Since we launched the Formative and Feedback Project at KIS in 2017, we received positive responses from teachers, students, and parents. Teachers and students have not only become more intentional about summative and formative assessment design but also enhanced their understanding of the assessment criteria. Students are involved in setting their own learning goals and feedback provided by teachers is also more personalized and relevant to students.
This change of formative assessment and feedback practice has been promising. However, giving feedback to every single student in a larger class can be time-consuming. On top of that, if you teach several classes, giving individual feedback becomes overwhelming and particularly daunting during report card writing season. If teachers have to call in sick and spend their day providing feedback on students’ assignments at home, that just does not seem to be right. If teachers are stressed and unhappy, they will need to work harder to support their students as they will need to fight their negative feelings. I sense the intensity and stress (crankiness) of teachers and feel there is a need to find solutions for this. Here is the question I am thinking, “what are some alternatives that allow teachers to provide meaningful and purposeful feedback and yet maintain their sanity?”.
Before getting into the sanity-saving feedback strategies, first of all, it is important to distinguish how marking and feedback are different. Marking and feedback are not the same things, but they are connected (Didau). A teacher can spend lots of time marking, but not necessarily providing students with useful information to move forward. For example, a teacher might only mark the questions right or wrong in a maths task but did not provide strategy or action steps to help learners bridge the gap. Marking tends to be summative and measures learning. On the other hand, feedback involves providing specific information to help learners improve their knowledge, skills, and conceptual understanding relating to their learning goals. It makes sense for students to receive actionable feedback from their formative assessment so that they can use this information to perform their summative assessment with increasing confidence. To ensure the quality of feedback, four prompt questions are used to guide teachers in providing descriptive feedback at KIS. I called it G.R.I.T Feedback.
These are nice prompt questions to consider when providing feedback to students. However, to give each individual student comment like this in a large class is laborious and demotivating for teachers. There should be some alternative and efficient ways that teachers can provide students with meaningful feedback while not feeling miserable. I got some ideas and strategies from my research.
I rethink our KIS feedback model and the feedback practices. Four feedback principles should be adhered to in the process of giving and receiving feedback.
The information is detailed in my poster below. I want to emphasize the importance of the Development guiding principle. In order for feedback to be effective and useful, students must have opportunities to interpret, respond and make an action plan to bridge the gap (and also to close the feedback loop).
Some questions to help students to decode feedback and develop actionable steps to regulate performance might include:
I had an aha moment after reading the article, “Reduce the workload AND increase impact!“. Feedback giving should be shifted from transmission to transformation and the key is to increase student engagement and form partnerships in this process. Partnerships include teacher-student(s) and student to student(s). Teachers should not be in the driver’s seat. Instead, the more teachers can involve learners in understanding the criteria through various ways, the most likely they will become assessment capable learners. I put together some strategies and also some protocols to help structure peer feedback in the hope to save teachers’ sanity.
For peer feedback to work, I think it’s important for students to
Click the picture below to download the poster. Links to protocols to support structured peer feedback are included.
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