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Showing posts from February, 2020

The Art of Questioning on Math Assessments

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Last year, I had a great conversation with a colleague around math assessment. We were talking primarily about how to best triangulate products, observations, and conversations to form an overall balanced assessment of student learning, but a side conversation has really stuck with me. She told me that on her math tests, for any given learning goal, she gives the students four levels of questions to choose from. The students can then decide how to best demonstrate their understanding of that expectation. I love the idea of student voice and student choice in how learning is demonstrated. But it's taken me about a year to really wrap my head around this idea, and to start working with teachers in my board to try it out. Traditionally... Traditionally, on a test, I might ask students three or four questions all on the same expectation. It might look something like this: Like most teachers, I started with an easy problem, and each subsequent problem gets a little more invo...