I am fortunate enough to work in a
building that has eighty minutes of time each week to work with my Professional
Learning Team. I am even more
fortunate that the use of those eighty minutes is largely determined by the PLTs. One of the things my PLT has spent a
lot of time on this year is assessments.
Most weeks, Dan Davisson, Bruce Janu @Vir_Historia and I go through upcoming
tests and read each question. We
look at the questions to determine several things:
-if the question is asking
something we want to assess
-if the question is understandable
to the students
-if the distracters are too hard or
confusing
-if the words in the question are
too difficult or too easy
-if the question is aligned to a
standard
It has been a great use of time. In
about half hour, we typically get through about four or five questions. We discuss how we teach each question
and the verbiage we use to teach it. Then, we discuss our understanding of the
question. This is the best
part. Each of use has a different
perspective, and it is interesting to see how three historians have a different
thought process for each question.
Also, we each speak to how we think
students will think about the question.
We look at it from their perspective to see why they might pick one
answer over another. It is great
to put ourselves in the minds of the students. It helps us look at their misunderstandings and how to help
correct those misunderstandings. The reason we are going through the tests this
year is because most of our questions have been taken from test banks and
online sources, or we have written them, and it has been several years since we
have collectively gone through with everyone present. It is a very enlightening experience that has students in
mind the entire time.
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