Understanding the Importance of Student Feedback and Checking for Understanding
Was I willing to let this ride? Was I willing to let someone fail because I waited to long to reteach or not provide enough practice.
The short answer--HELL NO
The Role of Student Feedback
Student feedback refers to specific information provided to students regarding their performance or understanding of a task. It serves multiple purposes in the learning process- Clarifying Expectations: Feedback helps students understand what is expected of them in terms of learning objectives, standards, and criteria for success (Hattie & Timperley, 2007). Clear expectations enable students to focus their efforts and align their learning strategies accordingly.
- Informing Next Steps: Effective feedback guides students on how to improve their performance. It highlights strengths and areas for growth, providing actionable steps for further learning (Wiliam, 2011). This process is crucial for promoting continuous improvement and mastery of content.
- Motivating Learners: Well-structured feedback can motivate students by recognizing their efforts and achievements. Positive reinforcement and encouragement foster a growth mindset and increase student engagement (Hattie & Timperley, 2007).
- Fostering Self-Regulation: When students receive feedback that is specific and actionable, they learn to monitor and regulate their own learning processes (Nicol & Macfarlane-Dick, 2006). This self-regulation is a critical skill that promotes lifelong learning and academic independence.
Research Insights from Robert J. Marzano
Robert J. Marzano's work emphasizes the significance of feedback in improving student achievement. According to Marzano (2012), feedback should be timely, specific, and focused on the task rather than the student. His research underscores the importance of feedback that provides clear guidance on how students can close the gap between their current understanding and the desired learning goals.
Marzano also highlights the power of formative assessment, which includes ongoing checks for understanding throughout the learning process. These assessments provide valuable feedback that informs instructional decisions and helps teachers adjust their teaching strategies to meet students' needs effectively.
The Concept of Checking for Understanding
Checking for understanding involves strategies and techniques that teachers use to assess whether students comprehend the content being taught. It serves several critical purposes in the instructional process:- Real-Time Feedback: By checking for understanding during lessons, teachers can immediately identify areas where students are struggling or misunderstanding concepts. This allows for timely interventions and adjustments to teaching strategies (Fisher & Frey, 2007).
- Adjusting Instruction: Effective checking for understanding informs instructional decisions. Teachers can tailor their explanations, examples, and activities based on students' responses to ensure clarity and promote deeper understanding (Black & Wiliam, 1998).
- Promoting Active Engagement: Engaging students in the process of checking for understanding encourages active participation and cognitive engagement. It shifts the focus from passive listening to active processing and application of knowledge (Heritage, 2008).
- Monitoring Progress: Regular checks for understanding provide teachers with ongoing data about students' learning progress. This continuous assessment helps track student growth over time and identifies areas where additional support may be needed (Chappuis, 2012).
Insights from John Hattie's Research
John Hattie's meta-analyses have identified feedback and formative assessment as high-impact teaching practices that significantly enhance student learning outcomes (Hattie, 2009). His research emphasizes several key findings:
- Effect Size: Feedback has a substantial effect size on student achievement, indicating its potent impact on learning progress (Hattie, 2009).
- Quality Matters: The quality of feedback matters more than the quantity. Specific, actionable feedback that addresses learning goals and criteria for success is most effective (Hattie & Timperley, 2007).
- Timing: Timely feedback that is provided during the learning process is more beneficial than delayed feedback after assessments (Hattie & Timperley, 2007).
Hattie's research underscores the importance of teachers engaging in deliberate efforts to provide meaningful feedback and actively check for understanding to maximize student learning gains.
Current Research Insights
Recent studies continue to support the foundational principles advocated by Marzano and Hattie regarding feedback and checking for understanding:
- Technology Integration: Digital tools and platforms offer new opportunities for providing immediate feedback and assessing student understanding in real time (Gikandi, Morrow, & Davis, 2011).
- Cultural Responsiveness: Effective feedback takes into account cultural backgrounds and diverse learning needs, enhancing its relevance and impact on student motivation and engagement (Gay, 2010).
- Peer Feedback: Incorporating peer feedback processes into instructional practices can complement teacher-provided feedback, promoting collaborative learning and multiple perspectives (Topping, 2009).
These studies highlight the evolving nature of feedback and checking for understanding in contemporary educational contexts, emphasizing their adaptability and importance in diverse learning environments.
Practical Strategies for Implementation
To effectively integrate feedback and checking for understanding into teaching practice, educators can adopt several evidence-based strategies:
- Use Formative Assessments: Incorporate regular formative assessments, such as quizzes, exit tickets, and class discussions, to check for understanding during lessons.
- Provide Specific Feedback: Ensure that feedback is specific, constructive, and directly related to learning objectives and criteria for success. Use rubrics and models to guide students towards improvement.
- Encourage Self-Assessment: Promote self-assessment and reflection among students by encouraging them to evaluate their own understanding and performance against learning goals.
- Utilize Technology: Explore digital tools and platforms that facilitate immediate feedback and interactive assessments, allowing for personalized learning experiences.
- Differentiate Instruction: Tailor feedback and instructional strategies to meet the individual needs of students, providing additional support or challenges as needed.
- Promote Peer Feedback: Incorporate peer feedback activities that encourage students to provide constructive comments and suggestions to their peers, fostering collaborative learning and communication skills.
- Monitor Progress Continuously: Regularly monitor and analyze student progress data from assessments and feedback to inform instructional decisions and interventions.
- I need help
- I sort of get it but need more practice.
- I got this and can help others.
- Bring on the really big words.
- I need help.
- I needed to tap all the words or most of them even after practicing.
- I read this fluently.
Student feedback and checking for understanding are integral components of effective teaching practice, supported by research from Robert J. Marzano, John Hattie, and current studies in education. Feedback enhances learning outcomes by clarifying expectations, guiding improvement, motivating learners, and fostering self-regulation. Checking for understanding ensures that teachers can assess student comprehension in real time, adjust instruction accordingly, and promote active engagement and progress monitoring.
We play a crucial role in implementing these practices systematically and thoughtfully, using evidence-based strategies to maximize their impact on student learning. By prioritizing meaningful feedback and ongoing assessment of understanding, teachers can create supportive learning environments where all students can thrive academically and develop into self-directed learners.
References
- Black, P., & Wiliam, D. (1998). Inside the black box: Raising standards through classroom assessment. Phi Delta Kappan, 80(2), 139-148.
- Chappuis, J. (2012). Seven strategies of assessment for learning (2nd ed.). Pearson Education.
- Fisher, D., & Frey, N. (2007). Checking for understanding: Formative assessment techniques for your classroom. ASCD.
- Gay, G. (2010). Culturally responsive teaching: Theory, research, and practice (2nd ed.). Teachers College Press.
- Gikandi, J. W., Morrow, D., & Davis, N. E. (2011). Online formative assessment in higher education: A review of the literature. Computers & Education, 57(4), 2333-2351.
- Hattie, J. (2009). Visible learning: A synthesis of over 800 meta-analyses relating to achievement. Routledge.
- Hattie, J., & Timperley, H. (2007). The power of feedback. Review of Educational Research, 77(1), 81-112.
- Heritage, M. (2008). Formative assessment: What do teachers need to know and do? Phi Delta Kappan, 89(2), 140-145.
- Marzano, R. J. (2012). The art and science of teaching: A comprehensive framework for effective instruction. ASCD.
- Nicol, D. J., & Macfarlane-Dick, D. (2006). Formative assessment and self-regulated learning: A model and seven principles of good feedback practice. Studies in Higher Education, 31(2), 199-218.
- Topping, K. (2009). Peer assessment. Theory Into Practice, 48(1), 20-27.
- Wiliam, D. (2011). Embedded formative assessment. Solution Tree Press.
A Path to Ensuring Mastery in Addition and Subtraction for Math Success
Do you happen to know how many standards students have to master to be able to solve basic multiplication and division equations?
I went looking and it’s more than 15!
I’m talking about place value, counting, and solving addition and subtraction facts fluently.
These skills are the foundations and need to be taught to mastery!
Do you need help getting your students to master place value or counting skills or addition and subtraction fluency?
If so, you're in luck! In this blog post, we will discuss how to teach these skills and ways to teach these concepts.
The first way is drill and kill practice. This is a traditional approach that many teachers use. The second way is with place-value games. Games are a great way to engage students and help them learn in a fun way. Finally, the third way is to give students time to demonstrate mastery in a variety of different ways.
Why Worry about it??
First–if you don't, who will!! Passing the buck doesn’t help anyone and when they get to 3rd grade your students will drown and the teacher who has them will give up.
Thank you for being part of my soap box.
Mastering multiplication and division requires a strong foundation in several basic mathematical skills, notably place value, counting, and addition & subtraction. Each of these skills plays a crucial role in understanding and performing multiplication and division effectively.
Place Value
Place value is fundamental in mathematics as it helps in understanding the significance of digits in a number based on their position.Break Down Numbers: Multiplication and division often involve breaking down larger numbers into smaller, more manageable parts. For example, understanding that 234 is 200 + 30 + 4 allows for easier mental multiplication and division using distributive properties.
Align Numbers Properly: When multiplying or dividing multi-digit numbers, place value ensures that digits are aligned correctly, which is crucial for obtaining accurate results. Misalignment can lead to significant errors.
Counting
Think for a second, can you students count by 1s past 50 without starting at 1. Or can they skip count by 5s starting at 65. Or counting by 100s starting at 200?
Counting is a foundational skill that underpins many mathematical concepts, including multiplication and division.
Counting is one of those skills that starts in preschool and gets more complex as students move through the grades. But it is also a standard that we think students have mastered or understand and walk away from before there is data to show they can count.
In Kindergarten, students are to count to 100 in both 1s and 10s. First grade, students are extending the counting sequence 120. Not to mention plus 10s or minus 10s. In Second grade students need to count by 100s and skip count by 5s, 10s, and 100s.
Students don't get counting or skip counting with calendar math. They need more. They need to count everything. Not just by 1s starting at zero or one but starting at 14 or 46 or 98.
Do you have students that don't know what number comes after 100 or 110?
You need this!
In this product, you will find student worksheets to get students working on counting by 1s, 5s, 10s, and writing numbers passed 100. And like all my activities--progress monitoring to support interventions and the RTI process.
Understanding Multiples: Multiplication can be viewed as repeated addition. For instance, 4 x 3 can be thought of as 4 counted three times (4 + 4 + 4). Similarly, division involves understanding how many times a number can be subtracted from another number, essentially counting in reverse.
Skip Counting: Skip counting (counting by 2s, 3s, 4s, etc.) is a direct application of counting that helps in learning multiplication tables and understanding the concept of grouping in division.
Patterns Recognition: Counting aids in recognizing numerical patterns, which is essential for mastering multiplication tables and identifying factors and multiples.
Addition & Subtraction
Addition and subtraction are the building blocks of multiplication and division:
In second grade there is a tiny standard that where multiplication starts. It's 2.OA.C--students start to learn about arrays and start using skip counting to solve multiplication facts of 2s, 5s, and 10s. This set of activities will help you build students capacity in using games and number talks.
Foundation of Multiplication: Multiplication is essentially repeated addition. For example, 5 x 4 can be seen as adding 5 four times (5 + 5 + 5 + 5). A solid grasp of addition makes this concept more intuitive.
Division as Repeated Subtraction: Division can be conceptualized as repeated subtraction. For example, 20 divided by 4 can be understood by subtracting 4 from 20 repeatedly until reaching zero, counting the number of subtractions made.
Handling Remainders: Division often results in remainders. Proficiency in subtraction is necessary to understand and calculate what is left over after dividing.
Interconnectedness of Skills
The interconnectedness of place value, counting, and addition & subtraction with multiplication and division highlights the importance of these basic skills. Mastering them provides a strong mathematical foundation, enabling students to tackle more complex problems with confidence. Understanding place value ensures accurate computation, counting fosters an intuitive grasp of numerical relationships, and addition & subtraction form the operational basis for both multiplication and division.BUNDLE
I have you covered with a growing bundle. All these products are bundled together in my store, so you can start the year off strong and build those necessary skills to ensure your students master all the skills they need to understand multiplication.
Part 4: Implement the Evaluation Plan
This is the last piece of a four-part blog series on How to Complete a Comprehensive Special Education Evaluation.
Part One Covered -- Why We Need a Comprehensive Evaluation
Part Two Covered -- Planning a Comprehensive Evaluation
Part Three Cover -- Everything about Parent Input
The last couple of pieces mean making sure you have all the data you need and of course consent.
If you are assessing a Second Language Learner (multi-lingual), ensure those administering assessments are appropriate and you are following your state and district guidelines to make sure the evaluation is needed. This means you are suspecting a disability but it could be a difference and not a disability. Otherwise, you may find you have data you can’t use which may affect the reliability and validity of assessment results.
IDEA contains specific provisions related to the assessment of students who speak a second language. These provisions ensure that evaluations are fair and non-discriminatory. Key sections include:
- 20 U.S.C. § 1414(b)(3) - Evaluation Procedures:
- This section mandates that assessments and other evaluation materials used to assess a child must be selected and administered so as not to be discriminatory on a racial or cultural basis. It also specifies that these materials should be provided and administered in the child's native language or other mode of communication unless it is clearly not feasible to do so.
- 34 C.F.R. § 300.304(c) - Evaluation Procedures:
- This regulation elaborates on the requirements for evaluations. It states that:
- Assessments and other evaluation materials must not be discriminatory on a racial or cultural basis (34 C.F.R. § 300.304(c)(1)(i)).
- They must be provided and administered in the child's native language or other mode of communication, and in the form most likely to yield accurate information on what the child knows and can do academically, developmentally, and functionally, unless it is clearly not feasible to provide or administer (34 C.F.R. § 300.304(c)(1)(ii)).
- The child must be assessed in all areas related to the suspected disability, including, if appropriate, health, vision, hearing, social and emotional status, general intelligence, academic performance, communicative status, and motor abilities (34 C.F.R. § 300.304(c)(4)).
- Assessments must be technically sound instruments that may assess the relative contribution of cognitive and behavioral factors, in addition to physical or developmental factors (34 C.F.R. § 300.304(c)(7)).
- 20 U.S.C. § 1412(a)(6)(B) - State Eligibility:
- This section requires states to ensure that children with disabilities are assessed using materials and procedures that are not racially or culturally discriminatory and that are provided and administered in the child's native language or other mode of communication unless it is clearly not feasible to do so.
These provisions collectively ensure that evaluations of students who speak a second language are conducted fairly and yield accurate, useful information about the student's abilities and needs. They emphasize the importance of using appropriate, culturally and linguistically responsive assessment methods. This is what IDEA states what WE HAVE to do but check your state regulations as they will be way more specific about what YOU HAVE to do.
What are my timelines?
Assign someone to set timelines when the individual assessment reports are due to ensure parents have a copy the week before the meeting to determine eligibility and to evaluation timelines will be met.
Why? Well outside of everything else you have to do, those timelines are important. If a student is already behind, why would you want to make it worse by messing up your dates? Plus, from an advocacy standpoint, it will get you in trouble if they are missed.
IDEA’s specific provisions that outline the timelines for conducting assessments and evaluations of students who may have disabilities. These timelines are designed to ensure that evaluations are conducted in a timely manner so that appropriate services can be provided without unnecessary delays. The relevant sections of IDEA include:
- 20 U.S.C. § 1414(a)(1)(C) - Initial Evaluations:
- This section states that the initial evaluation must be conducted within 60 days of receiving parental consent for the evaluation, or within the timeframe established by the state if the state has established its own timeline.
- 34 C.F.R. § 300.301(c) - Initial Evaluations:
- This regulation further specifies the timeline for initial evaluations. It mandates that the initial evaluation must be conducted within 60 days of receiving parental consent for the evaluation
unless the state has established a different timeframe. The evaluation must be sufficiently comprehensive to identify all of the child's special education and related services needs. - 20 U.S.C. § 1414(a)(2)(B) - Reevaluations:
- Reevaluations must be conducted if the public agency determines that the educational or related services needs of the child, including improved academic achievement and functional performance, warrant a reevaluation, or if the child's parents or teacher requests a reevaluation. However, a reevaluation may not occur more than once a year unless the parent and the public agency agree otherwise, and must occur at least once every three years unless the parent and the public agency agree that a reevaluation is unnecessary.
- 34 C.F.R. § 300.303 - Reevaluations:
- This regulation provides further detail on reevaluation timelines, specifying that reevaluations must occur at least once every three years unless the parent and public agency agree that a reevaluation is unnecessary. Reevaluations may also occur more frequently if conditions warrant or if requested by the child's parent or teacher, but not more than once a year unless agreed upon by the parent and the public agency.
These provisions ensure that evaluations and reevaluations are conducted within specific timeframes to facilitate timely identification and provision of appropriate services for students with disabilities.
Once all the assessments are completed, send a draft home. No, it's not in IDEA but if parents are equal partners at the table sending home the report is treating them as such. And, no, it’s not predetermination. It’s making sure everyone has the same information.
I also know that teams, builds, and district departments all have their own viewpoints and directions where this notion is concerned.
Predetermination will get you and your team in trouble. Big trouble and it’s a very slippery slope.
Predetermination in the context of IDEA refers to situations where decisions about a student's eligibility for special education services or the specifics of their Individualized Education Program (IEP) are made by the school district without appropriate input from the parents or before the IEP meeting occurs. Predetermination violates the collaborative intent of IDEA and can lead to a denial of a Free Appropriate Public Education (FAPE).
While the term "predetermination" itself is not explicitly mentioned in IDEA, the regulations and case law provide guidance on what constitutes predetermination and why it is prohibited. Courts have consistently ruled that predetermination occurs when school personnel make unilateral decisions about a child's educational program without meaningful parental involvement. Some key cases include:
- Deal v. Hamilton County Board of Education (6th Cir. 2004): The court held that the school district violated IDEA by predetermining the child's placement and failing to consider the parents' input during the IEP process.
- W.G. v. Board of Trustees of Target Range School District (9th Cir. 1992): The court found that the school district violated IDEA by predetermining the child’s placement and not allowing the parents to meaningfully participate in the IEP process.
These provisions and cases collectively underscore the importance of parental involvement and prohibit predetermination by ensuring that all decisions about a child's special education program are made collaboratively, with meaningful input from the parents.
IEP Team Evaluation Meeting and Eligibility Determination
Before the meeting, identify the team meeting who will be the meeting facilitator. The facilitator should prepare for and coordinate the IEP team evaluation meeting to ensure all IEP team participants, including the parent, collectively participate in reviewing, analyzing, and interpreting assessment information and make required evaluation decisions: special education eligibility or continuing eligibility and identifying the educational needs of the student.
The IEP team reviews the developmentally and educationally relevant questions (from the evaluation plan) in relation to findings from existing and new assessments and other information gathered in prior steps.
Consider all information and make evaluation decisions:
- For students who are culturally or linguistically diverse, how are the assessment results indicative of a disability versus a difference?
- Do any exclusionary factors apply?
- Does the student meet or continue to meet disability category criteria (refer to disability category forms)?
- What are the effects of disability (e.g., how does the student’s disability affect access, engagement, and progress in age or grade-level general education curriculum, instruction, environments, or activities; under what conditions are these effects intensified or lessened)?
- What are the student’s disability-related needs, whether or not commonly linked to the student’s identified category(ies) of disability (e.g., areas in which the student needs to develop or improve skills that address effects of the student’s disability so the student can access, engage and make progress in general education)?
- Does the student need or continue to need specially designed instruction to address disability-related needs? Or can the student’s educational needs be addressed without specially designed instruction?
If the student is eligible for special education, ensure there is enough information to include in the evaluation report to support writing an IEP based on the eligibility decision and information about the student’s educational needs that can be used to develop or review and revise the student’s IEP. Evaluation information should help the team develop an IEP that supports access, engagement and progress to meet age and grade-level general education standards and expectations.
If the student is not, or is no longer, eligible for special education, ensure there is enough information to support the IEP team eligibility decision and to make recommendations about student needs that can be addressed with general education supports to help the student access, engage, and make progress in age or grade-level general education. The team may consider if the student is eligible for protection under section 504 because of a “physical or mental impairment which substantially limits one or more major life activities.” Remember Special Education and Section 504 are two different things and can’t be completed at a Special Education meeting. Following your building Section 504 procedures.
Wrapping it all up
Document the IEP team evaluation decisions about eligibility and educational need on the evaluation report, including all required forms. Communicate and clarify next steps and any questions with the IEP team, including the parent (e.g., timelines for IEP development, plans to address student needs if student is not or no longer eligible for special education under IDEA).
If the student is eligible or continues to be eligible for special education: rewrite the student’s Individualized Education Program (IEP) based on the new data.
If the student is found not, or no longer eligible for special education, make general education recommendations as appropriate, such as supports other than special education services, within the LEA’s RTI/MTSS.
This by all means is not everything you need to know or even remember about making sure you are completing comprehensive special education evaluations–it was meant to provide a guide to help you remember what needs to be done and any sticky places that you need to be aware of.
Those sticky places–those are things I look for as an advocate myself. You have a chance to take IEP compliance training either from your State or from an advocate like Catherine Whitcher, I would recommend it. I was surprised about what I didn’t know as a special education teacher or changes that didn’t get communicated such as Case Law or shifts in how you complete ML assessments.
If you have questions about anything from this series please reach out to me.
Chat soon-
The Ongoing Journey: Problem Solving in Special Education with iReady Insights
What is RIOT/ICEL and what does it have to do with my vocabulary project??
How it all works?
RIOT: (Review, Interview, Observation, Test)
ICEL–Instruction, Curriculum, Environment, and Learner

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