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Monitoring Student Thinking
Use this Assessment Checklist to monitor and guide student thinking as students work in teams to classify items into categories.
Create Categories
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Questioning Strategies
- What kind of an item is this?
- What is the relationship between ________ and ________?
- How is ________ like ________?
- How are ________ and ________ different?
- Can you distinguish between ________ and __________?
- Can you separate the ________ from the ________?
- Which one doesn't belong in this group?
- Why are you grouping the items that way?
- Can you separate these items into more distinct categories?
- Why are you putting ________ and _________ together?
- Can you think of descriptive names for the categories you’ve created?
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Assessment Checklis t
Circle the letter of the skill or strategy that is apparent in each group’s discussion.
- Students can identify common features and compare and contrast items.
- Students can differentiate between general categories and specific items.
- Students can generate reasonable categories and explain their reasoning.
- Students can create appropriate names for categories.
Comments
Team 1 1 2 3 4
Team 2 1 2 3 4
Team 3 1 2 3 4
Team 4 1 2 3 4
Team 5 1 2 3 4
Team 6 1 2 3 4 |
Refine Categories
- Are you sure you want to categorize the items that way?
- Are there ways that items in the same category are different? Are these important differences? Would this make a difference in your categories?
- Take two items that could create a new category and put them together and ask them in what new category they might belong.
- Try re-categorizing the items into different groups. Do these groups more accurately reflect the characteristics?
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- Students can see flaws in their reasoning.
- Students can see multiple ways of categorizing.
- Students can evaluate the best categories and explain their reasoning.
Comments
Team 1 1 2 3 Team 2 1 2 3 Team 3 1 2 3 Team 4 1 2 3 Team 5 1 2 3 Team 6 1 2 3 |
Finalize Categories
- What is the overall theme of this category?
- What generalization can you make from this information?
- Think of good names for your categories.
- Are they short with just a few words?
- Do they accurately describe the items in them?
- Do all of the items fit in the category or do you need to move some to other categories or create new ones?
- Can think of any additional items that would fit in the category?
- Are some of your items more important to the category than others?
- Are your categories as refined as they can be?
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- Students can generalize categories that include multiple items.
- Students can prioritize items based on the degree to which their features relate to the category description.
- Students can finalize their category descriptions to include all appropriate items and exclude all irrelevant ones.
- Students can elaborate the categories by generating additional appropriate items and describing those items in more detail.
Comments
Team 1 1 2 3 4
Team 2 1 2 3 4
Team 3 1 2 3 4
Team 4 1 2 3 4
Team 5 1 2 3 4
Team 6 1 2 3 4 |
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