Today on the first day of the second part of the refresher course face to face we looked at writing effective learning intentions and success criteria. The question our group focused on was "How could success criteria be developed and used?" We reflected on the fact that success criteria are cyclical, informed by prior knowledge, observation and conferencing, and identified gaps in learning. We discussed the fact that success criteria could be developed by discussing the learning intention with the students and getting them to co-construct the criteria that would demonstrate that they had fulfilled that learning intention.
Something I found very important from this discussion was the idea that a successful learning intention does not contain the context for the task. So learning to write about how to write instructions you would write something like "WALT Write a list of instructions" not "WALT Write instructions for how to make a sandwich." This helped to make success criteria clear for me and is something I will check my success criteria against in the future.
GTS 2 Graduating teachers know about learners and how they learn.
2B: Graduating teachers have knowledge of a range of relevant theories, principles and purposes of
assessment and evaluation.