Pushing Multiple Choice Beyond it’s Frontier

My experience as a teacher only stretches across three years but during those three years, I have taught Social Studies in various capacities in five different school districts that were, in many ways, considerably different from one another. Of course, these school districts shared in common many characteristics and practices too. One of those similarities is the use of assessments composed largely of multiple-choice (MC) test items with a few short written responses. Some of the MC items task students to evaluate and analyze primary or secondary source text or interpret graphs, charts, or maps.

If you are reading this blog post there is little doubt you have taken such an assessment. As you no doubt know, an MC test item starts with a question followed by four to five answers one of which is the correct answer and the remaining possible answers– which are referred to as distractors– are incorrect. In a Social Studies context, the main purpose of an MC question is to measure how well a student has mastered basic fundamental facts such as the definition of terms, people, and places. Additionally, MC questions are used to assess reading comprehension and comparison and analysis of primary and secondary sources. When assessing the latter, MC questions are exceptionally limited since MC questions are, by nature, close-ended.

With all the emphasis there has been on critical thinking, critical reading, and writing in state standards, especially with the introduction of the Common Core, why has the use of MC test items persisted to be used so pervasively in Social Studies contexts? Why do social studies teachers continue to use a form of assessment which is exceedingly limited in its ability to demonstrate a student’s depth of knowledge? The answer to these questions reveals an education system which remains institutionally anchored to antiquated concepts of student assessment.

Why Teachers and School Districts Use Multiple Choice

Since Michigan relies on standardized tests such as M-Step and SAT to assess the level of teacher and school district effectiveness, teachers and districts have responded by formulating assessments that emulate such tests. As a result, districts and their Social Studies departments create assessments that will give students the greatest chance of achieving growth as measured by standardized tests rather than the many skills embedded in the state standards.

The purpose for my exhaustive explanation of how standardized tests have resulted in semester exams designed with a traditional model of MC test items with a few written responses is to lay out how such assessments are actually used. Teachers and school districts are responding to how they will actually be evaluated rather than standards that are not reflected in the standardized tests.

The other incentive for teachers to rely on MC based assessments and exams is that they are much easier to grade. Data from MC test items can be gathered very efficiently thus providing teachers some measure of relief from a burdensome workload.

MC based assessments possess severe limitations in providing information that is useful in informing instructional design. Using data from MC based assessments can only lead to instruction designed to help students improve their ability to take MC tests.

Assessing the Value of Multiple Choice

My first two questions for my Assessment Design Checklist attempt to focus attention on creating authentic assessments:

  1. Does my assessment task students to express how they have made meaning of the knowledge and concepts?
  2. Does my assessment task students to apply thinking skills in a manner where they must transfer their knowledge of concepts to new and/or unfamiliar contexts?

Applying these questions to a MC based assessment leads me to one inescapable conclusion: MC test items cannot remotely engage students in expressing how they have made meaning of what they have been taught nor can it be said with much confidence that MC test items measure how well a student can transfer their knowledge of concepts to different contexts.

As Bob James observes in regards his own assessment design process:

Even though this approach to assessment makes grading and justifying the grades fairly easy, I have always felt a bit uneasy that these assessments don’t reflect the point of the unit and that the project grade sometimes has less to do with the key ideas and more to do with effort. I think I tend to test what is easy to test instead of assessing for my deeper goals.

Wiggins asserts that multiple choice tests are inauthentic, that is, they fail to task students to perform a task that is authentic to the actual tasks and skills they were taught and therefore a poor measure of what the student actually learned. How, then, should educators approach the seemingly entrenched problem of MC based assessments?

Pushing Multiple Choice Toward Authentic Assessment

As noted above, there is little room in the world of Understanding by Design for MC test items. Due to irresistible institutional forces, however, many Social Studies educators have little choice but to include such test items in their assessments. What can an educator do to push MC test items toward a more authentic assessment of how a student has made meaning from the targeted objective? Can MC test items provide the teacher with a reasonable avenue to provide feedback to their students?

The advent of digital assessment platforms has expanded the possibilities of how an educator can use MC test items to measure, to some degree, how the student made meaning from instruction. For example, Google Forms gives the assessment designer to help students with how they make meaning by basing the order in which they take the assessment upon how they answer select MC questions. If a student makes a selection that indicates a lack of understanding or comprehension of a particular concept, then they will be pushed to another test item designed to assist them in forming a firmer grasp of the targeted concept. If the student indicates mastery of the concept then they can be pushed to more sophisticated test items depending on their responses.

Moving Forward by Starting at the End

The beginning stages of my understanding of how to engage in backwards design and applying the concepts and principles of Understanding by Design have already opened new perspectives for me as I continue to refine and revise my own assessments so as to capture what the student truly understands rather than what they merely know. The process of doing so begins by asking ourselves what exactly we are trying to learn about our students learning and offering a rationale that supports our initial choices. I have started an Assessment Design Check List that explains my first two questions that are at the heart of what I hope to accomplish in CEP 813. Please feel free to click on the link above to review what I have started. I would love to hear your thoughts on the beginning stages of my journey.

Assessing Mastery Level of Content & Skills

As we close in on the end of the school year, I am still attempting to shoehorn some important content into the remainder of our truncated semester. One of my last units I will be teaching in World History is on genocide. We will be focusing on the Eight Stages of Genocide before looking into the Holocaust in more depth. In addition to teaching students the Eight Stages of Genocide, I am also having them practice their skills in critically secondary sources to improve the comprehension of more sophisticated texts.

To that end, I have created a small assessment to use after students read about the Eight Stages of Genocide in order to assess their understanding of the content and measure how well they comprehend the text. If you wish to review the assessment including the directions for students, click on the link in the paragraph below.

The name of this assessment is The Eight Stages of Genocide. It begins with an excerpt from an article which discussed the Eight Stages of Genocide. Students are instructed to read the text then respond to the questions that follow. Two of the questions are multiple choice and the final question is a constructed response. This assessment is given following the lesson and will serve as a springboard to making instructional decisions on which students still possess misconceptions about the topic.

Assessing My Assessment: Reinforcing Old Paradigms

In my previous blog post I explained three beliefs I have regarding student assessment:

  1. Multiple choice questions are virtually worthless
  2. Assessment should be integrated as a part of how students learn.
  3. Assessment should be designed to provide effective feedback to students

One of my missions for this blog is to take one of my assessments and measure it against these three beliefs. Not surprisingly I have found the example I am using woefully inadequate in light of my stated beliefs.

For this particular exercise I have selected my Unit 5 test on the Age of Enlightenment and Revolutions. This test is summative in the strictest sense of the word– it is the end of the line for this unit of study, after this test it is on to the next unit. My assumptions regarding this test is that it based on dated concepts about the purpose of assessment. I did not design this assessment but it seems obvious to me– or my assumption– that this assessment instrument is a reaction to what students are expected to do during standardized tests. Most of the test is dedicated to testing trivial knowledge by means of multiple choice. Consequently, this test pretty much runs counter to all three beliefs I expressed about assessment:

  1. It is made up of mostly multiple choice which tells me how prepared they are to be good at Jeopardy or Trivia night but nothing about how well they can analyze a primary source
  2. This test is summative which means it is the concluding activity for the unit and as a consequence cannot be used as an instrument for students to assess their own mastery of content and skills and improve upon them
  3. Getting a multiple choice question wrong or right tells the student and the teacher precious little regarding the student’s growth or how well they have constructed their understanding and schema they have been learning and practicing.
Unit 5 test

Click on image to see the entire test

After reading Shepard, I am already considering a shift in how I see number three on effective feedback. That being said there is no doubt that my assessment is an excellent– or bad–  example of an assessment informed by social efficiency and behaviorism devoid of even a glimmer of social-constructivist theory. The purpose of the test really is to produce a grade in the industrial education tradition. Moving forward, I hope to gain more insights as to how I can go about changing this in practical terms. Rome was not built in a day and revising assessments to target the thinking skills and dispositions students truly need for the world they are inheriting will not be created in a short time either

Three Things I Believe About Assessment

4052593758_dd0694a117_o

Microscopio de tres cuerpos para las observaciones simultáneas, University Library of Seville

As I begin diving into CEP 813: Electronic Assessment, I have been, fittingly, asked to write about three things I believe about assessment. My first three years of teaching have left little space for me to think beyond any given day or reflect on every facet of my practice. Now space has been made for me to consider my thinking about assessment. All teachers I have met in my very young career have their own beliefs about assessment and I suspect those beliefs, at least for most teachers, change over time. I am sure that will be my experience as well. So at the beginning of a class on assessment, I share three beliefs I have about assessment- it will be interesting to see how those beliefs change and shift by the end of the course.

1. Multiple choice questions are virtually worthless

For any multiple choice test item, It is nearly impossible to know if the student got it right because they have an understanding of the topic or got it wrong because they have misconceptions. A multiple choice question says little about students grasp of a concept or the implications of a historical event. Multiple choice questions can even set students up for failure even though they may have an excellent grasp of the more important facets of the topic which cannot be measured by multiple choice.

2. Assessment should be integrated as a part of how students learn

When students are invited to participate in creating an assessment that will be used to measure their growth they are given ownership of their own learning. Additionally, when students participate in creating assessment instruments, rubrics, for example, they must engage in the content in a meaningful way and form an intimate understanding of the skills that they will be learning and practicing. Students will have a thorough understanding of what mastery looks like for each skill and concept.

3. Assessment should be designed to provide effective feedback to students

If all a given assessment accomplishes is to produce a grade which supposedly represents student growth then it reduces the endeavors of the student’s learning and teacher’s instruction to an exercise of producing grades rather than genuine learning and growth. The ultimate purpose of assessment should be to tell the student how much and how well they have mastered targeted skills and content. Effective feedback does not stop at informing the student and teacher what the student has and has not mastered but should explain to the student how they can clarify misconceptions and identify errors in their thinking on a given topic.

Teaching Inquiry & Critical Thinking Through History

Universale Descrittione di Tutta la Terra Conosciuta Fin Qui

I have long held a deep passion and innate curiosity about the past. The seeds of my fascination with history were planted during my middle school years. That curiosity was further fueled by my seventh grade geography teacher whose passion for understanding the world through social studies was infectious. We are still friends after thirty years. It was through history that I found intellectual empowerment and it is through history that I share my passion and curiosity with my students. I combine this passion for history education with my background in technology— I spent nearly twenty years in computer graphics. My final creation for my latest class in Educational Technology at Michigan State University is a visual synopsis of my passion and curiosity that drives my teaching. Please take a moment and follow the link below to my Prezi: Inquiry Leads to Empowerment.

https://prezi.com/view/T1XzuX34L1hrYo7mCakh/

Reference

Universale Descrittione di Tutta la Terra Conosciuta Fin Qui. (n.d.). Retrieved May 3, 2017, from http://www.gallery.oldbookart.com/main.php?g2_itemId=13591&g2_imageViewsIndex=3

The Achievement Gap as a Wicked Problem: The Big Takeaway

One of the fundamental realities one must face when tackling a wicked problem is recognizing that wicked problems are inherently complex and thus no one solution can completely address the problem. Tackling a wicked problem requires wrapping one’s mind around the the extent and frontiers of the problem as well as the major obstacles presented by the problem.

My colleague, Sarah Robinson, and myself explored the Achievement Gap as a wicked problem. Our initial goal was to gain a fundamental understanding of the Achievement Gap in order to identify one small facet we could explore more deeply and work toward a solution that held the possibility of moving toward improving outcomes for students.

4 ASPECTS OF AG

We identified literacy practices in the home  as holding the possibility of developing a solution. We arrived at literacy practices in the home by consulting a variety of journal articles that addressed various dimensions of the achievement gap. While reading select research papers we encountered several discussions addressing literacy in the home. One article examined the results of a study which set up a home based literacy program in which families were provided books to read to their children. The result was a marked improvement in the children’s literacy levels upon entering kindergarten (Harvey, 2016).

Our questioning process led us to ask: what if we created an app that allowed students to access ebooks for free with functions that both rewarded, challenged, and held students accountable for their reading outside of the classroom. Cell phones play an important role in many students lives, even students from lower socioeconomic households. We saw cell as holding the promise of meeting students where they were with respect the type of medium that would increase the possibilities of reading outside the classroom.

The result of our work is presented in our Prezi: The Wicked Problem of the Achievement Gap. We welcome any feedback, especially constructive criticism.

http://prezi.com/j8ion3hrtvuw/?utm_campaign=share&utm_medium=copy&rc=ex0share

WORKS CITED

Harvey, A. (2016). Improving Family Literacy Practices. SAGE Open, 6(3), 2158244016669973. https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244016669973

Narrowing the Literacy Gap: Could Cell Phones Promote Student Reading Outside the Classroom?

Brave_and_Kakuru_texting 2

Could cell phones promote literacy beyond the classroom?

The achievement gap in education has long been the most vexing of challenges in the United States and continues to be one of the most formidable problems facing educators today. Undoubtedly, any educator could recite the many chief ways the achievement gap manifests itself in their classrooms and how it can be measured. Socioeconomic status, gender, race and ethnicity are the major demographics where achievement gaps are seen and it manifest itself in almost every facet of student performance. Literacy is one of the primary facets of student learning where a considerable achievement gap exist between student groups.

The number of approaches and strategies to narrow the achievement gap in literacy are countless. Many seek to address issues of literacy in the homes of children from their infancy. One study in particular sought to study the effects of parents reading to their children from infancy and concluded that when parents were provided one book a month to read to their young children that it “helped 70% [of the children] with vocabulary development and 66% with listening skills” (Harvey, 2016).

My colleague Sarah Robinson and myself teach secondary social studies and we both work with  populations whose average reading level is below grade level. We both face the challenge of students who are already behind in their literacy. We asked ourselves: how can we support literacy outside of the classroom with a technology based approach? Most of our students— but not all— possess cell phones. Cell Phones are not only ubiquitous among our students but also in their level of use. What if cell phones could be used to promote reading outside the classroom? What if we could provide students the means to use their cell phones as e-readers and have free access to quality ebooks? What if we could create a system of accountability and support that would leverage student use of cellphones as a means to increase student reading and literacy outside the classroom?

As members of my community of practice I invite you to take our survey to assist us in narrowing the scope and revising our strategy to develop a strategy to enhance student literacy through a technology that is an embedded part of our students lives. You can take the survey by clicking the link below.

Survey: Narrowing the Achievement Gap by Promoting Reading Outside the Classroom Through Cell Phones

References

Elliott, J. (2010, March 16). Ugandan students texting [Two students using mobile phone in classroom]. Retrieved April 14, 2017, from https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Texting#/media/File:Brave_and_Kakuru_texting.

Harvey, A. (2016). Improving Family Literacy Practices. SAGE Open, 6(3), 2158244016669973. https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244016669973.jpg

 

 

Minding the Gap: Exploring the Achievement Gap Through Family Dynamics, Race, and Socioeconomic Factors

Chasm 2.jpg

The achievement gap in education is vast and multidimensional. The vast complexity of this wicked problem becomes even more vexing when examining the issue at points in which multiple factors intersect. There is no facet of the achievement gap which does not intersect with another. In attempting to explore the achievement gap through various lenses and perspectives I have expanded my own understanding of the issue in significant ways. As I have worked with my teammate, Sarah Robinson, in exploring the achievement gap through systematic questioning we have arrived at three main questions:

  1. Why do some schools achieve at a higher level?
  2. Why do some students achieve at a higher level?
  3. Why does family literacy play a role in the achievement gap?

Examining the achievement gap through the inquiry lens above reveals several sobering realities that makes the achievement gap a tremendous wicked problem. The info-graphic below provides a brief synopsis of the major facets of the achievement gap as related to our three questions above.

Achievement Gap-page-001

References

Foresman, P. S. (2007, August 16). Chasm [Digital image]. Retrieved April 7, 2017, from https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Chasm_(PSF).jpg

Bursting the Information Bubble

 

Reflection_in_a_soap_bubble_edit

The danger posed by the internet in creating intellectual vacuums where individuals build a fortress of information sources which confirm their own beliefs and shield them from ideas that challenge their own has been well illustrated by recent events in the news media. The phenomena of fake news has reached an acute stage where facts are challenged with “alternative facts.” This is not a terribly new problem. For all its revolutionary impact in democratizing the flow of information, the internet has also become a clearinghouse of extraordinarily dubious claims. Those of us who consider ourselves well read and skilled in the arts of detecting claims of an odoriferous nature would do well to challenge our own sphere of information sources. Whether it be the constant and unchecked flow of news demanding our attention via our preferred social media conduit or where we look to for enlightenment in our own respective areas of trade or professional practice. Could the internet amplify our human tendencies to seek comfort from sources that would affirm our own perspectives and viewpoints within the territories of our professional practice? What can we do to avoid such pitfalls?

My most recent class in Educational Technology at Michigan State University— Applying Educational Technology to Practice— has challenged me to take a hard look at my own “information diet.” The focus was on my Professional Learning Network which includes the online sources I look to to inform and enlighten my practice as a social studies teacher and budding educational technology integrator. The challenge was to seek out new sources in two different categories: sources related to my professional practice and more specifically on the wicked problem of the achievement gap in education. The sources had to be from an RSS feed, Twitter, or Facebook— none of which I fancy. And this was the challenge that pushed my buttons.

I confess— I am still not a fan of Facebook, Twitter, or even RSS feeds as a means to stay connected. The challenge for me is to try to re-frame how I see these needy mediums of information. As a first year teacher with five preps I hardly have the time to devote attention to the overwhelming flow information which comes cascading through my computer and phone. How does one perform the necessary triage of all those small bits of information to decide which ones are worthy of my attention? I am not associated with any affinity spaces in my professional world for that reason. This is where I am lacking in my information diet. There is no doubt I could benefit from exploring and sharing in one of these spaces and sparing some time with a few good sources that provide a plurality of perspectives.

So I have added a number of new members to my information diet. One of them is the C3 Teachers website. This source was unknown to me before this assignment. Here I have found a community of social studies teachers implementing the C3 (College, Career & Civic Life) standards for social studies which essentially are inquiry based standards. In addition to C3 Teachers I am following the Stanford Center for Educational Policy and Analysis (CEPA). CEPA provides  a variety of research on various educational issues including the achievement gap in education. The research comes from a variety of sources which provide differing perspectives on the achievement gap. Please take a look at my infographic below for a synopsis of what can be found from these sources.\

SwansInfoDiet (1)

Photo Credit

Gaspar, Joaquim Alves. Reflection in a Soap Bubble. 2006. Lisboa. Wikimedia Commons. Web. 03 Apr. 2017.