A New Way to Troubleshoot Student Learning
The studies, led by Madhabi
Chatterji, Associate Professor of Measurement and Evaluation in the Department of Organization and Leadership
The method requires teachers to
break down math problem solving – or any academic task they want students to
learn -- into a set of connected skills and concepts required by students to
solve the tasks. They organize the tasks by difficulty. They then assess
student performance at each step to understand precisely where students make
errors or show lack of understanding. The underlying philosophy of PALD is to
re-conceive testing in general as a diagnostic process embedded within
instruction, rather than simply as an instrument for testing students at the
end of a semester or year or for sorting students by merit.
In one paper, “Proximal
Assessment for Learner Diagnosis (PALD): A Study of Classroom Practices
and Early Teacher and Student Outcomes”, Chatterji and colleagues Douglas
Ready, Nancy Koh, Linda Choi and Radhika Iyengar compare classrooms in which
teachers used PALD, with others at the same schools that did not, to assess how
teachers’ use of PALD practices affected student achievement in math on local
and standardized tests.
In another paper, “Mapping
Cognitive Pathways in Mastering Long Division,” Chatterji and colleagues Nancy
Koh, Howard Everson and Pearl Solomon present a case study of one class that
was exposed to PALD-trained teachers in both grade 5-6, documenting changes in
their learning gaps and cognitive development as they became experts in long
division.
“The fundamental questions
we are asking through this work are, ‘Can we train teachers to look at children
and their learning processes more diagnostically? And if teachers gain the
skills to conduct close-up examinations of where children’s learning stalls,
would they take actions to turn things around?’” Chatterji says. “We were
also interested in determining if signs of students’ progress will show up on
standardized tests in the long run, and if the attitudes of both teachers and
students towards tests and testing also change – will they come to believe more
in diagnostic tests as an aid to teaching and learning?
“The answer to these questions,
based on our preliminary studies, is Yes – particularly in terms of teacher
attitudes towards assessment and student outcomes in grade 6 where more
students had continuing exposure to PALD.” Some results in PALD fifth
grade classes were on a par or inferior to those in non-PALD fifth grade
classes. The authors believe that in these instances, the novelty of the PALD
method for the teachers, lower levels of student exposure, and teachers’ lower
math subject matter knowledge, might have all affected the PALD implementation
and early outcomes.
The assessments of students that
PALD-trained teachers use are based on “situated tasks” that draw on embedded
concepts and skills. Thus, problems in long division are designed to reflect
real situations in which a fifth or sixth grader will need to apply
long-division skills. For example, children were asked: If cookies come in
packs of 12, and there are 215 fifth graders in your school, how many packs of
cookies must be purchased in order to give each fifth grader one cookie on the
last day of school?
“It’s a more contextualized
method of assessment, teaching and student evaluation that stresses diagnosis,”
Chatterji says.” You wouldn’t say in the end, simply, whether a student got a
problem right or wrong. You’d say what he or she did right, where the mistakes
occurred, and what needs to be done to help the child take the next cognitive
step to learn. So, PALD’s a much more fine-grained approach to analysis than
current grading and standardized testing methods. And along the way, you’re
teaching children meta-cognitive skills – that is, to think about what they’re
learning and where they’re falling down.”
In conducting their studies at
Hillcrest Elementary, El Dorado Elementary, Elmwood Elementary and Colton
Elementary, Chatterji and colleagues at first met with some resistance from
teachers who balked at the extra labor involved in implementing PALD
methodology.
Initially teachers were up in
arms because of the time it takes to implement PALD. But after a year,
participant teachers became the greatest advocates for the PALD approach.
“Using proximal assessment to
evaluate student understanding is an effective method to ensure positive
student outcomes,” says Andrea LaMantia, a sixth grade teacher at
LaMantia says that while she
initially thought using PALD would be time consuming, “in the long run, it
saved time. Learning math is contingent on understanding embedded
concepts. Students often give up once they get confused.
Eliminating this confusion early in the process not only helps achievement but
builds self-confidence as well.”
(Ms. LaMantia is available for
interviews with the media.)
Chatterji is Co-Director (with
Edmund Gordon) of the Assessment and Evaluation Research Initiative (AERI) at
Teachers College, affiliated with The Campaign for Educational Equity. She has
just returned from
Published Wednesday, Apr. 2, 2008