1. Description of a method of understanding
prior-knowledge of students.
Making sure
to encourage our students to promote their prior-knowledge on a subject is a
great tool for teachers to see what students already know and what may need to
elaborated on. There are different ways that teachers can do this such as:
anchor charts, K-W-L charts, doing a group discussion, think-pair-share and
etc. Several of these ways can be beneficial to students to hear what others
may have to say about the topic that is being covered. When students already
know a little information about a topic they feel more confident that they will
succeed during the project.
2.
Discussion on the importance of establishing anchors for a project.
Using anchor
charts in the classroom is a huge support system on its own. Having students
fill out a K-W-L chart with what they already know, what they want to know and
what they learned from doing this project helps reinforce what students have
learned about. Making sure that your students are filling these out as they go
along is important because each student learns at a different pace. Anchor
charts are important to make sure that each student is able to understand where
they are going with their learning. These charts are also helpful for teachers
to see where these students have come compared to where they were before you
started the project. Anchor charts are also helpful when it comes to
differentiated instruction and how each student as an individual is learning
versus getting graded as a group.
3. Description of several ways to assess
what students learned during the project.
There are
several different ways to assess students while they are working on their
projects. These can be formative assessments where they aren’t being graded on
what they learned such as: an exit slip, a K-W-L chart, journal reflections.
These types of assessments are used throughout the project and aid the teacher
in understanding what the students are learning and where they may be stuck and
don’t understand a concept. Summative assessments are the main assessment for
the project and provide the students with their final grade. These assessment
types vary from class to class and project to project. I really like what the
author mentions in the chapter on page 144 about having professionals come in
and give the students feedback on their overall projects. Though you will
ultimately be grading their project it gives students meaningful real-world
feedback that matters to them.
4. Discussion on how concepts in this
chapter relate to your topic/project.
Several of
these concepts relate to our project this semester. We are always being
assessed by one another and by Professor Peterson. Our formative assessments
are our concept maps which also work as an anchor chart to track our journey
through this project. We are always able to go back to the concept maps that we’ve
created to get information to add to other aspects of our project. Our weekly
chapter reflections are also used as a formative assessment to see how well we understand
the information in our text book. We are almost done with our project and to
look back on how each concept from the book relates to our topic is eye-opening
to see.
This is such a fantastic reading reflection! You did a great job at thoroughly answering each question by including a lot of details. I really like the fact that you mentioned K-W-L charts in the your first three answers. K-W-L charts are extremely helpful tools when it comes to developing a successful project. I also liked that you mentioned that we're always being assessed by each other, as well as Professor Peterson, this is true. I also liked your reference to page 144 where the author talks about having professionals come in. Overall, this reflection rocks!
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