[Assessment] EFF in the classroom & Role MapsAaron Kohring akohring at utk.eduTue Jan 10 16:13:06 EST 2006
Marie, Another of your questions refers to the Role Maps. For me, I'd try to keep it simple by narrowing the focus. For example, say you have a classroom where the students' primary focus is to find a job. As a class, we have been looking at the Worker Role Map (http://eff.cls.utk.edu/fundamentals/role_map_worker.htm). We've already talked about the knowledge and skills they have and what they need to work on. Maybe we've decided that one important area to address is the Broad Area of Responsibility: Work With Others and a Key Activity: Communicate with Others Inside and Outside the Organization. Students have identified Communication Skills as an area to work on. For this lesson, we choose the Listen Actively standard as our focus. These students have done role plays. They brainstorm some workplace scenarios. You choose a scenario as a class. Then looking at the Listen Actively standard and the scenario, we want to develop a simple rubric check-off to assess our role play. How well did we Listen Actively during the role play: Well Done, Sometimes, Need to Work on. What evidence will we look for: -You focused your attention on the person speaking - You asked questions when you didn't understand - You did not interrupt the speaker - You looked directly at the person speaking - Your facial expression and posture showed you were paying attention - You thought about what the speaker said and compared it to what you already know Then ask, does our rubric adequately address the standard we are focusing on for this role play. The students could break into groups to write dialog for the role play. Each group could act out their role play while the other groups assess their performance. Often there is great dialogue that comes out of this interaction, too. Aaron At 03:01 PM 1/10/2006 -0500, you wrote: >Hi everyone, > > > >I m wondering if one of our guests (or anyone who works with EFF!) can >describe how to use EFF to develop an assessment for the classroom. Maybe >this is a lot to ask, but if you can walk us through an example of >assessing Read With Understanding or Use Math to Solve Problems for >example, that would be great (but an example using any standard will do!). > > > >Also, how do you assess some of the Lifelong Learning and Interpersonal >Skills? Some of the Broad Areas of Responsibility and Key Activities in >the Role Maps (http://eff.cls.utk.edu/fundamentals/eff_roles.htm) are >pretty abstract and the concepts are large can someone comment on this? > > > >Thanks, > >marie > >Assessment Discussion List Moderator > > > >------------------------------- >National Insitute for Literacy >Assessment mailing list >Assessment at nifl.gov >To unsubscribe or change your subscription settings, please go to >http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/assessment Aaron Kohring Coordinator, LINCS Literacy & Learning Disabilities Special Collection (http://ldlink.coe.utk.edu/) Moderator, National Institute for Literacy's Content Standards Discussion List (http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/Contentstandards) Coordinator, Equipped for the Future Websites (http://eff.cls.utk.edu/) Center for Literacy Studies, University of Tennessee EFF Center for Training and Technical Assistance Phone:(865) 974-4109 main (865) 974-4258 direct Fax: (865) 974-3857 e-mail: akohring at utk.edu
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