Thursday, September 13, 2018

Assessment Doesn't Always Go As Planned

As I began reading through my students’ first set of essays yesterday, my sense of excitement about these papers turned into disappointment. For the most part, the papers did not meet the standard (ELA 9-10 RL 2, in case you’re wondering!). 

Knowing that to grade them would be to place failing numbers on them, I opted to forego grading. Instead, I assessed. Is there a difference? All grading should be assessment of learning, but sometimes, and more importantly, we need assessment for learning.

Instead of taking the mighty pen to the papers to destroy students’ efforts, and chance inhibiting their motivation to read and write for the remainder of the year, I reminded myself that I believe in Engelmann’s mantra: “If the student hasn’t learned, the teacher hasn’t taught.”

Oh, I’ve presented. Plenty. I’ve talked about what to include in the essay and how to take notes on the book they’re writing about. I’ve provided a graphic organizer, a color-coded sample essay, and a rubric checklist. For real, I thought I had taught this standard and had been very clear in my expectations for the essay that would measure how well they could perform the standard. But, again, “If the student hasn’t learned, the teacher hasn’t taught.”

Clearly, this was not an issue of unmotivated students turning in poor work. These students thought they had done what was expected. Their papers were multiple pages, hundreds of words. Of summary. They had read their chosen novel. That was evident. They knew the plot and shared details in their papers.

But that was only the evidence for the points they should have made in their essays.

And so, I was faced with a choice: grade the papers, assigning failing grades to those that didn’t meet the mark, and move on the next lesson, or reteach, leaving an empty hole in my gradebook.

Grading, with the push to record one or two or more grades in the gradebook each week, can overshadow the value of assessment if we let it. Don’t.

Use assessments to assess your teaching. Know when to take responsibility for poor student performance. And when you find that students need more instruction to perform at the expected level, provide that instruction before grading the work.

In a Nutshell

It’s the teacher’s responsibility to teach until the students get it. Reteach & reassess. Not all assessments should be grades, even when it might have been the teacher’s intention to grade.

Sunday, April 15, 2018

Beauty in the Details

Three weeks after the celebration, and I'm just now having an opportunity to shoot some of the details of Sara's wedding.  A much needed return to the camera!

Invitation atop the book of historic churches that served as the guest book 
One of my favorite details: EJ's handwriting circa 2000


Traditions:  Pinson Cousins Loving Cup began with Raina & Stephen in 2015, and the tablecloth from Goose was used at our wedding in 1989 and covered the wedding cake table at Sara's & EJ's; the book of historic churches includes our family's ancestral Mt. Enon Church and Cemetery; handkerchiefs embroidered for the wedding will be passed on

Invitation to the ceremony pictured with my bouquet atop the photo of the sanctuary

 In a Nutshell
I have a deep appreciation for tradition, and my desire to preserve memories through photography grows stronger day by day.

A Whirlwind Winter

The first quarter of 2018 has come and gone, and what a whirlwind it has been!  Wedding planning took center stage.  With just 90 days from proposal to "I do," we kicked planning and preparation into high gear immediately.

Minimal time to concentrate on photography limited my supply of worthy images, but here are nineteen of my favorites from Winter 2018:

January 2018 snow

January 2018 snow 

Radium Springs

Radium Springs - texture of the rocks

Radium Springs - close up of early blooms 

Radium Springs - wrought iron gate - lines & texture

My favorite guy

Wedding Shower -texture & color - so inviting!

Cousin cuties

Bridesmaids Luncheon - table setting - lines, texture, color

Aunts in navy - guess they got the memo!

Mother of the groom - is she excited or what?

The bride - ready to get the weekend started

Rehearsal Dinner: a couple of cousin boys with the bride

Everybody loves Joey!

Engagement 

Engagement

Engagement: Happy girl

Engagement

In a Nutshell

Mastering the art and science of photography requires continued study and practice.  Keep working.

Wednesday, January 3, 2018

He FINALLY Asked; She Said Yes

When your daughter asks you to take photographs... and then responds to the finished products with "They're beautiful!! Thank you mama! You did great. It looks like we paid someone!"

So worth it!  My thirty day growth challenge is paying off already.

I love the happiness in these images.








In a Nutshell
Her gratitude warms my heart.  I'm so happy she loves these images, and happier still that she loves these two guys and they love her in return.