Part 3 of a 3 part series
You’ve now chosen a platform for the “Face of Your Classroom” as well as identified some activities and assignments that engage students. In this step you will look for ways to personalize the work and provide options around assessing the learning. Here, you think about the ways in which students will interact with the work and demonstrate competency, as well as how you will embrace learner variability.
Within an online environment, formative and summative assessments are unique, and methods for communication are varied. Each student has unique needs, wants, or motivators. Think about tools for assessment, communication, and differentiation - as well as how you can continue to personalize learning.
Consider the following questions regarding ASSESSMENT:
Sound like a tall order? Let's dig into some resources that can help guide you on your journey.
How do you empower students with voice and choice? One way is to provide a variety of tools and formats for students to create artifacts to demonstrate their competency. Visit Thing 14 - Creative Communications or the companion on the 21things4students site Thing 17 - Creative Communications. Here, students are asked to consider the best way to communicate their message. This is done by choosing the right platform (digital tool), process (method), and product (digital artifact) to demonstrate competency. Students then showcase their work through video, animation, audio, cartoons, screencasts, slideshows, infographics, or other media format against pre-established rubrics.
In addition to formative and summative assessments, gathering feedback and providing opportunities for students to ask questions should be built into the mix of an online experience. Embrace tools like Zoom, Adobe Connect, WebEx, Google Hangouts, or Microsoft Teams and offer to host virtual meetings. When students feel comfortable in the protocols of the face-to-face and online classroom environments, they will be more actively and confidently communicating. Whether it is with their peers or with the teacher, building capacity is the key here.
Here are some quick tips:
As you consider these tools and resources, you might want to revisit your guiding questions from the beginning of this section (Part 3) on Assessment.
With the T3PD model from Thing 19 - Assessment and Analysis as a guide, check out free formative and summative tools for assessing students.
For more ideas about how to build engagement into your assignments and activities: