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The Road to Tenure offers humorous recollections of the messiness
and confusion that fill the days of a pre-tenure academic-from
graduate school through the postdoc and into the assistant
professor days. The book's three sections roughly map onto the
chronology of academic life, beginning with graduate school and the
job search experience; followed by teaching, research, and service;
and finally the challenges of family and academic identity. The
book is not a how-to, nor does it emphasize "lessons learned" on
the way to tenure. Instead, the collection earnestly, and with good
humor, captures a significant and meaningful slice of the
experience of pursuing academia in contemporary colleges and
universities. For the doctoral student or newly hired faculty
member, these essays will provide some comfort with their implicit
suggestion that, while it's certainly hard work, you are not alone.
The Road to Tenure offers humorous recollections of the messiness
and confusion that fill the days of a pre-tenure academic-from
graduate school through the postdoc and into the assistant
professor days. The book's three sections roughly map onto the
chronology of academic life, beginning with graduate school and the
job search experience; followed by teaching, research, and service;
and finally the challenges of family and academic identity. The
book is not a how-to, nor does it emphasize "lessons learned" on
the way to tenure. Instead, the collection earnestly, and with good
humor, captures a significant and meaningful slice of the
experience of pursuing academia in contemporary colleges and
universities. For the doctoral student or newly hired faculty
member, these essays will provide some comfort with their implicit
suggestion that, while it's certainly hard work, you are not alone.
"This book places students center stage in the discussion of how we
know what students know. Using formative assessment to understand
student learning is a theme grounded in good teaching and good
assessment!" -Jo Topps, Regional Directorth K-12 Alliance/WestEd
"This book incorporates current research and not only provides an
explanation of the necessity of formative assessment, but offers a
system for planning lessons and a variety of tools to implement
formative assessment in the classroom." -Susan Leeds, Science
Department Chair and Gifted Studies Teacher Howard Middle School,
Winter Park, FL Use this powerful tool to enhance science teaching
and learning! Research has shown that when teachers use formative
assessments effectively, they have a clearer understanding of what
students know and are better able to design instruction that meets
learners' needs. This practical guide shows teachers how to create
and implement formative assessments in their middle and high school
science classrooms. Grounded in extensive and solid research, this
guide covers all science content areas-physics/physical science,
life science/biology, earth and space science, and chemistry-as
well as five types of formative assessments: big idea questions,
concept maps, evidence-to-explanation, predict-observe-explain, and
multiple choice. Teachers will find additional support in: Richly
detailed, concrete examples of the five types of assessments
In-depth guidelines for implementing the assessments Brief case
studies with transcript excerpts that demonstrate how teachers have
used formative assessments Easy-to-use templates to help analyze
lessons in current units and identify places for inserting
formative assessments With this easy-to-use, hands-on guide, any
teacher can learn how to use formative assessment strategies to
improve student achievement in science!
The current wave of science education reforms emphasizes more
equitable opportunities for students as they learn disciplinary
core ideas and apply crosscutting concepts by engaging in the
practices of scientists. Formative assessment—the assessment
teachers and students conduct while learning is in progress—also
needs to shift to support this vision. This book combines
three-dimensional science learning, sociocultural theories of
learning, and science for justice and equity to provide a
comprehensive picture of formative assessment for today's K–12
science classroom. Using practical examples and strategies, the
author provides guidance for classroom teachers around formative
assessment task design that centers students' interests and builds
on the resources they bring to school. The text explores the
different enactment approaches teachers can use to prioritize and
respond to students' ideas as they are learning. It also offers
approaches to, and resources for, professional learning that
support teachers as they engage in formative assessment for
ambitious science instruction. Book Features: Provides a framework
for designing and enacting 3D science assessments that support both
rigorous and equitable instruction. Advocates for formative
assessment that evaluates the practices of scientific inquiry, as
opposed to measuring the memorization of science content. Includes
assessment tasks, samples from classroom practice, and
transcriptions of classroom conversations with students. Offers
guidance for providing students with helpful feedback to advance
their learning, as well as suggestions for collaborating with
colleagues. Shows how formative assessment can be enacted across
classrooms to create opportunities to coordinate practice at a
larger scale.
"This book places students center stage in the discussion of how we
know what students know. Using formative assessment to understand
student learning is a theme grounded in good teaching and good
assessment!" -Jo Topps, Regional Directorth K-12 Alliance/WestEd
"This book incorporates current research and not only provides an
explanation of the necessity of formative assessment, but offers a
system for planning lessons and a variety of tools to implement
formative assessment in the classroom." -Susan Leeds, Science
Department Chair and Gifted Studies Teacher Howard Middle School,
Winter Park, FL Use this powerful tool to enhance science teaching
and learning! Research has shown that when teachers use formative
assessments effectively, they have a clearer understanding of what
students know and are better able to design instruction that meets
learners' needs. This practical guide shows teachers how to create
and implement formative assessments in their middle and high school
science classrooms. Grounded in extensive and solid research, this
guide covers all science content areas-physics/physical science,
life science/biology, earth and space science, and chemistry-as
well as five types of formative assessments: big idea questions,
concept maps, evidence-to-explanation, predict-observe-explain, and
multiple choice. Teachers will find additional support in: Richly
detailed, concrete examples of the five types of assessments
In-depth guidelines for implementing the assessments Brief case
studies with transcript excerpts that demonstrate how teachers have
used formative assessments Easy-to-use templates to help analyze
lessons in current units and identify places for inserting
formative assessments With this easy-to-use, hands-on guide, any
teacher can learn how to use formative assessment strategies to
improve student achievement in science!
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