Using Data for Instructional Improvement
Following your last lesson, you discover only 60% of your students met the learning outcome.
Not only did they demonstrate a lack of understanding through non-written, observable formative assessments, but the data from their assignment as scored through use of a rubric revealed the majority of the class did not meet the objective.
Using one of the two instructional plans you previously created, determine the following:
How you will identify particular areas of need/misunderstanding (what will you look for? See Chapter 6 from Ward, Fischer, Frey, & Lapp).
How you will address and re-teach with differentiation, so students meet the learning objective?
How you will employ students in the process of self-reflection and identifying areas of misunderstanding?
How you will reassess for the learning objective?
How will these instructional adjustments better prepare them for the impending summative assessment?
James-Ward, C., Douglas, F., Frey, N., & Lapp, D. (2013). Using data to focus instructional improvement. Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision & Curriculum Development.
Chapter 2: Using Data to Focus Instructional Improvement
Chapter 3: Using Soft Data to Bring Information into Focus
Chapter 6: Monitoring Progress and Midcourse Corrections
Attachment:- Common core aligned lesson plan.rar