Talk with students about assessment

Many of the students have asked, “What is different between MACC and a regular class?” In my opinion, one of the things that will be different is that in MACC, students will have more input into their own learning environment. For example, students were encouraged to share essential agreements around behaviours that will provide them with an effective learning community. Today, they were also asked to think about what it means to be a good contributor to a MACC class.

We discussed how activities are more rich when active participation happens. How will we measure this active participation in MACC?

Students were given a rubric with the letter grades A, B, C+, C and C-. We discussed what those letter grades generally mean, based upon students’ past experiences or what they have heard.

Then, I asked them to draft on a blank rubric what participation would look like at the “A” or “B” level. In groups they came up with measurable criteria, and then we shared the criteria aloud. I recorded their responses and collected their drafts, which I will use to make a rubric on participation. This rubric will apply to all subjects and MACC 4/5 activities, and I will ask students to do self-assessments, based on their criteria and mine, as we continue during the term.

Learning how to assess your own performance is an important, lifelong skill, and students will be encouraged to answer their own question when they say, “Is this good enough?” or “Is this what you want?” I often answer by saying, “Does it fit the criteria?” or “What do you think based on what we agreed would be quality work?”