This document outlines an assignment called the Student Writing Analysis Project (SWAP). The purpose is for students to use insights from experienced teachers to evaluate K-12 student writing samples. Students will choose an area of focus to research in an online archive of student work called the SWAP archive. They will then apply what they've learned to provide feedback on writing samples collected from their own field placement. The feedback must be aligned with standards and address relevant issues for individual students. It should also employ diverse strategies to support different learners. Finally, students will develop a follow-up lesson plan based on their analysis.
This document outlines an assignment called the Student Writing Analysis Project (SWAP). The purpose is for students to use insights from experienced teachers to evaluate K-12 student writing samples. Students will choose an area of focus to research in an online archive of student work called the SWAP archive. They will then apply what they've learned to provide feedback on writing samples collected from their own field placement. The feedback must be aligned with standards and address relevant issues for individual students. It should also employ diverse strategies to support different learners. Finally, students will develop a follow-up lesson plan based on their analysis.
Purpose To use insights from professional teachers to practice responding to and evaluating student writing Big Questions: What makes good ELA instruction? Rationale As teachers, you will respond to and evaluate students’ performances on a daily basis. How will you make clear comments that both support and challenge students? How will you evaluate in ways that both maintain standards and acknowledge individual achievement? How will you use assessment to inform subsequent instruction? Assignment For this assignment, you will use the S.W.A.P. archive at http://23.21.225.52/: this is a collection of student writing with and without teacher comments, with information about the students and the school context provided by teachers at different grade levels in different parts of the country.
Each option below involves exploring a “path” through the archive for a particular purpose, and then returning to student writing you collected in your field placement to apply what you’ve learned.
Step 1 – Collect student writing at field placement At some point during your field placement, you will collect a class set of student writing. You should do this BEFORE you teach your own lesson (as a way to learn more about the students).
Step 2 – Come up with a research question Generate a question that will guide your inquiry into the S.W.A.P. data: what do you want to know about responding to student work? Use this question to explore the archive, posting comments as you go. If you prefer, you may choose one of the questions I’ve proposed below (detailed versions of these “paths” appear on the S.W.A.P. homepage):
o Option 1 – How can a teacher design and implement assignments that encourage students to meet standardized criteria but avoid formulaic writing?
o Option 2 – What are the advantages and disadvantages of robo-grading?
o Option 3 - How can a teacher provide feedback that sensitively takes into account students' cultural and linguistic backgrounds?
o Option 4 – How can a teacher provide feedback on students’ digital writing?
Step 3 – Respond to student writing; compose a follow-up lesson Using what you learned from your research to analyze and respond to at least three pieces of the student writing; include these with your final paper. Please make sure there is not already feedback from your cooperating teacher: write your own comments, and explain why you would respond this way to these three students. Then, compose a lesson plan that follows up on what you learned from responding to these students: for example, what does the work/your response suggest you might need to (re)teach to the class? Criteria 4 3 2 1 0 Aligned The feedback on The feedback on The feedback The feedback on The feedback students’ writing students’ writing (and on students’ students’ writing on students’ (and plan for plan for subsequent writing (and (and plan for writing (and subsequent instruction) align with plan for subsequent plan for instruction) align at state-adopted subsequent instruction) align subsequent the appropriate content standards, instruction) with assignment instruction) do level of rigor with assignment rubric align with rubric criteria, or not align with state-adopted criteria, and potential assignment potential state-adopted content standards, modifications rubric criteria, modifications content assignment rubric and potential standards, criteria, and modifications assignment potential rubric criteria, modifications or potential modifications Scaffold The feedback on The feedback on The feedback The feedback on The feedback ed students’ writing students’ writing (and on students’ students’ writing on students’ (and plan for plan for subsequent writing (and (and plan for writing (and subsequent instruction) explain plan for subsequent plan for instruction) are how and why the subsequent instruction) expl subsequent specific and explicit, writer might revise instruction) ain how or why instruction) do explaining how and this work and explain how the writer might not explain why the writer approach a similar and why the revise this work how or why might revise this task in the future writer might the writer work and approach revise this might revise a similar task in the work or this work future approach a similar task in the future Relevant The feedback on The feedback on The feedback The feedback on The feedback students’ writing students’ writing (and on students’ students’ writing on students’ (and plan for plan for subsequent writing (and (and plan for writing (and subsequent instruction) address plan for subsequent plan for instruction) address issues relevant to the subsequent instruction) subsequent important issues assignment and to instruction) address an issue instruction) do relevant to the the individual writer address issues relevant to the not address assignment and to relevant to the assignment or to issues relevant the individual writer assignment or the individual to the to the writer assignment or individual to the writer individual writer Diverse The feedback on The feedback on The feedback The feedback on The feedback students’ writing students’ writing (and on students’ students’ writing on students’ (and plan for plan for subsequent writing (and (and plan for writing (and subsequent instruction) employ a plan for subsequent plan for instruction) employ variety of strategies subsequent instruction) subsequent a variety strategies that sensitively instruction) employ instruction) do that sensitively address diverse employ strategies that not employ address diverse learners (e.g., strategies that address diverse strategies that learners (e.g., students of different sensitively learners (e.g., address students of different cultural/ address students of diverse cultural/ linguistic diverse different learners linguistic backgrounds, ability learners (e.g., cultural/ backgrounds, ability levels, and learning students of linguistic levels, and learning styles, including different backgrounds, styles, including students with IEPs cultural/ ability levels, and students with IEPs and who are ELLs) linguistic learning styles, and who are ELLs), backgrounds, including with awareness of ability levels, students with the teacher’s own and learning IEPs and who are writing history styles, ELLs) including students with IEPs and who are ELLs) Justified The feedback on The feedback on The feedback The feedback on The feedback students’ writing students’ writing (and on students’ students’ writing on students’ (and plan for plan for subsequent writing (and (and plan for (and plan for subsequent instruction) are plan for subsequent subsequent instruction) are informed by current subsequent instruction) are instruction) explicitly informed research and instruction) informed by writing are not by current research resources (e.g., NCTE are informed research and informed by and resources (e.g., position statements, by research resources (e.g., research (e.g., NCTE position district and and resources NCTE position NCTE position statements, district community (e.g., NCTE statements, statements, and community resources) in both its position district and district and resources) in both approach and its statements, community community its approach and its content district and resources) in its resources) content community approach or its resources) in content both its approach and its content Focused The feedback on The feedback on The feedback The feedback on The feedback students’ writing students’ writing (and on students’ students’ writing on students’ (and plan for plan for subsequent writing (and (and plan for writing (and subsequent instruction) plan for subsequent plan for instruction) thoroug thoroughly or subsequent instruction) subsequent hly and specifically specifically demonst instruction) thoroughly or instruction) do demonstrates rate knowledge of thoroughly specifically not knowledge of important disciplinar and demonstrate demonstrate important disciplina y content (e.g., specifically knowledge of knowledge of ry content (e.g., purpose, audience, demonstrate basic disciplinar basic disciplin purpose, audience, rhetorical situation, knowledge of y content ary content rhetorical situation, genre conventions, basic disciplin genre conventions, disciplinary writing ary content disciplinary writing conventions, etc.) conventions, etc.)
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