“What did you do
at school today?” was a common question that I got when I went home from school
while sitting at the dinner table.
My response was simple: “math, science, lunch, recess, and reading,” never
actually answering the question of what I did in school.
At the end of the
period, with about 4 minutes left, students are given group folders that
contain their reflections for each skill.
All I ask them to do from day to day is check off what they did from Day
1 to Day 5 and at what level. The
key at the top explains the abbreviations in each square.
Now here is where
the true reflection starts.
Typically our students are taking an objective quiz every 5 days or
so. Once they receive those
quizzes back, they answer the following questions on the back of their “work
trackers.”
After showing students
examples of what good reflections and poor reflections look like, it’s their
turn. They begin look over their
quizzes and record their grades. I
also have them look up their overall grades too and then answer the
questions. As they do so we look
at how long they are spending on each level, what day they get to level 3, if
they were absent during the week, etc.
So what do I do
with the reflections after the quiz? On one hand, it is used to monitor student
progress and hold them accountable for the work they did that day. On the other hand it is a conversation
piece too. If a student wants or
needs to retake the quiz they will come in to make corrections on their quiz. Before we even begin to look through
the quiz and start corrections we have a one on one conversation about their
work throughout the week and how it has reflected in their grades. I start with
the front with all the check boxes and talk about pacing, length of time spent
on each level etc. And that
usually gets them to understand why they earned the grade they did. The level of understanding they have
gotten through throughout the week usually matched the level of understanding
they show on their quiz.
I was really
excited about doing this reflection for all the reasons above, but there was
one hidden perk that I wasn’t really expecting. Students are not looking at their score and putting it in
the retake or no retake piles I have in my room. They are taking the time to look through their mistakes and
look at the questions they got wrong.
Especially for the students who get through a majority of the checklist
and don’t earn the grades they want or demonstrate the knowledge they think
have of the topic. They are
looking for the ways they can improve and why they got the questions wrong. They see and realize how easy of an
improvement it could be. They will
retake their quiz and demonstrate they really do know this topic at a higher
level.
Over all, I have
really enjoyed watching the students complete these reflections and it has
given me more opportunities for discussions than I ever imagined. The
reflections stay in their folder until the unit test, so it helps them to
narrow their focus on the objectives to study before the test. I have kept the ones they have
completed so far, unsure of what to do with them yet. But considering this reflection is already on version 5, I
can only assume there will be more versions to come!
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.