT OF 21st CENTURY
SKILLS IS A LENS THROUGH WHICH
TO VIEW CONTENT KNOWLEDGE.
21
23. RUBRICS
• Rubrics are generally the most specific of the
21st century measures and include explicit
indicators of achievement at all levels.
• They are more descriptive than rubrics and can
be used by both teachers and students for peer
and self evaluation.
23
24. RUBRIC FOR ASSESSMENT OF COMM.
SKILL
EXEMPLARY
PROFICIENT
BASIC
NOVICE
Conveys
message for a
selected target
Recognizes
purpose, can
organize &
present info to
meet it.
Is aware or the
purpose and
can organize the
info to meet the
purpose
Unclear of the
purpose,
compromises
quality of
information and
presentation.
Confused about
the purpose of
communicatn
Has difficulty
focusing on
content.
Receptive
communication
Listens, reads,
views
purposefully
Distinguishs
facts from
opinion,
recognizes
intent of
message
Identifies facts,
summarizes
main ideas.
Can identify
some facts in a
message.
developing
skills in
interpreting
message.
Partially
understands the
purpose of the
message.
Uses a full range
of resources to
express ideas.
Uses a
combination of
comm.
resources
appropriate to
the topic.
Regularly
selects a few
resources that
are a good
match for the
assignment.
Requires
support to
communicate
through
additional
resources.
Familiar with
only a few
modalities for
expressing
ideas, result
compromised
work.
24
25. CHECKLISTS
• Checklists are more functional and contain a list of essential targets
and desired outcomes. They can be used while the students are in
the process of learning or on the completion of the activity.
CHECKILST FOR PRESENTATION
COMMENTS
Introduction captures attention of audience
Objectives are stated in the introduction
Content is clear and understandable.
Presentation is logically sequenced
Projects voice so all can hear
Uses technology to effectively support message
Summary synthesizes main idea.
25
26. STUDENT CONTRACTS
• Learning contracts are agreements between students
and teachers that describe the learning outcomes and
strategies for achieving them.
• They give the students a choice over personal goals
and strategies to achieve these goals.
• They provide for differentiation of learning and
assessing and can be used to hold learners
accountable.
• They encourage a blending of core content and 21st
century outcomes.
26
27. LEARNING CONTRACT
NAME________________________
TOPIC, UNIT OR
GOAL_______________________
Student‟s responsibilities:
Completion dates and deadlines:
Teacher‟s responsibilities
Evidence required:
Resources recommended/ required
Assessment of learning ( formative and
summative):
Student‟s signature_______________
Parent‟s signature________________
Teacher‟s signature_______________
27
28. SELF ASSESSMENT/
REFLECTION
• Self reflection and assessment are important lifelong
skills that can be developed and supported in the
classroom.
• Self assessment may be daily or long term, oral or
written, done individually or in small groups.
• Elements of self assessment include opportunity for
reviewing learning, identifying confusion, providing
evidence of learning, evaluating progress, planning and
improving outcomes.
28
29. SAMPLE SELF ASSESSMENT
•
•
•
•
GENERIC QUESTIONS:
What did I learn?
What worked and what did not?
What‟s next?
•
•
•
•
SPECIFIC QUESTIONS:
What steps can I take to improve my writing?
What three habits of mind did I use and how did I apply them?
How well did I listen to the ideas of others and make a
contribution to the group?
• If I were to do this again, here is what I would do differently:
29
30. PEER REVIEW
• It is important to make students aware of the importance of non
judgmental peer review and to make it a regular part of the learning
process.
• A structure such as a checklist can help students stay focused on the
learning outcomes.
Peer Assessment of Group Project
4=Strongly agree 3=Agree 2=disagree 1=strongly disagree
SCORE
All members contributed equally and fairly to the group.
Members of the group worked together well
When we disagreed , we were able to settle it promptly without
hurting each others feelings
Group members encouraged each other towards achievement
of goals
30
31. OBSERVATION
• Teacher can use formal or informal observation to
assess student understanding to use 21st century skills.
• Observation can be anecdotal or may be combined
with a checklist or rubric.
• Teacher can note the use of web based reference
material, actively listening to others‟ contributions,
building on others ideas, adding original ideas to the
discussion etc. to the checklist.
31
32. LOGS
• Logs help students track their work towards a target. They can be
used by both teachers and students to show progress towards a
benchmark.
• Eg, a student assembling an electronic portfolio may track his own
progress, set schedules and post messages to other students.
PROJECT PROGRESS LOGS:
DATE
PROGRESS
EVIDENCE
What goals have I worked towards?
What have I learned?
What are my next steps? What is the timeframe?
Whom can I collaborate with to improve my work?
How have I used my critical thinking skills?
How would I assess my progress so far?
32
33. CONCEPT MAPS
• Graphic organizers can be used to assess students‟ knowledge,
understanding and critical thinking.
• A design that contains only partial information can be given to the
students , who can then fill it with teacher support.
Video
Web
2.0
Sims
• You tube
• Movie
maker
• Digital
storytelling
• Blog
• Twitter
• Facebook
• Xtranormal
• Secondlife
33
34. JOURNALS
• They provide a window into a student‟s thinking and
learning.
• A journal entry begins with a response to a question.
“Compare a decision you had to make to the one made
by the character in the story”. Or “How will you use
your new knowledge in your next blog posting?”
• They help students assimilate new content, describe
points of confusion or reflect on controversial issues.
• They can be supported with wikis and other supporting
software.
34
35. QUESTIONNING
• Formal and informal questioning can be used to move
students forward with their learning.
• Formally they can be used to assess previous
knowledge in the beginning of a lesson or for closure of
a lesson.
• A series of questions ranging in cognitive complexity
from understanding to application, analysis and
synthesis can add depth to the lesson.
35
36. PORTFOLIO REVIEW
• Portfolios can be used to demonstrate processes and
growth in relation to selected Learning Objectives.
• They can be used to display 21st century skills such as
Problem solving, creativity and information literacy and
reflect strengths and weaknesses.
• To be objective and comprehensive, assessment of
student portfolios should be based on contracts,
rubrics, peer/self assessment.
• E- portfolios are becoming increasingly popular.
36
38. CRITICAL THINKING
• Definitions of Critical Thinking
include concepts of analyzing
information, applying strategies
for deciding, readiness to
consider ideas ,using logical
enquiry, making inferences,
appraising evidence, testing
conclusions, making accurate
judgments and analyzing
assumptions.
38
39. IN PRACTICE:
Mrs GREENLY’S CLASSROOM
• Mrs Greenly is covering an interdisciplinary unit on Genetically
modified food.
• Begins with an introductory KWL activity, wherein students write on
sticky notes and paste them on the KWL chart.
• She determines their knowledge level and presents them with core
knowledge and vocabulary needed along with a self assessment
rubric where students can track their progress.
• After a quick formative assessment she decides which resources and
strategies to use.
• She puts the students in groups to read two opposing articles on GM
food.
• Groups are then reformulated with student choice. They can choose
to be a scientist, farmer, nutritionist, politician etc.
39
40. • Using previously acquired digital literacy skills, they complete
a web quest for in depth information on GM foods.
• A world forum is set up with representatives from each interest
group. Some students present the groups‟ findings while
others become part of the evaluation panel.
• All students participate in peer review, using a specially
designed rubric.
• Finally, the groups prepare a product that can be a brochure,
power point presentation, prezi, video, website, blog, poster or
any other platform.
• Each group presents 5 important facts for the others to know.
• The desired critical thinking skills are woven into the
assignment and are clear to the students.
40
42. PROBLEM SOLVING
• Problem solving is the
basic process of
identifying problems,
considering options
and making informed
choices.
• It is used when an
easy answer to
problem does not exist.
•
•
•
•
•
It involves the following
Knowledge and Skills:
Describing the problem with
depth and clarity.
Evaluating alternatives and
considering multiple
perspectives.
Gathering information to
make informed choices.
Implementing and
monitoring.
Evaluating the problem. If
required, revisit it.
42
43. STEPS IN PROBLEM
SOLVING
• Understand the problem
• Brainstorm possible solutions
• Devise a plan
• Carry out the plan
• Evaluate the result
Beyond the classroom, Problem solving has global,
local and personal applications. Those of us
who develop problem solving skills are better
equipped at solving conflicts in the real world.
43
44. IN PRACTICE
• Create a pretend scenario for students that requires
them to think creatively to make it through. An example
might be getting stranded on an island, knowing that
help will not arrive for three days. The group has a
limited amount of food and water and must create
shelter from items around the island. Encourage
working together as a group and hearing out every
child that has an idea about how to make it through the
three days as safely and comfortably as possible.
44
45. PROBLEM SOLVING RUBRIC
EXPERT
COMPETENT APPRENTICE NOVICE
IDENTIFIES
THE
PROBLEM
Clearly
describes the
problem
including details
and supporting
information.
Describes the
basics of the
problem with
some details &
supporting
information.
Explains a part
of the problem
but has trouble
understanding
all parts of the
problem.
Has difficulty
recognizing and
defining parts
of the problem.
IDENTIFIES
MULTIPLE
SOLUTIONS
Comes up with a
number of
feasible and
clearly defined
solutions. Say
four.
Described three
possible
solutions.
Described 1 or
2 possible
solutions.
Had no solution
or is not sure of
his solution.
Evaluates the
solutions and
picks one that
seems feasible.
Gave a simple
explanation for
one choice.
Is not able to
explain a
solution.
Analyzes all the
DEFENDS
SOLUTIONS possible
solutions and
picks up one that
shows his
understanding of
the problem.
45
46. CREATIVITY
• Creativity is the ability or
power to create, to produce
through imaginative skill
and to bring into existence
something new.
• Originality, uniqueness,
imagination, flexibility,
fluency, making
connections and forming
new patterns are the core
of Creativity.
• Creativity is the process
of making something that
hasn't been made before
- be it a painting, an
idea, a solution, a
relationship or a new
dance move. It is a set of
beliefs and attitudes as
much as it is a toolbox of
skills and knowledge.
http://www.thinkingclassroom.co.uk/ThinkingClassroom/
Creativity.aspx
46
47. PODUCTS THAT STUDENTS
HAVE DESIGNED
• A dog leash/collar that carries the dog‟s water bottle.
• A twirling spaghetti fork and an automatic coffee
stirrer.
• A car seat for a pet.
• A sleeve sneeze catcher.
• An educational twister game.
• A new musical instrument with both percussion and
wind.
47
48. IN PRACTICE
• In my Physics class (VIII) at the end of the session when the
students are familiar with the concepts of air resistance,
buoyant force, Newton‟s laws, they are given to design an
Egg Lander that would land an egg from a height without
breaking.
• Students are divided into groups of 4 or 5 and work
collectively to create an Egg Lander, that they research,
design, test their design, modify if needed and finally launch
the Lander.
• Each group then prepares a product like a ppt, video, prezi
etc.
48
49. METACOGNITION
• Metacognition is an expensive way of
saying “Thinking about one‟s own Thinking”.
• It requires taking active control over thinking
and learning and using strategies for
enhancing learning and performance.
• It considers how learners take in, store and
retrieve information.
49
50. • Darwin observed that “Ignorance more frequently
begets confidence than does knowledge”
• In classrooms, ignorance cannot be bliss.
• When an athletic team loses a game, they go
back and review the tapes. They analyze errors
and device strategies to improve their
performance in the next game. This is
Metacognition.
50
51. SELF ASSESSMENT CAN HELP
STUDENTS UNCOVER THEIR THINKING
PROCESS
• Assessment strategies can be wrapped into other
assessments:
• Think aloud: Students talk, think and record their
processes.
• Written responses to writing prompts.
• Graphic organizers while the work is in progress
• Anecdotal records.
• Questionnaires that give students insight into their
work.
51
52. METACOGNITIVE REFLECTION
PLANNING:
•What do you know about this topic?
•What do you want to know about this topic?
•What resources are you considering exploring?
•Where did you start? What did you do first? Why?
ACTING:
•Describe your steps.
•Which resources seem worthwhile? Why?
•How did you know you were doing along? What did you ask yourself?
•What problems did you run into? How did you adjust your process in
response?
•How did you know you reached your goal?
EVALUATING:
•What worked to produce a high quality product?
•Describe any new strategies you used.
•What would you do differently if you were starting over?
11/24/2013 you do in relation to the requirements of the assignment?
copyright www.brainybetty.com
•How did
2006 All Rights Reserved
52
53. COMMUNICATION SKILLS
• Communication involves creating meaning, imparting
knowledge, skills and beliefs to others and receiving
inputs from multiple sources.
• Learning in school and in the outside world is based on
effective communication. Today‟s teacher has a vast
array of resources like audio, video, digital images and
technologies that connect students in real time, even to
remote areas.
• Students can record their learning and explain their
thinking, share with others, display their work, thus
increasing the relevance and meaning of knowledge.
53
54. COMMUNICATION SKILLS FOR THE
21ST CENTURY CLASSROOM.
• Verbal communication such as conversation, debate,
persuasion, constructive dialogue etc.
• Receptive communication skills: Paying attention,
listening and comprehending.
• Reading, viewing and listening to multiple types of
media.
• Producing effective communication through oral,
written, visual, non verbal and technical media.
• Expressing views and preferences in a neutral manner.
54
55. •
•
•
•
•
•
•
ACTIVITIES THAT INVOLVE
COMM. SKILLS
Reading
Multicultural understanding
Math
Games
Summarizing
Teach another
Debates
They can be integrated with other instruction or used as a
stand alone.
Communication skills can be assessed using checklists and
Rubrics.
55
56. COLLABORATION
• Collaboration is learning to plan and work together, to
consider diverse perspectives, to participate in discourse
by contributing, listening and supporting others. It is
about recognizing and valuing individual contributions
towards the group‟s productivity and improvement.
• Collaborative learning is based on the idea of synergyThat the whole equals more than the individual parts.
• A brilliant example: Facebook was created from the
collaborated ideas of many people
56
57. st
21
ESSENTIAL
CENTURY
COLLABORATION SKILLS
• Balance listening and speaking, leading and following
in a group.
• Demonstrate flexibility, compromise, empathy.
• Consider, prioritize and advance the needs of the
larger group.
• Work together to create new ideas and new products.
• Share responsibility for completing work.
• Work respectfully with others to make decisions that
include the views of multiple individuals.
57
59. VISUAL LITERACY
• Visual literacy refers to both understanding
(interpretation, analysis, evaluation) and
production ( creativity and synthesis of
ideas) of digital images.
• Methods and modes include pictures,
photographs, comics, symbols, maps,
graphic organizers, infographics, graphs,
timelines, flowcharts.
59
60. IN PRACTICE
• Students of class 8 of my School worked in
groups to research on topics of their choice and
prepared infographics as the end product, to
illustrate what they have learnt.
• A checklist or a rubric to assess Visual literacy
should include organization, labelling, use of
colour etc. This will help the students to
understand the grading criteria and it will also
ensure consistency on the part of the teacher.
60
61. A CHECKLIST OR RUBRIC FOR
ASSESING STUDENT WORK
•
•
•
•
•
•
Interprets symbols used in the imagery.
Understands meanings and draws inferences.
Compares source to other resources on the topic
Draws on previous knowledge to make meaning.
Critically analyzes the work.
Translates images into written language in one‟s own
words.
• Creates a visual response to the work.
61
62. TECHNOLOGY LITERACY
• 8 to 18 year olds are spending 8 to 10 hours a day
interfacing with media in the form of TV, music,
computer, smart phones, video games.
• Nicholas Carr states that deep reading is being
replaced by superficial and cursory learning, die to the
bombardment of the brain with constant stimuli.
• In his research found that digital natives are better at
multitasking and short term decision making and less
capable of complex reasoning and emotional aptitudes
like empathy.
62
63. THE CHANGING ROLE OF
THE TEACHER
• The teacher‟s role has changed from a deliverer of
information to that of a conductor of learning who helps
the students to reflect and apply what they have learnt.
• Thus, assessment too must be flexible. Multiple
methods using multiple modalities will help students
demonstrate their skills and knowledge in many ways.
• Technology will both guide and track learning and
support assessment.
63
65. CIVIC & CITIZENSHIP SKILLS
• These are the skills that we need to live in a world that
we cannot visualize today.
• Studies have shown that these skills can be explicitly
taught.(www.civicyouth.org)
• Value of civic engagement has shown to improve with
participation, increased understanding, tolerance and
respect for others.
65
66. IN PRACTICE
• Prepare a skit on Historical figures and
present them to the elementary/junior
school students.
• Topic Day: Students can research topics
like „Services for seniors‟, „Health care for
the underprivileged children‟ prepare and
present a product like a ppt, poster, prezi,
tweet, infograph, website, blog etc.
66
67. GLOBAL UNDERSTANDING
• Cultural awareness to recognize, respect
and accept the interdependence of all
cultures and countries.
• Education should empower students to
build a knowledge of global issues.
67
68. IN PRACTICE
• Student exchange programs provide both
the cultures an opportunity to learn from
each other!
• Youth for Understanding is an International
Cultural program that my school is
participating in.
68
69. COLLEGE AND CAREER /
WORKPLACE SKILLS
• Begin with a good foundation in core areas, but academic
knowledge alone is not enough.
• Students should be able to rise to higher levels of Blooms
Taxonomy, solve problems, draw on their creativity, and
are insightful into how they think and learn.
• Communication, Collaboration, Technology expertise build
workplace skills that employees value.
• The emphasis on college and career skills to reduce the
gap between skills learnt in high school and skills needed
in college and the workplace.
69
70. MYTHS AND TRUTHS ABOUT 21ST CENTURY
TEACHING, LEARNING & ASSESSING
MYTHS
TRUTHS
It is not for everyone
Students of all ages, grades, subjects, genders,
cultures and achievement levels benefit from it.
It is too hard for some
students
When used thoughtfully and appropriately, all level of
students benefit.
Classrooms will become
chaotic
There may be some messiness, but learning occurs
in a non linear fashion
It is more important to
teach core content
Core content must be integrated with 21st century
skills, as they support each other. They must be
assessed together
It makes more work for
the teachers
It is a change that requires a different approach to
teaching and assessing.
It will replace tests
It will increase the spectrum of assessment that are
used to determine learning.
70
71. REFERENCES
• Assessing 21st century skills by Laura Greenstein.
• http://homepage.usask.ca/~dln136/files/873%20%20prototype2.pdf
• http://education.cu-portland.edu/blog/teachingstrategies/5-problem-solving-activities-for-theclassroom/
71