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How To Use Mapping Strategies After a TestTargeting Learning Areas Helps Teachers Improve Instruction
Using mapping strategies after a test can lead to improved instruction as teachers aim to engage their learners more effectively.
While a good test should assess how well students may have processed targeted learning skills, the only way to ensure students are engaged and on-task is by mapping those original skills against the student progress. Mapping provides teachers with concrete evidence as they assess how to improve students' learning and ultimately, teacher's instruction. This process involves first mapping problematic areas of student learning and then using that targeted information to engage their students more effectively. Teachers Map Problematic Areas of Student LearningAfter marking the test, teachers should begin to notice those specific skill sets that caused students difficulty. In reading for example, this could be deeper comprehension, decoding and word recognition. In areas of early reading skills for example, teachers can consider the following questions:
Teachers can then use new targeted assessment goals to reflect classroom learning and assessment. Diversifying Instruction Using a Variety of Learning Contexts Teachers can provide more targeted areas of practice in a variety of engaging learning contexts, such as pair or group work, that are also favorable to the classroom dynamics. For example, if a student is still struggling with decodable skills, teachers can provide students with decodable texts, work on reading targeted vocabulary and sound blends in isolation and within word contexts. All this can be done using a cooperative learning technique such as jigsaw learning, providing students can handle this type of group work. Implications for Differentiated InstructionStudents acquire various reading skills at different rates. When students are experiencing difficulty, teachers should emphasize effort that will help students complete the activity more successfully. If a task is too difficult, no learning can take place. In bridging word-text skills for example, teachers can appeal to various learning groups in terms of using the same reading comprehension skills but with different learning tasks. For example, a lower performing group scans a text for names of people and places. They should remember to look for words beginning with capital letters. They can then classify them according to groups of "names" and "people." The middle group lists names of people, places and numbers and what they refer to and the stronger group underlines five unknown words. They guess the meanings and confirm their answers in the dictionary. In engaging learners more effectively, teachers should consider mapping problematic areas of student difficulty to ensure complete integrity and accountability in learning tasks, as they prepare their students for the next test.
The copyright of the article How To Use Mapping Strategies After a Test in New Teacher Support is owned by Dorit Sasson. Permission to republish How To Use Mapping Strategies After a Test in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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