14 Examples of Formative Assessment [+FAQs]

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Traditional student assessment typically comes in the form of a test, pop quiz, or more thorough final exam. But as many teachers will tell you, these rarely tell the whole story or accurately determine just how well a student has learned a concept or lesson.

That’s why many teachers are utilizing formative assessments. While formative assessment is not necessarily a new tool, it is becoming increasingly popular amongst K-12 educators across all subject levels. 

Curious? Read on to learn more about types of formative assessment and where you can access additional resources to help you incorporate this new evaluation style into your classroom.

What is Formative Assessment?

Online education glossary EdGlossary defines formative assessment as “a wide variety of methods that teachers use to conduct in-process evaluations of student comprehension, learning needs, and academic progress during a lesson, unit, or course.” They continue, “formative assessments help teachers identify concepts that students are struggling to understand, skills they are having difficulty acquiring, or learning standards they have not yet achieved so that adjustments can be made to lessons, instructional techniques, and academic support.”

The primary reason educators utilize formative assessment, and its primary goal, is to measure a student’s understanding while instruction is happening. Formative assessments allow teachers to collect lots of information about a student’s comprehension while they’re learning, which in turn allows them to make adjustments and improvements in the moment. And, the results speak for themselves — formative assessment has been proven to be highly effective in raising the level of student attainment, increasing equity of student outcomes, and improving students’ ability to learn, according to a study from the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). 

On the flipside of the assessment coin is summative assessments, which are what we typically use to evaluate student learning. Summative assessments are used after a specific instructional period, such as at the end of a unit, course, semester, or even school year. As learning and formative assessment expert Paul Black puts it, “when the cook tastes the soup, that’s formative assessment. When a customer tastes the soup, that’s summative assessment.”

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14 Examples of Formative Assessment Tools & Strategies

There are many types of formative assessment tools and strategies available to teachers, and it’s even possible to come up with your own. However, here are some of the most popular and useful formative assessments being used today.

  • Round Robin Charts

Students break out into small groups and are given a blank chart and writing utensils. In these groups, everyone answers an open-ended question about the current lesson. Beyond the question, students can also add any relevant knowledge they have about the topic to their chart. These charts then rotate from group to group, with each group adding their input. Once everyone has written on every chart, the class regroups and discusses the responses. 

  • Strategic Questioning

This formative assessment style is quite flexible and can be used in many different settings. You can ask individuals, groups, or the whole class high-level, open-ended questions that start with “why” or “how.” These questions have a two-fold purpose — to gauge how well students are grasping the lesson at hand and to spark a discussion about the topic. 

  • Three-Way Summaries

These written summaries of a lesson or subject ask students to complete three separate write-ups of varying lengths: short (10-15 words), medium (30-50 words), and long (75-100). These different lengths test students’ ability to condense everything they’ve learned into a concise statement, or elaborate with more detail. This will demonstrate to you, the teacher, just how much they have learned, and it will also identify any learning gaps. 

  • Think-Pair-Share

Think-pair-share asks students to write down their answers to a question posed by the teacher. When they’re done, they break off into pairs and share their answers and discuss. You can then move around the room, dropping in on discussions and getting an idea of how well students are understanding.

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  • 3-2-1 Countdown

This formative assessment tool can be written or oral and asks students to respond to three very simple prompts: Name three things you didn’t know before, name two things that surprised you about this topic, and name one you want to start doing with what you’ve learned. The exact questions are flexible and can be tailored to whatever unit or lesson you are teaching.

  • Classroom Polls

This is a great participation tool to use mid-lesson. At any point, pose a poll question to students and ask them to respond by raising their hand. If you have the capability, you can also use online polling platforms and let students submit their answers on their Chromebooks, tablets, or other devices.

  • Exit/Admission Tickets

Exit and admission tickets are quick written exercises that assess a student’s comprehension of a single day’s lesson. As the name suggests, exit tickets are short written summaries of what students learned in class that day, while admission tickets can be performed as short homework assignments that are handed in as students arrive to class.

  • One-Minute Papers

This quick, formative assessment tool is most useful at the end of the day to get a complete picture of the classes’ learning that day. Put one minute on the clock and pose a question to students about the primary subject for the day. Typical questions might be:

  • What was the main point?
  • What questions do you still have?
  • What was the most surprising thing you learned?
  • What was the most confusing aspect and why?
  • Creative Extension Projects

These types of assessments are likely already part of your evaluation strategy and include projects like posters and collage, skit performances, dioramas, keynote presentations, and more. Formative assessments like these allow students to use more creative parts of their skillset to demonstrate their understanding and comprehension and can be an opportunity for individual or group work.

Dipsticks — named after the quick and easy tool we use to check our car’s oil levels — refer to a number of fast, formative assessment tools. These are most effective immediately after giving students feedback and allowing them to practice said skills. Many of the assessments on this list fall into the dipstick categories, but additional options include writing a letter explaining the concepts covered or drawing a sketch to visually represent the topic. 

  • Quiz-Like Games and Polls

A majority of students enjoy games of some kind, and incorporating games that test a student’s recall and subject aptitude are a great way to make formative assessment more fun. These could be Jeopardy-like games that you can tailor around a specific topic, or even an online platform that leverages your own lessons. But no matter what game you choose, these are often a big hit with students.

  • Interview-Based Assessments

Interview-based assessments are a great way to get first-hand insight into student comprehension of a subject. You can break out into one-on-one sessions with students, or allow them to conduct interviews in small groups. These should be quick, casual conversations that go over the biggest takeaways from your lesson. If you want to provide structure to student conversations, let them try the TAG feedback method — tell your peer something they did well, ask a thoughtful question, and give a positive suggestion.

  • Self Assessment

Allow students to take the rubric you use to perform a self assessment of their knowledge or understanding of a topic. Not only will it allow them to reflect on their own work, but it will also very clearly demonstrate the gaps they need filled in. Self assessments should also allow students to highlight where they feel their strengths are so the feedback isn’t entirely negative.

  • Participation Cards

Participation cards are a great tool you can use on-the-fly in the middle of a lesson to get a quick read on the entire classes’ level of understanding. Give each student three participation cards — “I agree,” “I disagree,” and “I don’t know how to respond” — and pose questions that they can then respond to with those cards. This will give you a quick gauge of what concepts need more coverage.

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List of Formative Assessment Resources

There are many, many online formative assessment resources available to teachers. Here are just a few of the most widely-used and highly recommended formative assessment sites available.

  • Arizona State Dept of Education

FAQs About Formative Assessment

The following frequently asked questions were sourced from the Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development (ASCD), a leading education professional organization of more than 100,000 superintendents, principals, teachers, and advocates.  

Is formative assessment something new?

No and yes. The concept of measuring a student’s comprehension during lessons has existed for centuries. However, the concept of formative assessment as we understand it didn’t appear until approximately 40 years ago, and has progressively expanded into what it is today.

What makes something a formative assessment?

ASCD characterized formative assessment as “a way for teachers and students to gather evidence of learning, engage students in assessment, and use data to improve teaching and learning.” Their definition continues, “when you use an assessment instrument— a test, a quiz, an essay, or any other kind of classroom activity—analytically and diagnostically to measure the process of learning and then, in turn, to inform yourself or your students of progress and guide further learning, you are engaging in formative assessment. If you were to use the same instrument for the sole purpose of gathering data to report to a district or state or to determine a final grade, you would be engaging in summative assessment.”

Does formative assessment work in all content areas?

Absolutely, and it works across all grade levels. Nearly any content area — language arts, math, science, humanities, and even the arts or physical education — can utilize formative assessment in a positive way.

How can formative assessment support the curriculum?

Formative assessment supports curricula by providing real-time feedback on students’ knowledge levels and comprehension of the subject at hand. When teachers regularly utilize formative assessment tools, they can find gaps in student learning and customize lessons to fill those gaps. After term is over, teachers can use this feedback to reshape their curricula.

How can formative assessment be used to establish instructional priorities?

Because formative assessment supports curriculum development and updates, it thereby influences instructional priorities. Through student feedback and formative assessment, teachers are able to gather data about which instructional methods are most (and least) successful. This “data-driven” instruction should yield more positive learning outcomes for students.

Can formative assessment close achievement gaps?

Formative assessment is ideal because it identifies gaps in student knowledge while they’re learning. This allows teachers to make adjustments to close these gaps and help students more successfully master a new skill or topic.

How can I help my students understand formative assessment?

Formative assessment should be framed as a supportive learning tool; it’s a very different tactic than summative assessment strategies. To help students understand this new evaluation style, make sure you utilize it from the first day in the classroom. Introduce a small number of strategies and use them repeatedly so students become familiar with them. Eventually, these formative assessments will become second nature to teachers and students.

Before you tackle formative assessment, or any new teaching strategy for that matter, consider taking a continuing education course. At the University of San Diego School of Professional and Continuing Education, we offer over 500 courses for educators that can be completed entirely online, and many at your own pace. So no matter what your interests are, you can surely find a course — or even a certificate — that suits your needs.

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6 Strategies for Fast and Formative Assessments

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While assessments are not the most exciting thing to do in the art room, many districts require them. Finding assessments that fit your teaching style is key, so they are meaningful to you and your students.

However, honing in on the perfect assessment system can be tricky. I personally teach from a Teaching for Artistic Behavior (TAB) point of view. The TAB website describes the learning environment by stating, “TAB classrooms are highly structured environments. Students scaffold their own learning, sometimes going deeply into specific subjects or media. They work at their own pace, following their own lines of inquiry, and develop skills as they need them.” In other words, the students are treated as artists.

At the same time, the teacher is there to teach skills, art vocabulary, art history, and any other information or techniques students need to successfully carry out their ideas. Finding the proper ways to assess is important so as not to disrupt the creative flow of this type of classroom. My personal go-to? Quick, formative assessments.

Check out these six strategies for fast and formative assessments you can begin using today.

students working

1. Observation

One of the best things about being in the art room is watching your students create. You can watch them think about their ideas, explore new techniques and processes, create things that inspire them, and make mistakes into happy accidents. A great way to assess students and check for understanding is to look at the art your students are creating.

This includes any sketches and planning students do before they work on their final piece or as they work on a final piece. Observations are quick and informal. Often, your students will willingly share what they are creating giving you more insight into their artistic process.

One simple way to record what you see is with a notebook or checklist.

2. Think-Pair-Share

Another fun way to see what your students know is through the Think-Pair-Share routine. This allows your students to share information with a peer. This can be done during or after a demonstration, artist presentation, or discussion.

For instance, if you started class with an artist presentation or mini-lesson about how artists stretch and explore, you could pose the question, “Why do artists stretch and explore?” or, “Why is it important to stretch and explore as an artist?” You can easily pace the room to listen to your students as they discuss to check for understanding.

3. Exit Tickets

sticky note exit tickets

In a TAB classroom, you will see students in a variety of centers exploring and creating. A quick way to grasp what they have learned is to give them an exit ticket. You can use a sticky note, note card, blank sheet of paper, or even create an exit ticket digitally.

You can have students share something they learned during their studio time or have them answer a particular question about the skill builder taught that day.

Here are a few questions you could ask your students to share on their exit ticket:

  • What did you learn today?
  • How did you problem-solve in art?
  • What inspired your work today?
  • How did the skill-builder inspire your work?
  • How did the artist inspiration inspire your work?
  • Which studio habit of mind did you focus on? How?
  • What was your favorite part of class today?

4. Thumbs Up/Thumbs Down

thumbs up

Having students do a show of hands on a particular topic or questions allows you to quickly see if the students grasped the information. Let’s say you decide to do a mini-lesson about weaving. You can get a feel for your students’ comfort level with the process by asking them to give a thumbs up if they feel they are ready to try it out or a thumbs down if they need more instruction.

Then, when students disperse to centers, you can pull anyone at the weaving center who said they wanted more instruction aside for another short lesson.

5. Interviews

Interviews can also be referred to as student conferences. Having a discussion is powerful. As students explore centers, pull one student at a time aside to talk with them. During this time you can find out more about what they are learning and how you can better support their art goals. It’s also a nice time to find out what they enjoy or are not enjoying about your classroom. In this way, you also get to learn how to better support your students in all areas of their development.

6. Critiques

While many may think critiques are just for finished work, I often do them with works in progress. This way, students can get peer feedback that may help push them to explore new ideas. Critiques can take place during a Think-Pair-Share activity, within table groups, or in a whole group discussion.

In short, assessing in a TAB environment doesn’t have to be stressful. Use the collaborative nature of your classroom and the stellar relationships you have with your students to your advantage.

To learn more about TAB, check out these amazing resources:

  • The Open Art Room  
  • Engaging Learners in Art Making: Choice-Based Art Education in the Classroom
  • Studio Thinking 2: The Real Benefits of Visual Arts Education
  • Teaching Artistic Behavior Website

What are some other quick formative assessments that work well for your students?

Does your district require you to have a certain number of assessments?

Magazine articles and podcasts are opinions of professional education contributors and do not necessarily represent the position of the Art of Education University (AOEU) or its academic offerings. Contributors use terms in the way they are most often talked about in the scope of their educational experiences.

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Wynita Harmon

Wynita Harmon is AOEU’s Chair of Faculty Development and a former AOEU Writer and elementary school art educator.

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Teachers' Essential Guide to Formative Assessment

Topics:   Tech & Learning Assessment Classroom Media & Tools

How can I use formative assessment to plan instruction and help students drive their own learning?

teacher giving student a high five

What is formative assessment?

What makes a good formative assessment, how should i use formative assessment results, how do i know what type of formative assessment to use, what are the benefits of using an edtech tool for formative assessment.

A formative assessment is a teaching practice—a question, an activity, or an assignment—meant to gain information about student learning. It's formative in that it is intentionally done for the purpose of planning or adjusting future instruction and activities. Like we consider our formative years when we draw conclusions about ourselves, a formative assessment is where we begin to draw conclusions about our students' learning.

Formative assessment moves can take many forms and generally target skills or content knowledge that is relatively narrow in scope (as opposed to summative assessments, which assess broader sets of knowledge or skills). Common examples of formative assessments include exit tickets, fist-to-five check-ins, teacher-led question-and-answer sessions or games, completed graphic organizers, and practice quizzes.

In short, formative assessment is an essential part of all teaching and learning because it enables teachers to identify and target misunderstandings as they happen, and to adjust instruction to ensure that all students are keeping pace with the learning goals. As described by the NCTE position paper Formative Assessment That Truly Informs Instruction , formative assessment is a "constantly occurring process, a verb, a series of events in action, not a single tool or a static noun."

As mentioned above, formative assessments can take many forms. The most useful formative assessments share some common traits:

  • They assess skills and content that have been derived from the backward planning process . They seek to assess the key learning milestones in the unit or learning sequence.
  • They are actionable . They are designed so that student responses either clearly demonstrate mastery of the skills and content, or they show exactly where mastery is lacking or misunderstanding is occurring.
  • When possible, they are student-centered . Using an assessment where students measure themselves or their peers, or where they're prompted to reflect on their results, puts students in charge of their own learning. It allows students to consider their own progress and determine positive next steps. Unfortunately, student-centered formative assessments don't always yield the easiest and most actionable information for teachers, so their benefits have to be weighed against other factors.

Formative assessments are generally used for planning future instruction and for helping students drive their own learning. In terms of future instruction, how you use assessment data most depends on what kind of results you get.

  • If 80% or more demonstrate mastery , you'll likely want to proceed according to plan with subsequent lessons. For individual students not demonstrating mastery, you'll want to find ways to interject extra support. This might mean a differentiated assignment, a guided lesson during independent work time, or support outside of class.
  • If between 50% and 80% demonstrate mastery , you'll need to use class time to have structured differentiation. You'll need to build this into the next lesson(s) if it isn't already planned. This means different activities or guided instruction for different groups of students. Students who've demonstrated mastery could engage in an extension activity or additional practice, or serve as support for other students. Students still attempting mastery could receive additional guided practice or additional instructional materials like multimedia resources or smaller "chunks" of content.
  • If fewer than 50% demonstrate mastery , you'll need to do some whole-class reteaching. There are many approaches and concrete strategies for reteaching. Check out this article from Robert Marzano as well this blog post from BetterLesson for ideas.

The above recommendations are general rules of thumb, but your school or district may have specific guidelines to follow around teaching and reteaching. Make sure to consult them first.

Also, it's important to remember that building differentiation into the structure of your class and unit design from the beginning is the best way to make use of formative assessment results. Whether this means a blended or flipped classroom or activity centers, structuring in small-group, student-directed learning activities from the outset will make you more willing—and better prepared—to use formative assessment regularly and effectively in your class.

This is perhaps the most difficult question when it comes to formative assessment. There are so many different methods— just check out this list from Edutopia -- that it's easy to get lost in the sea of options. When it comes to choosing, the most important question is: What type of skill or content are you seeking to measure?

  • Content knowledge ("define," "identify," "differentiate") is generally the easiest to assess. For less rigorous objectives like these, a simple fist-to-five survey or exit ticket can work well. An edtech tool can also work well here, as many of them can score and aggregate multiple-choice responses automatically.
  • Higher-order thinking skills ("analyze," "synthesize," "elaborate") are generally more difficult and time-consuming to assess. For this, you'll likely use a different question type than multiple choice and need to allow more time for students to work. A good option here is to have students do a peer assessment using a rubric, which has the double benefit of allowing them to reflect on their own learning and cutting down the time you need to spend assessing the work. This can be done through an LMS or another project-based learning app , or through old-school paper and pencil; it just depends on your preference. Because students—and adults, too—often don't know what they don't know, self-assessments may be less accurate and less actionable for these types of skills.
  • Process-oriented skills ("script," "outline," "list the steps") also tend to be more difficult to assess. Graphic organizers can work well here, allowing teachers (or peer reviewers) to see how students arrived at their results. STEM apps for higher-order thinking and coding apps can also make this assessment information more accessible.

As mentioned above, one of the big benefits of using a tool for formative assessment is that it allows teachers to more efficiently use their time. Apps like Quizlet and Formative use a quiz format to provide real-time feedback to both students and teachers, and—n their premium versions—provide aggregate qualitative and quantitative assessment data. Other apps, like Kahoot! or Quizizz , provide these features with the added engagement of game-based competition . Apps like Flip (video-based) and Edulastic (tracks against standards) provide assessment data with other additional perks. Check out our list of top tech tools for formative assessment to see a range of options.

Finally, if you're already regularly teaching with technology , using an edtech tool fits seamlessly into the daily activities your students already know how to do. It can be an independent activity that students do as part of a blended classroom, or an outside-of-class activity that's part of a flipped classroom. In this context, both students and teachers will get the most out of the time-saving and student-centered benefits that edtech tools provide.

As an education consultant, Jamie created curriculum and professional development content for teachers. Prior to consulting, Jamie was senior manager of educator professional learning programs at Common Sense and taught middle school English in Oakland, California. For the 2016–2017 school year, Jamie received an Excellence in Teaching award and was one of three finalists for Teacher of the Year in Oakland Unified School District. While teaching, Jamie also successfully implemented a $200,000 school-wide blended-learning program funded by the Rogers Family Foundation and led professional development on a wide range of teaching strategies. Jamie holds a bachelor's degree in philosophy from Eugene Lang College and a master's degree in philosophy and education from Teacher' College at Columbia University. Jamie currently lives in Sao Paulo, Brazil with his 4-year-old son, Malcolm, and his partner, Marijke.

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Teaching excellence & educational innovation, what is the difference between formative and summative assessment, formative assessment.

The goal of formative assessment is to monitor student learning to provide ongoing feedback that can be used by instructors to improve their teaching and by students to improve their learning. More specifically, formative assessments:

  • help students identify their strengths and weaknesses and target areas that need work
  • help faculty recognize where students are struggling and address problems immediately

Formative assessments are generally low stakes , which means that they have low or no point value. Examples of formative assessments include asking students to:

  • draw a concept map in class to represent their understanding of a topic
  • submit one or two sentences identifying the main point of a lecture
  • turn in a research proposal for early feedback

Summative assessment

The goal of summative assessment is to evaluate student learning at the end of an instructional unit by comparing it against some standard or benchmark.

Summative assessments are often high stakes , which means that they have a high point value. Examples of summative assessments include:

  • a midterm exam
  • a final project
  • a senior recital

Information from summative assessments can be used formatively when students or faculty use it to guide their efforts and activities in subsequent courses.

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When students translate the concepts they’re learning into visual representations, it reveals much about how deeply they understand the material.

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25 Formative Assessment Options Your Students Will Actually Enjoy

Get them excited to show you what they know!

25+ Formative assessment ideas for the classroom.

Formative assessment is the piece of the teaching puzzle that allows us to quickly (and hopefully, accurately) gauge how well our students are understanding the material we’ve taught. From there, we make the important decisions about where our lesson will go next. Do we need to reteach, or are our students ready to progress? Do some students need additional practice? And which students need to be pushed to achieve the next level?

The best formative assessments will not only answer these questions but will also engage students in their own learning. With that in mind, here are 25 formative assessment techniques that will have your students looking forward to showing you what they know.

1. Doodle Notes

Female and male teens drawing on paper on a desk

Have students doodle/draw a pic of their understanding instead of writing it. Studies have shown it has numerous beneficial effects on student learning.

2. Same Idea, New Situation

Ask your students to apply the concepts they’ve learned to a completely different situation. For example, students could apply the steps of the scientific method to figuring out how to beat an opposing soccer team. They observe data (the other team’s plays), form theories (they always rely on two main players), test theories while collecting more data (block those players and see what happens), and draw conclusions (see if that worked).

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3. Tripwire

Green tightrope stretched across image with woods background

Tripwires are things that catch people off guard and mess them up. Ask your students to list what they believe are the three misunderstandings about the topic that are most likely to mess up a peer. By asking students to think about the key understandings from this angle, we can get an excellent view of how well they comprehend the topic.

4. Two Truths and a Lie

No longer just a get-to-know-you game or icebreaker, this well-known activity also makes a great formative assessment. Ask students to list two things that are true or accurate about the learning and one idea that sounds like it might be accurate, but isn’t. You’ll be able to assess each student’s understanding when they turn in their responses, and going over them with your class the following day makes an excellent review activity.

5. Popsicle Sticks

Brightly colored popsicle sticks on a white background

Formative assessment doesn’t need to be complicated or time-consuming to be meaningful and engaging. Have each student put their name on a popsicle stick in a jar or box on your desk. Let them know you’ll be pulling popsicle sticks to see who will be answering questions about the lesson. Knowing their name could be pulled makes students who might let peers do the talking focus on the learning. It dispels notions of favoritism and identifies learning gaps. And, most importantly, provides real-time feedback teachers can use in their lesson planning.

6. Explain it to a Famous Person

Ask the student to explain the day’s lesson to someone famous in an analogy that would make sense to that person. For example, the Revolutionary War was fought between the colonies and Great Britain. The colonies wanted to be independent and, after winning the war, renamed themselves the United States of America, just like when Prince left his record label and had to change his name to an unpronounceable symbol in order to break contractual obligations (I’m dating myself with this example, aren’t I?).

7. Traffic Light

Traffic Light post-it note with formative assessment instructions on it

Printing on post-it notes is actually pretty simple and fun! Slap a clip-art picture of a traffic light on there and you have a perfect formative assessment tool that students can complete when time is short at the end of class.

8. 30-Second Share

Challenge students to explain what the lesson they learned was all about to a peer, a small group, or the entire class in 30 seconds. At first, you might want to start at 15-seconds and build their stamina. But by encouraging students to explain everything they can for a set and relatively short amount of time, you’ll be building their confidence and public speaking skills at the same time as you get a good grasp on how much they’ve remembered about the lesson.

9. Venn Diagrams

Basic venn diagram on a chalkboard

An oldie but a goodie. Have your student compare the topic you just introduced to a tangential topic you taught in the past. This way, you’re getting a formative assessment on how well they understand the new topic and they’re getting a review of an older topic as well!

10. Poll Them

Polls are a great way to quickly assess student understanding. You can do this in person, or you can use apps like Poll Everywhere , Socrative , or Mentimeter to make free polls students can answer using their phones or computers.

11. S.O.S. Summaries

A great, quick formative assessment idea that can be used at any point throughout a lesson is the S.O.S. summary. The teacher presents the students with a statement (S). Then, asks the students to give their opinion (O) about the statement. Finally, the students are asked to support (S) their opinion with evidence from the lesson. For example, a teacher might say to the students, “Complete an S.O.S. on this statement: The Industrial Revolution produced only positive effects on society.”

S.O.S. can be used at the start of a lesson to assess prior knowledge or at the end of a unit or lesson to determine if students’ opinions have changed or if their support has grown stronger with the new information they’ve learned.

12. FOUR-Corners

This activity can be used with questions or opinions. Before asking the question/making the statement, establish each corner of the room as a different potential opinion or answer. After giving the prompt, each student goes to the corner that best represents their answer. Based on classroom discussion, students can then move from corner to corner, adjusting their answer or opinion.

13. Jigsaw Learning

Three students in silhouette holding up large puzzle pieces

Perfect when teaching complicated subjects or topics with many different parts. In this formative assessment, teachers break a large body of information into smaller sections. Each section is then assigned to a different small group. That small group is in charge of learning about their section and becoming the class experts. Then, one by one, each section teaches the others about their part of the whole. As the teacher listens to each section being taught, they can use the lesson as a method of formative assessment.

14. Anonymous Pop-Quiz

All the formative assessment power of a pop-quiz with none of the unnecessary pressure or embarrassment. To use this tool, simply quiz your students on the essential information you want to ensure they understand. Instruct each student NOT to put their name on their paper.

Once the assessment is complete, redistribute the quizzes in a way that ensures no one knows whose quiz they have in front of them. Have the students correct the quizzes and share out which answers most students got wrong and which answers everyone seemed to understand the most. You’ll know right away how well the class as a whole understands the topic without embarrassing any students individually.

15. One-Minute Write-Up

Young Black man and young Asian woman look over a paper together

At the end of a lesson, give students one minute to write as much as they can about what they learned through the lesson or unit. If needed, provide some guiding questions to get them started.

  • What was the most important learning from today, and why?
  • Did anything surprise you? If so, what?
  • What was the most confusing part of the lesson, and why?
  • What is something that will likely appear on a test or quiz, and why?

Challenge them to write as much as they can and to write for all of the 60-seconds. To make it a bit more engaging, consider letting students do this with a partner.

16. EdPuzzle

Students love to watch videos and, because of this, we end up showing a lot of short video clips. While they’re engaging, it’s often tough to determine if our students are getting the information we hoped they would get out of watching them. EdPuzzle solves this problem. The free app allows you to link to a video and add questions that stop the video at times you determine. So you can show your students the video of the Dust Bowl, but stop at various points to ask them what they think life might have been like during this time. You can ask them to make comparisons between what they watch and the characters they’re reading about in class. All of this information is then available for you to view and use for formative assessment.

17. Historical Post Cards

Back of a blank postcard

Ask students to take on the role of one historical figure you’ve been learning about in class. Have them write a postcard/email/tweet (as long as it’s short) to another historical figure discussing and describing a political event.

18. 3x Summaries

Have students write a 75-100 word summary of a lesson independently. Then, in pairs, have them rewrite it using only 35-50 words. Finally, have them work with a small group to rewrite it one last time. This time, they may use only 10-15 words. Discuss what different groups decided was the most essential information and why they chose to omit certain information. The conversation about what they left out is just as useful as seeing what they left in.

19. Roses and Thorns

Rose bushes

Ask students to write or share out two things they really liked/understood about a topic (the roses) and something they didn’t like/didn’t understand (the thorn).

20. Thumbs Up, Down, or in the Middle

Sometimes things stick around because they just work. Asking students to give you a thumbs up if they understand, thumbs down if they don’t, or thumbs somewhere in the middle if they are so-so about it, is probably one of the fastest formative assessments around. It’s also very easy to keep track of if you’re the teacher standing in the front of the room. Just make sure that you follow up with the thumbs down or thumbs in the middle folks to help them with any confusion.

21. Word Clouds

Word cloud about high school

Ask your students to provide you with the three most essential words or ideas from a lesson and plug them into a word cloud generator . You’ll quickly have an excellent formative assessment that shows you what they thought was most worthy of remembering. If it doesn’t line up with what you think was most important, you know what you need to reteach.

22. Curation

Ask students to gather a bunch of examples that correctly demonstrate the concept you taught. So if you’re studying rhetorical strategies, have students send you screenshots of ads that demonstrate them. Not only will you be able to tell immediately who understood the lesson and who didn’t, but you’ll also have a bunch of great examples and non-examples ready to go for those students who need additional practice.

23. Dry Erase Boards

Young smiling girl standing in front of bright yellow wall holding a blank dry erase board

Another time-tested method of formative assessment that teachers often overlook is individual dry erase boards. They really are an awesome and fast way to see where each student’s level of understanding is at any given point.

24. Think-Pair-Shares

Like so many teacher tools, this one can get stale if overused. But, if used as a method to encourage all students to find their voice and share their learning, it’s perfect for formative assessment. To ensure its effectiveness, ask a question of the class. Have every student write down their own answer. Pair students up with a classmate and give them time to share and discuss their answers. After pairs have had a chance to discuss, have them share out with a larger group or the class as a whole. Circulate, listening to groups who have students you know might be more likely to struggle with the current topic. Collect the papers for extra accountability.

25. Self-Directed

Black background with the word

This one can intimidate some students at first, but it can be incredibly powerful to let students themselves choose how they want to demonstrate learning. You can support students by giving them managed choice, but let them decide if they want to show you they understood the essential parts of your lesson by drawing a picture, writing a paragraph, creating a pop quiz, or even writing song lyrics. This shows you’re putting them in charge of their own learning.

What’s your go-to method of formative assessment? Tell us in the comments.

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25 Formative Assessment Options Your Students Will Actually Enjoy

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Formative and Summative Assessment in Art

Formative assessment and summative assessment are two different types of evaluation that are used to assess student learning.

Formative Assessment in Art

Formative assessment is a form of ongoing evaluation that is used to monitor student progress and provide feedback on their learning. The goal of formative assessment is to help students improve their learning and performance as their work progresses.

What are the student’s strengths and weaknesses? Praise their strengths and tell them how to do even better.

Formative assessment in art can be done in different ways. For example:

Reflecting on the Student’s Previous Grades . The most basic formative assessment is to look at see where your students are currently at with their progress. This may be looking at the grades you have put in your mark book and taking an average. You may want to dig a bit deeper and see how they are achieving with particular tasks. What are their strengths and weaknesses? Do they need to improve their research pages? Or drawing? Do they need more opportunities to demonstrate their creativity?

Marking Work. Marking work can be both formative and summative. It is formative if you treat it as part of an ongoing process throughout a period of time to help the student improve. For example, you might give feedback on a drawing, giving advice on how to improve. Getting into the habit of using ‘EBI:’ which stands for ‘Even Better If’ works well for some people. You could ask the student to reflect back on this advice when they next do a drawing. If their drawing improves throughout the year, you can use the best end grade to go towards their end-of-year summative grade.

Observation . Students may have been spending a lot of time working on a piece of art and you need to assess work mid-way through. (Perhaps you have a reporting deadline and want to give them the best grade you can). This can be done outside of class, or, if they are focussed on the task, you can walk around with your planner and note down a grade or rough percentage.

Observation and Verbal Feedback. Art teachers give verbal feedback all the time. This may be a clear instruction on how to improve a piece of work, or a discussion to encourage the student to decide how they will improve a piece of work.

Summative Assessment in Art

Summative assessment is a form of evaluation that takes place at the end of a course, unit or term. It is typically used to evaluate student achievement and to assign a final grade. Summative assessment of art may be a single grade for a whole project, or a series of grades for different aspects of a project. The goal of summative assessment is to provide an accurate and fair evaluation of student learning and performance.

In short, Formative assessments are used to improve learning during a course and Summative assessments are used to evaluate learning at the end of a course.

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Using Rubrics in Drawing Questions and Show Your Work boxes

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COMMENTS

  1. Using Drawings for Formative Assessment

    Here are some ways to integrate drawing as formative assessment: Line-color-symbol: Draw a line, choose a color, or select a symbol that represents your current understanding of the concept we are learning. Be prepared to explain your choice. Draw an image that represents (gravity, how an argumentative essay is structured, the relationship ...

  2. 7 Smart, Fast Formative Assessment Strategies

    3. Dipsticks: So-called alternative formative assessments are meant to be as easy and quick as checking the oil in your car, so they're sometimes referred to as dipsticks. These can be things like asking students to: write a letter explaining a key idea to a friend, draw a sketch to visually represent new knowledge, or.

  3. How to use drawing as a formative assessment tool

    To prepare a multipart question, teachers can add a premade lesson from the Lesson Library or upload a background image of a template. Students can use this drawing tool to label the template, and then they can complete their drawing assessment by adding a text box to explain their answers. Explore Draw It activities. 4.

  4. 14 Examples of Formative Assessment [+FAQs]

    What makes something a formative assessment? ASCD characterized formative assessment as "a way for teachers and students to gather evidence of learning, engage students in assessment, and use data to improve teaching and learning." Their definition continues, "when you use an assessment instrument— a test, a quiz, an essay, or any other kind of classroom activity—analytically and ...

  5. 6 Strategies for Fast and Formative Assessments

    Check out these six strategies for fast and formative assessments you can begin using today. 1. Observation. One of the best things about being in the art room is watching your students create. You can watch them think about their ideas, explore new techniques and processes, create things that inspire them, and make mistakes into happy accidents.

  6. Teachers' Essential Guide to Formative Assessment

    A formative assessment is a teaching practice—a question, an activity, or an assignment—meant to gain information about student learning. It's formative in that it is intentionally done for the purpose of planning or adjusting future instruction and activities. Like we consider our formative years when we draw conclusions about ourselves, a ...

  7. 13 Formative Assessments That Inspire Creativity

    Here are 13 formative assessment strategies that lean into creativity—inspired by the work of several Edutopia contributors, and from Finley's handy list of quick checks for understanding . Simple Symbols: Sketchnoting—simple, hand-drawn renderings of things like facts, dates, or abstract concepts—can be a great way to help students ...

  8. PDF A Guide for Teachers FORMATIVE ASSESSMENT IN ACTION

    5.1 Think, Pair, Share. 5.2 Pose, Pause, Pounce, Bounce. 5.3 Cross the Line. 5.4 Swap Partners. 5.5 Heads Down, Thumbs Up. 5.6 The Use of Roleplay to Explore Understanding. 5.7 Great Ways to Start a Lesson, Finish a Lesson and Check Progress in the Middle. 5.7.1 Starting a lesson.

  9. Tips for Making Assessments Secure and Successful

    🌟 Drawing: The possibilities with this question type are endless! Students can draw, type, and upload images (including photographs and screenshots) to the Drawing whiteboard. Take this question type even further by uploading an image of a blank table, graph, or graphic organizer to the background, or asking students to annotate a diagram or ...

  10. PDF DESIGNING FORMATIVE ASSESSMENT LESSONS FOR CONCEPT DEVELOPMENT AND ...

    LEM SOLVING Malcolm Swan University of Nottingham [email protected] assessment is the process by which teachers and students g. ther evidence of learning and then use this to adapt the way they teach and learn. I describe a design research project in which we integrated formative assessment strategies into lesson materials ...

  11. Formative vs Summative Assessment

    The goal of summative assessment is to evaluate student learning at the end of an instructional unit by comparing it against some standard or benchmark. Summative assessments are often high stakes, which means that they have a high point value. Examples of summative assessments include: a midterm exam. a final project. a paper. a senior recital.

  12. PDF formative assessment. 56 different examples of

    Extension projects such as: diorama. posterfancy file foldercollageabc booksAny creative ideas students can come up with to dem. ditional understanding of a concept.Doodle ItHave students dr. tand, instead of writing it.Chalkboard SplashNumerous students respond to a prompt/question on.

  13. PDF An Introduction to Formative Assessment Classroom Techniques (FACTs)

    Formative—To inform instruction and provide feedback to students on their learning. Summative—To measure and document the extent to which students have achieved a learning target. NOTE: Diagnostic assessment becomes formative when the assessment data are used to inform instruction. 01-Keeley-45516.qxd 2/26/2008 10:34 AM Page 4

  14. PDF Formative Assessment in the Visual Arts

    ng, they embraced formative assessment. The remainder of this article will introduce two approaches to assess-ment in visual art classes that reveal the innova-tive ways in which the teachers implemented formative. Emily Maddy: 7th-Grade Gradation LessonJason Rondinelli and Emily Maddy teach art in IS 2.

  15. Formative Assessment Teaching Tools

    Teachers get real-time feedback and post-session reports. Nearpod offers nine types of formative assessments to capture student understanding in any lesson! Students can drag words and images onto any background while you monitor progress in. An interactive whiteboard where students can draw, highlight, type, and add pictures.

  16. Assessing Student Understanding Through Drawings

    Students don't need highly developed artistic skills to express what they're learning by sketching it out, and their drawings can often tell you more than a simple multiple choice quiz or writing assignment can. For more on this topic, check out Shveta Miller's article "Using Drawings for Formative Assessment."

  17. 25 Formative Assessment Options Your Students Will Actually Enjoy

    With that in mind, here are 25 formative assessment techniques that will have your students looking forward to showing you what they know. 1. Doodle Notes. Have students doodle/draw a pic of their understanding instead of writing it. Studies have shown it has numerous beneficial effects on student learning.

  18. PDF Formative Assessment Writing Activities and Research Activities

    ersationStudents write letters back and forth to each other.Complete. students finish notes or responses as homework.Write AroundA group of 3 to 5 students wri. notes about a topic and then pass. heir papers to each other. Students read. nd write responses.Students can respond to historica.

  19. Formative and Summative Assessment in Art

    Summative assessment is a form of evaluation that takes place at the end of a course, unit or term. It is typically used to evaluate student achievement and to assign a final grade. Summative assessment of art may be a single grade for a whole project, or a series of grades for different aspects of a project. The goal of summative assessment is ...

  20. Formative Writing Assignments

    Formative Writing Assignments. At the landing page for this section we outlined the broad brush strokes of teaching writing assignments, which lead from reviewing the prompt → to readings and lecture content → to turning content into evidence through questions → to formulating a claim → to drafting → to revision → to reflection.

  21. Formative In-Person Learning Guide

    This guide is full of links and videos to help you find ways to adapt your classroom instruction no matter what setting your students are learning in. Use this guide to learn how to use Formative for: 👨🏽‍💻 Independent Work and Self-paced Mastery. 💡 Stations and Centers. 🙋🏼 Student Self-Assessment and Reflection.

  22. Formative Assignments

    Formative assignments work at any stage of a draft/revision cycle: . Before starting to write a full draft: in-class brainstorming of questions, keeping a reading journal, summarizing sources, drafting a thesis, research proposals, annotated bibliographies, etc. . While writing a draft: writing intros and conclusions, outlining, delivering ...

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