Thursday 30 January 2014

Easing the marking load

Today I discovered marking statement banks; it has changed my life.

I actually heard the idea of statement banks for marking floating around my school a couple of weeks ago. But it filled me with memories of writing crappy, unpersonal school reports a few years back by picking statements from a bank. Also the word "bank" scared me initially as it made me think that I'd need to write a lot of statements.

But today, the pile of marking on my desk was growing to a level that made me anxious. It was lunchtime, I had about half an hour, how was I going to make a significant indent on the pile?

I flicked through a pile of year 9 home works and looked for common strengths and areas for improvement. On a PowerPoint slide I wrote three what went wells, and three even better ifs. I numbered the WWW 1-3 and the EBIs A-C. The reality is, that if I am marking work in the WWW and EBI way anyway, I find myself repeating my comments over and over. If you have a wide enough range of comments to fit the work, it will still be personal enough.

 

Then it took me about 10 minutes to go through the kids work and write "1B" or "3A" etc. on each piece. I still pointed out spelling errors and so on on their work, and wrote a couple of personalised comments where my statements didn't fit.

Now, next lesson I will put my ppt slide up for all to see and the students can write their relevant comments on their work for me. This also helps them take ownership of their progress by writing out what they did well and what they need to improve.

This is going to make marking so much quicker. Try it!

Sunday 5 January 2014

How to write learning objectives

Some teachers I know struggle with writing learning objectives. Having mentored numerous trainees in the past, it is surprising how many of them just don't get it and end up writing lists of tasks instead.

I remember being taught about learning objectives in my training and it made sense to me and it's never been something I have struggled with.

Somewhere along the line, I fell across Bloom's Rose:

http://iteachu.uaf.edu/files/2011/08/2000px-Blooms_rose.svg_.png
In the centre of the "rose" there are the 6 different levels from Bloom's taxonomy. Then moving outwards, there are various key trigger words that you can use to construct your objectives at each level. Finally on the outer part, there are possible activities you can set your students in order to help meet the objective you have written.

If you have ever struggled with objectives, then I recommend the next time you are stuck, use Bloom's rose. It's a great tool for your toolkit.

Happy new year!