Monday, 18 June 2012

Leading Edge


If given the opportunity to be released from a Ministry of Education mandate, what would you choose?  This week’s blog allows us the opportunity to recognize the great work of our Active Learning Department. In response to the Ministry of Education’s request for educators to use “Innovation to Think Differently”, our school has taken the lead in petitioning the government to release us from providing grades for our students in all grades of Physical Education. The continued dialogue about assessment and evaluation is evolving and it’s great to see that the Ministry of Education realizes that if things are going to change, it must be from the grass roots. The M.O.E. application below outlines our bid to move forward in how we assess and evaluate our students.
  

INNOVATION TO THINK DIFFERENTLY
Ministry of Education Expression of Interest from Sullivan Heights Secondary
Submitted by: Mr. Ryan Neufeld & Mr. Jeff Vaughn


What do you want to do and why?

In the Sullivan Heights Secondary "Active Learning Department" (formerly PE), we believe strongly that the use of external rewards and punishments produces short term gains but ultimately reduces the value of the activity itself. Indeed, with activities requiring even rudimentary cognitive skill, use of rewards (including large monetary sums) has been repeatedly proven to actually reduce performance. These beliefs are based both in modern psychological testing focused on motivation, as well as ancient understandings of the value of intrinsic drive and higher purpose. Unfortunately, public education in BC is structured around a grading system, which functions as an external reward/punishment for student behavior, learning and ability. At Sullivan we have been working to change this dynamic. It is our heart felt and pedagogical desire to have grades removed completely from the discussion for all grade levels. This will allow for the return to a truly internally motivated environment where: (1) activities are valued for their own sake; (2) where mistakes are not punished but seen as learning opportunities; (3) where students are regarded holistically, as human beings first rather than as an after-thought of curriculum; (4) where teachers and students feel safe to experiment and honour emergent learning; and (5) where formative reports of progress/assessment are co-constructed between student, teacher and parent.

What policy/order/regulation interim change are you requesting?

We request relief from the requirement to provide letter grades and/or percentages for all our PE classes. Studies from around the globe have demonstrated the detrimental effects grades have, and how strongly socioeconomic status, standardized achievement and high grades are related. We are opposed to continuing to reward and punish students based on their socio-economic status and level of support at home. We are ready to move towards a system focused on mentoring each student in his or her own learning journey. We believe the current system limits immediate learning and can dismantle a child’s innate passion and curiosity. We seek to create an environment, where learners understand and believe in their own capacity for improvement.

What will be different when innovation is successful?

Without the pressure and focus on grades, the community of learners at Sullivan will be free to collaborate authentically and organically together in search of "better practice" and individualized learning. The oft-stated goals of the 21st Century Learner movement are marginalized at best, and unattainable in most cases because of the constant pressure from the arbitrary but potent grading/standardization/exam current that flows through schools. Teaching to the test/exam remains a pervasive barrier to true individualized learning. The use of grades as external motivators is counter productive to the goal of life long learning. Having a prescribed learning outcome or intended destination for every class defies the opportunity for emergent learning and severely limits the ability of students to find new solutions or merge learning in creative ways. Indeed, the entire paradigm shift (from teacher centered to learner centered) demands the removal of subjective and “objective” summative evaluation found in grading. It requires a new system of evaluation where all participants in “education” are learners, teachers, and evaluators. A system where formative assessment is evident via conversations, collection of evidence, and the presentation of one’s learning as a final summative assessment. This fundamental shift will free time to explore teachable moments, trying new technologies, reworking lessons to be project and exploratory in nature, and most importantly to allow student learning at its own place and pace is monumental. Without “time” innovation will continue to be brushed aside for “accountability” to the test, exam, and curricular outcomes. Without grades everything will be different.

Diffusion: How might others learn about your work?

At Sullivan we have a staff that have embraced themselves as learners and are connected with each other as well as educators from around the world in the conversations of improved practice. Before beginning this proposal, and in a matter of minutes, connections were made within the school, the district, and the province and even with other educators in other provinces. Through massive Personal Learning Networks on Twitter, questions were posed and insights garnered from teachers, administrators and innovations specialists from across the country. What we are finding is that many others already know about and share our purpose.

This proposal is very timely in that we are currently living in a revolution of assessment reform in education. Many educators and parents are now challenging the status quo, as many of them have now come to realize the harmful effects of our current grading system.  A major part of our work will be to continue to present our learning and changes in practice to other teachers through Professional Development days, District and Provincial Conferences (and “un”conferences), and online through our presence on social media (blogging and twitter). We have also recently been invited to attend and present at a national conference for educators to further spread our portfolio/interview assessment practices to a much bigger audience.

The message “learning for learning’s sake” will have a resounding effect with educators and students across the nation if the BC government leads the way by showing a commitment to removing the largest barrier to changing teacher practice.

Diffusion: How might partner groups/community be involved in the process?

By definition, our formative assessment model requires a much greater involvement in the learning and evaluating process from the learner. It has also proven to require a much greater involvement from parents interested in their child’s progress. Instead of symbol and number on a piece of paper, they are required to dialogue with their children about the learning and growth process. In concert with the teacher, the conversations students have with supportive adults continue the metacognitive process of practice, self-assessment, and goal setting. Through this discussion, a greater understanding of learner needs emerges, as does a strong community of support.

With the extra time afforded, teachers are relieved of the pressure to grade a set curriculum so explorations of citizenship and stewardship can become far more involved, both in depth and breadth throughout our courses.

PLEASE provide/attach research base supporting this innovation.

1)  Our Active Learning Department Head, Mr. Jeff Vaughn, recently completed a Masters degree reviewing many of the concerns we share about the dichotomy between personal needs and those of the system. In it he summarizes much of our early research, and shares what progress we have already made.


2) Alfie Kohn - The case against grades.                               


3) Dan Pink - Drive (The Surprising Truth about What Motivates Us) Video Summary


4) George Couros - Carol Dweck’s Growth Mindset and Grading


5) Chris Kennedy - Superintendent of West Vancouver School District



6) Will Richardson



7) Sugata Mitra - Hole in the Wall and Kid Driven Education Talks





Identify the stakeholders…       Trust the process…      Trust the people…



3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Having taught phys ed for 19 years I can see how this type of assessment would work there, but.. I also teach math and have expectation of a certain level of competence and qualifications for higher level programs. I realize a portfolio can have tests or assignments showing competence but these are difficult to compare for higher level programs on a large scale.

Anonymous said...

Over 12 years of teaching PE, I have struggled with the methods of evaluating students. There have been a group of PE teachers who have talked about getting rid of grades or moving to Pass/Fail or no grades at all. Really happy to hear that there are others out there who are looking to find ways of putting the learner first and getting them motivated to be active.

Anonymous said...

With over 20 years experience in PE I too have grappled with the concept of grades and only use a numerical system in senior courses of study that require an external assessment component. I have utilized portfolios with great success but you need to have the confidence to allow students to direct their own learning at some point! We are bound to a broad grading system employed across the school of A-E and I feel this gives little incentive to our low achieves to improve and ultimately adopt a life of physical activity, which I believe is our ultimate sign of success! I have found a competency checklist teamed with peer assessment ( where they play an active role in assessing others) has been very productive, unlocking an understanding of skills, improving competency and with it motivation to get active. Grading works for some subjects but in PE it can become a label and barrier for engagement in low achievers.

Grad 2017 - L.A. Matheson Secondary School

Principal’s Message   This is a very exciting and somewhat anxious time for our Grade...