Learning Goals & Success Criteria: Viewing Guide
Learning Goals & Success Criteria: Viewing Guide
Learning Goals &
Success Criteria
Assessment for Learning Video Series
VIEWING GUIDE
A resource to support the implementation of GROWING SUCCESS:
Assessment, Evaluation, and Reporting in Ontario Schools. First Edition,
Covering Grades 1–12, 2010
Contents
Introduction 3
Segment 1 The Foundation of Assessment for Learning 6
Segment 2 Developing Learning Goals 11
Segment 3 Sharing and Clarifying Learning Goals 17
Segment 4 Developing Success Criteria 22
Segment 5 Helping Students Understand Criteria 26
Segment 6 Co‐constructing Success Criteria 30
Appendices 39
A: Where Am I Now? 39
B: My Learning Plan 40
C: Learning Goals and Success Criteria Quotations 41
D: Learning Goals Concept Attainment 43
E: Learning Goals Checklist 45
F: Sharing and Clarifying Learning Goals 46
G: Sharing and Clarifying Learning Goals – Reflecting on My Practice 47
H: Tracking Progress 48
I: Helping Students Understand Success Criteria 50
J: Sharing and Clarifying Success Criteria – Reflecting on My Practice 51
K: Identifying Success Criteria for a Task 52
L: Suggested Reading 54
References 55
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Introduction
This viewing guide accompanies the video, Learning Goals and Success Criteria, which shows
teachers learning about identifying, sharing, and clarifying learning goals and success criteria, and
implementing these practices with their students. The guide provides learning activities to
facilitate reflection and discussion about learning goals and success criteria and to provide support
for trying new practices. While you can use this resource to learn independently, by learning
collaboratively you and your teaching colleagues can provide one another with support and
feedback throughout the learning process.
In this video you will learn how to:
• develop learning goals and share them with students;
• clarify students’ understanding of the learning goals;
• identify success criteria for use in assessment by teachers and students;
• ensure that students and teachers share a common understanding of the learning goals and
success criteria;
• increasingly engage students in classroom assessment so that they can become
independent learners.
Planning Your Professional Learning
a. Self‐Assessment and Goal Setting
Before viewing the video, use the self‐reflection tool, Appendix A: Where Am I Now?, to identify
what you are already doing well and an area of assessment practice that you would like to
implement or improve. You may wish to monitor your professional learning at regular intervals
using this assessment tool.
b. Viewing the Video
The video is divided into six segments, each of which focuses on a specific aspect of developing,
sharing, and clarifying students’ learning goals and success criteria. This viewing guide contains
additional information and selected activities related to the content of the video. Each segment is
organized as follows:
Key Questions: Provide a focus for viewing and reflection. Use these questions to initiate
thinking and promote discussion prior to and after viewing each segment.
What’s in This Segment: Presents additional information about the content. Time
signatures relate the information to specific strategies and skills shown in the video.
After Viewing: Suggests activities intended to promote reflection and discussion and ways
to apply new learning when planning and teaching. “After Viewing” activities are generally
provided for each “What’s in This Segment” time signature.
Extending the Learning: Includes a selection of post‐viewing activities to extend and
challenge the learning beyond current practice.
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While viewing the video, consider using one of the following organizers to focus your viewing:
ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
What I Already Know
(complete before viewing)
What I Hadn’t Thought
of (note during viewing)
Next Steps for Me
(complete after viewing)
ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
What are the students doing?
(What’s different?)
What is the teacher doing?
(What’s different?)
What are they learning?
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c. Action and Feedback
The activities provided in “Extending the Learning” are intended to help you implement the
strategies. Consider inviting a colleague to provide feedback as your “critical friend” (Costa &
Kallick, 1993). Critical friends observe and ask questions to explore the reasons for your
instructional decisions. They provide support as they challenge you to grow professionally.
d. Reflection and Goal Setting
Once you have reached a level of comfort in using the new practice, revisit the self‐reflection tool,
Appendix A: Where Am I Now?, to plan next steps. Appendix B: My Learning Plan is provided to
support you in setting learning goals and developing action plans.
Setting the Stage
Appendix C: Learning Goals and Success Criteria Quotations can be used before viewing to activate
prior knowledge and engage the viewer in reflection (and discussion if viewing with others) and in
making connections to his or her own assessment practices.
Use the following “Have the Last Word” strategy:
1. Copy the quotes onto individual sheets of paper, using a font that is legible for sharing in a
group.
2. Divide the participants into groups of 4 to 6.
3. Distribute the quotes so that each group member has a different quote.
4. Ask each participant to individually read and reflect on the meaning of his or her quote.
5. Ask groups to begin sharing as follows: The first participant reads the quote aloud to the
group and shares his or her reflections. Every other participant then has an opportunity to
comment, with the person who read the quote having the final word. The process
continues until all of the quotes have been read. Each participant has a turn at “having the
last word”.
6. Ask each group to collectively answer the following question: “Based on these quotes, what
is best practice with respect to identifying, sharing, and clarifying learning goals and success
criteria?”
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Segment 1 The Foundation of Assessment for Learning
Assessment for learning improves student learning and, in addition, helps students become
independent, self‐monitoring learners (Black & Wiliam, 1998; Clarke, 2008). Teachers play an
essential role in supporting students to develop these skills by:
ensuring that students have a clear understanding of what they are learning and what
successful learning looks like;
modelling descriptive feedback, self‐assessment, and goal setting; and
providing opportunities to practise these skills, first with guidance and support and
then independently.
Learning is easier when Key Questions
learners understand what How does identifying, sharing, and clarifying learning goals and
goal they are trying to success criteria lead to a common understanding of what is
achieve, the purpose of being learned?
achieving the goal, and the How are learning goals and success criteria foundational to
specific attributes of success. improved learning for students?
(Chappuis & Stiggins, 2002)
What’s in This Segment?
This segment introduces the practices in which teachers and students engage when they use
assessment to improve learning, with a particular emphasis on learning goals and success criteria.
A common understanding among teachers and students of the learning goals and success criteria is
the foundation upon which descriptive feedback, self‐assessment, and goal setting are built. When
teachers take time to identify, share, and clarify the learning goals and success criteria with their
students, students begin to acquire the knowledge and skills they need to direct their own
learning.
A. Where Am I Going? (1:10–2:03)
Learning goals and success criteria are critical pieces of information students need to be successful
learners. Hattie and Timperley (2007) describe three questions that guide learning for students:
• Where am I going?
• How am I going?
• Where to next?
Identifying and sharing learning goals with students at or near the beginning of a period of
instruction is intended to provide an explicit answer to the first question, by clearly setting
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direction about what the students are expected to learn. Making the success criteria explicit helps
students to determine the answer to the second question, “How am I going?”, by identifying “look‐
fors” that students can use to monitor their progress towards the goals.
After Viewing
Activity 1 Reflect on (and discuss if viewing with others) the following question:
• How does a clear and common understanding of learning goals and success criteria help
students respond to the third question, “Where to next?”
B. The Self‐Assessment
Conversations, and Learning Tasks
Learning Goals
Engineering Effective Questions,
Continuum (2:04–5:52)
This continuum is rooted in the
Gathering Information
work of Black and Wiliam (1998; Success Criteria
2008), and has evolved from
teachers engaging their students
Descriptive Feedback
in classroom assessment. It is a
practical framework that helps
teachers to understand the Self and Peer Assessment
interrelationship of the
assessment practices that support
Individual Goal Setting
students in being able to monitor
and direct their own learning (e.g.,
through self‐assessment and goal
setting). It is also a convenient way for students to learn the language, knowledge, and skills
associated with self‐assessment and independent learning. Each stage in the continuum
increasingly engages learners in monitoring their learning and setting goals, and progressively
leads to independent learning. The continuum highlights the transformation that teachers and
students experience in how they teach and learn when they embrace the spirit of assessment for
learning and assessment as learning.
i. Learning goals (2:04–2:36)
Learning goals are brief statements that describe, for students, what they should know,
understand, and be able to do by the end of a period of instruction (e.g., a lesson, a cycle of
learning, a unit, a course). They represent a subset or cluster of knowledge and skills that students
must master in order to successfully achieve the overall expectations.
ii. Success criteria (2:37–3:11)
Success criteria describe, in specific terms and in language meaningful to students, what successful
attainment of the learning goals looks like. Criteria help students understand what to look for
during the learning and what it looks like once they have learned. Quality success criteria make the
learning explicit and transparent for students and teachers alike. They identify the significant
aspects of student performance that are assessed and/or evaluated (i.e., the “look‐fors”) in
relation to curriculum expectations.
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After Viewing
Activity 2 Review the learning goals and success criteria shown in the video and reproduced below.
Reflect on (and discuss if viewing with others) the following questions:
1. How is the language in the learning goals and success criteria student friendly?
2. Why is it so important for learning goals and success criteria to be written in language
students can readily understand?
Learning Goals: Success Criteria: (1:45)
I can reflect on and identify my strengths and next steps Opinion
for improvement in my writing. (1:36) • Clear, strong point of view
• Supported with examples and facts from
I can simplify polynomial expressions through addition research
and subtraction. (1:56) • Uses comparisons
• Presents a variety of facts and examples
We are learning to investigate and explain how a • True and believable
fraction, decimal, and percent are related. (2:19) • Describes consequences
• Includes a call for action
I will be able to select the evidence that supports my
point of view. (2:34) Language
• Uses advanced vocabulary
• Descriptive words and phrases
• Correct spelling
• Varied sentence lengths and types
Activity 3 Reflect on (and discuss if viewing with others) the implications for students and teachers
of the following statement: “Clarifying learning goals and co‐creating success criteria are
foundational to improved learning and the development of independent learners.”
Some reflections that might surface
Clarifying learning goals:
• answers the questions “Where are we going?”, “What are we expected to learn?”;
• helps identify the curriculum expectations to be addressed in the learning;
• makes the learning transparent;
• builds a common understanding of the learning;
• helps define quality success criteria;
• invites students to take ownership of their learning;
• encourages students to reflect on and internalize the learning.
Co‐creating success criteria:
• answers the questions “What does successful learning look like?”, “What are we to look for
during the learning?”;
• makes the success criteria explicit for teachers and students alike;
• builds a common understanding of success;
• lends itself to descriptive feedback;
• promotes self and peer assessment;
• helps identify possible next steps;
8 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
• leads to individual goal setting;
• empowers students to take ownership of their learning;
• challenges students to internalize the criteria;
• helps develop independent learning skills.
iii. Descriptive feedback (3:12–4:40)
Learning goals and success criteria are the basis for descriptive feedback. To be effective,
descriptive feedback, whether provided by the teacher or generated by peers or through self‐
assessment, must be related to the goals and the criteria. Once students have an understanding of
what they are to learn (learning goals) and what the learning looks like (success criteria), they will
know the language to use in giving and responding to descriptive feedback.
After Viewing
Activity 4 Review the feedback that the teacher gives the students (3:19–4:36). Identify some of
the criteria that the teacher and students were using to monitor their learning.
iv. Self and peer assessment (4:41–5:24)
When success criteria are clear, transparent, and explicit, students can learn to use the criteria to
assess their work and improve their learning. Students and teachers begin to speak a common
language that reflects their common understanding of what it means to learn. The process of co‐
creating the criteria, developing a common understanding of success, coming to agreement on the
precise language used to describe the criteria, and linking all feedback to the criteria encourages
students to internalize the criteria and enhances both their knowledge and skills. Clearly
understanding the success criteria means that students have a framework for giving themselves
feedback about their own work in relation to the criteria.
After Viewing
Activity 5
a) Examine the clip (4:41–4:59) to find evidence in the student responses that indicates the
students have been taught to use the success criteria to self‐ and peer‐assess.
b) In the clip (5:10–5:24), the student self‐assesses his progress on achieving the learning goal “I
will be able to select the evidence that supports my point of view”. Reflect on (and discuss if
viewing with others) the following questions:
1. What success criteria do his comments reflect?
2. How did the student learn the language he is using?
3. What knowledge and skills does he need in order to self‐assess accurately?
v. Setting individual learning goals (5:25–5:52)
The ability to set appropriate and relevant individual goals is directly linked to the nature of the
descriptive feedback received, the success criteria, and the learning goals. Quality criteria that are:
• detailed, meaningful, and specific,
• connected to the knowledge and skills identified in the curriculum expectations, and
• expressed in student‐friendly language
empower students to identify next steps and set individual goals.
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After Viewing
Activity 6 Examine the learning goal written by the student (5:53). Does it challenge your beliefs
about what students can do, what they can learn? Try to backtrack to identify the knowledge,
skills, and process the teacher incorporated in planning to bring students to this level of
independent practice.
C. Teacher and Student Reflections (5:53 ‐ 7:01)
Activity 7 While watching this segment, record some of the reflections of the teacher and students
in relation to the following points:
• Positive results that flow from understanding learning goals and success criteria
• Having the opportunity to use and apply the criteria
Reflect on (and discuss if viewing with others) the
implications for teachers and students of: Assessment for learning is
• identifying, sharing, and clarifying learning goals; about far more than testing
• co‐constructing and using success criteria. more frequently or providing
teachers with evidence so
Extending the Learning that they can revise
Activity 8 Reflect on (and discuss if viewing with others) the instruction, although these
following questions: steps are part of it. In
• What is the relationship between clear learning goals addition, we now
and the specific and overall expectations outlined in understand that assessment
the Ontario curriculum? for learning must involve
• Why is it essential that students and teachers come students in the process.
to a common understanding of what they are
expected to learn? (Stiggins, 2002)
• When and why is it important to scaffold learning
goals for students?
Activity 9 If the video is being used in a community setting, use an Inside/Outside Circles strategy:
Participants stand in pairs in two concentric circles to engage in a focused discussion. Participants
then rotate to new partners to further the discussion process on the same question or an
extension question. Questions for discussion might include:
1. Why are learning goals and success criteria fundamental prerequisites for students to
become independent learners?
2. How can identifying, sharing, and clarifying learning goals and success criteria nurture
collaborative learning partnerships between teachers and students?
Activity 10 If you haven’t already done so, use the self‐reflection tool, Appendix A: Where Am I
Now?, to identify what you are already doing well and an area of practice focusing on learning
goals and success criteria that you would like to implement or improve. You might revisit this tool
at regular intervals to monitor your professional learning over time.
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Segment 2 Developing Learning Goals
Research emphasizes the importance of empowering students to
Students can hit any target become self‐monitoring and self‐directed learners. The first step
they can see that holds still in developing independent learners is to ensure that students
for them. know precisely what they are to learn. Learning goals describe the
knowledge and skills in the Ontario curriculum that students are
(Stiggins et al, 2006) required to learn, in a way that actively engages them in the
learning process. When teachers express curriculum expectations
as learning goals in student‐friendly language, students know what they have to learn, connect the
tasks they are doing with what they are learning, and are able to monitor how they are doing in
light of these goals.
Key Questions
What are the criteria for effective learning goals?
How does developing student‐friendly learning goals help teachers and students come to a
common understanding of what is being learned?
What’s in This Segment?
This segment focuses on how teachers develop and use learning goals when planning assessment
with instruction. It presents criteria developed by teachers for writing effective learning goals that
unpack the curriculum expectations and lead to improved learning for students.
Activity 1 Before viewing the segment, reflect on (and discuss if viewing with others) the following
question: What are the criteria for developing effective learning goals? Use Appendix D: Learning
Goals Concept Attainment to initiate and guide your thinking.
A. What Are the Criteria for Developing Effective Learning Goals? (1:18–5:38)
Effective learning goals are based on the curriculum but expressed in a way that supports the
learning needs of students. Students learn in different ways, in different increments, and at
different rates. Some students need to learn in smaller increments than others; some need to
“leapfrog, then circle back” (Popham, 2008, p. 28) in
a non‐linear path. Desired knowledge and skills
i. Identifies knowledge and skills from the
curriculum expectations (1:18–3:15)
When writing learning goals teachers use the Learning goal
Scaffolding
curriculum expectations, which identify the
knowledge and skills students are expected to learn, Learning goal
as a starting point. Learning goals do not “rewrite the
curriculum”, but rather share with students “where Learning goal
we are going” in a way that students can understand.
Learning goal
By clustering and scaffolding overall and specific
expectations, teachers unpack the curriculum into
manageable chunks so that students can successfully Current knowledge and skills
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move from their current understanding and ability to the desired level of knowledge and skills.
Activity 2 Write a learning goal for a lesson or cycle of learning:
1. Examine the overall curriculum expectations for a subject or course.
2. Select a related specific expectation.
3. Write a learning goal that represents the knowledge and/or skills outlined in the
expectation.
ii. Incremental and scaffolded (2:12–3:47)
Specific expectations, which describe in
more detail what students are expected to
learn, can sometimes be expressed as
learning goals; but often, they need to be
“unpacked” or broken down into smaller
incremental goals depending on where
students are in their learning.
Learning goals can represent knowledge
and skills to be developed over both long‐
term and short‐term periods. Long‐term
goals typically represent a “significant skill
… the kind of learning outcome requiring a
number of lessons for students to achieve
it” (Popham, 2008, p. 24). Teachers use
short‐term goals to identify “step‐by‐step
building blocks” students need to achieve
the long‐term goal. Popham refers to these The long‐term goals pictured (above) represent learning
clusters of short‐term goals as learning that is to be achieved by the end of a unit. Within the
progressions, “a sequenced set of sub‐skills framework of these long‐term goals, teachers develop
and bodies of enabling knowledge that … incremental, scaffolded goals to focus students’ learning in
the short term.
students must master en route to mastering
a more remote curricular aim” (Popham,
2008, p. 24).
The teachers in this clip “deconstruct” the overall and specific expectations in order to build a
progression of learning goals. These goals provide students with different entry points into the
learning, and support the teachers’ efforts to differentiate instruction. In the clip (2:16–3:16),
teachers unpack the concepts and skills students need in order to achieve the long‐term goal – I
can simplify polynomial expressions through addition and subtraction – and identify three short‐
term goals:
• I can identify polynomial expressions.
• I can identify like and unlike terms.
• I can group like terms.
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After Viewing
Activity 3 Reflect on (and discuss if viewing with others) the following questions:
1. How do incremental learning goals scaffold instruction for students?
2. How does collaborating with colleagues help teachers to scaffold learning for their
students?
Activity 4 Consider an upcoming cycle of learning for your students (if possible, work with a
colleague).
1. Examine the overall and specific expectations. Identify the knowledge and skills students
are expected to demonstrate. Do the expectations identify knowledge and skills that build
upon each other?
2. Use the list of knowledge and skills identified in (1) to create a learning progression of
short‐term goals that will help students to be successful in their learning.
Activity 5 Involving students in deconstructing expectations and formulating learning goals is one
way to ensure they have a clear grasp of what they are supposed to know and do. Below is a
suggested process that could be planned with a colleague or individually.
Identify a cluster of expectations to be addressed in an upcoming lesson. Ensure that at least one
of the specific expectations will require unpacking – i.e., it needs to be broken down into a number
of simpler, incremental goals.
1. Display the selected specific expectation(s) to the class.
2. Ask students to express the expectation(s) as a learning goal or goals, using their own
words. If required, prompt them by asking, “What are we expected to learn?”
3. Share some of the sample goals with the class for discussion.
Where possible use the students’ sample goals to:
• highlight the essential learning (knowledge and/or skills) identified in the expectation(s);
• identify where the students may have deconstructed and reconstructed the expectation(s)
using their own words;
• look for incremental goals that might lead to the scaffolding of the more complex specific
expectation(s).
iii. Expressed in language meaningful to students (3:47–5:06)
Curriculum expectations can be quite complex, using abstract or subject‐specific language that is
unfamiliar to students. Expectations will frequently address some understanding or “big idea” that
students need to see expressed in more concrete terms. Rewriting these expectations in language
meaningful to students helps teachers and students begin with a common understanding of what
is to be learned.
While striving to express the learning in student‐friendly language, teachers recognize that each
subject/discipline has specific terminology that students are expected to know and understand,
and use when communicating their learning. Teachers use this terminology in the learning goal
statement as part of what is to be learned. In the video, the word “simplify” is a term that students
are required to understand, and it is therefore used in the learning goal. Similarly, in the goal “We
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are learning to create and perform phrases that explore two or more elements of dance” (Grade 9
Dance), students are expected to know and understand dance‐related terms such as “phrases” and
“elements”.
After Viewing
Activity 6 Revisit the learning progression of short‐term goals developed in Activity 4. Is the
language of the goals meaningful to your students? Is it age‐appropriate? If not, rewrite the goals
in language that students will understand.
You might try doing this with your students:
1. Post an expectation for the class to view.
2. Have students identify words that are unclear, substitute words that are meaningful for
them, and reconstruct the expectation as a learning goal that is expressed in student‐
friendly language.
iv. Specific and observable (5:06–5:23)
Short‐term, incremental learning goals that use verbs that describe specific and observable actions
or activities are tools that students can use to become independent learners. Students use learning
goals and success criteria to monitor their progress. While the goal of the learning may be that
students “understand” a concept, learning goals that give more specific direction about what
“understanding” looks like benefit students in their learning.
After Viewing
Activity 7 When planning, look at expectations that require students to “demonstrate their
understanding”. Rewrite these expectations using verbs that are specific and observable. Will the
students need to “identify”, “describe”, “explain”, “apply”, “analyse”, and so on? Try to be very
precise in the observable verbs you choose to demonstrate “understanding”.
Revisit the short‐term learning goals developed in Activity 4. Are the verbs specific and observable?
Do the goals convey explicitly to the students what is to be learned? One strategy to check if the
learning goals are expressed in a way that helps students to monitor their learning is to ask them
to complete an exit card at the end of a lesson. Pose the following questions:
• How are you progressing on the learning goal?
• How do you know?
The key to using an exit card is also to use the information the next class. It is important to show
students that the information they give you is relevant and that it guides instruction.
v. Stated from the student’s perspective (5:23–5:38)
Writing the learning goals from a student’s perspective (“We are learning to …”; “I will be able to
…”) encourages students to take ownership of the learning while simultaneously making the
learning more explicit.
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B. Applying the Success Criteria for Successful Learning Goals (5:39–6:54)
Learning goals can be expressed in a variety of ways, depending on the readiness of the learner
and the nature of the learning being addressed. This clip summarizes the criteria for effective
learning goals presented earlier in the segment, and shows how the criteria can be applied to a
specific expectation.
After Viewing
Activity 8 Appendix E: Learning Goals Checklist lists criteria developed by teachers to consider
when crafting learning goals. The chart below provides a variety of weaker and stronger samples of
learning goals. Select one or more goals and use the checklist to assess their effectiveness. What is
done well? What needs improvement? How can improvements be made?
Elementary Samples Secondary Samples
1. I can tell about the people and places in 1. We are studying the creative process.
my community. (Gr. 1 Social Studies) (Gr. 9 The Arts)
2. We are studying Living Skills. (Gr. 2 2. We are learning to use cues to infer
Health and Physical Education) the meaning of unfamiliar words. (Gr.
3. Understand the importance of problem 9 Core French)
solving. (Gr. 3 Mathematics) 3. I can make and explain inferences
4. I can name and describe different about texts. (Gr. 9 English)
elements used to create music. (Gr. 4 4. We are learning to explain how colour
The Arts) is produced and used using the
5. We are learning to identify the point of additive and subtractive theories of
view presented in a text. (Gr. 5 colour mixing. (Gr. 10 Science)
Language) 5. Use appropriate and inclusive
6. You will apply a variety of tactical content, images, and language in
solutions to increase your chances of communications media productions.
success as you participate in physical (Gr. 10 Technological Education)
activities. (Gr. 6 Health and Physical 6. I can use a variety of techniques to
Education) convey a sense of movement. (Gr. 11
7. By the end of the lesson, students will The Arts)
be able to design and safely build 7. We are learning to understand
parallel circuits and series circuits. (Gr. 6 recursive sequences. (Gr. 11
Science and Technology) Mathematics)
8. I am learning to analyse the issues 8. I can explore a wide range of
related to substance use. (Gr. 7 Health increasingly complex traditional and
and Physical Education) emerging technologies, tools, and
9. You will learn about the relationship of techniques. (Gr. 12 Computer Studies)
the angles in a triangle. (Gr. 8 9. I am learning to understand
Mathematics) accounting principles and practices.
10. Students will use a variety of methods to (Gr. 12 Business Studies)
construct bisectors of line segments and
angles. (Gr. 8 Mathematics)
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Extending the Learning
Activity 9 Think about a lesson that you are about to teach.
1. Consider one or two of the teaching/learning activities When we invest time up
(the things you ask students to do during the lesson). front to build the vision [of
What knowledge and/or skills are students expected to what students are to be
learn as a result? learning], we gain it back
2. Write a sentence identifying the expected learning. later in increased student
3. Using the criteria in Appendix E: Learning Goals motivation and the resulting
Checklist, self‐assess your learning goal statements. (If higher‐quality work.
you are learning with colleagues, you may wish to peer‐
assess each other’s learning goals.) (Chappuis, 2009)
4. Use the feedback generated by assessing your own or a
colleague’s learning goal to identify what was done well and possible areas for improvement.
Reflect on and/or discuss how you might revise the learning goals based on the feedback.
Activity 10 Examine a unit of study that you teach. (If possible, you’ll want to do this activity with
colleagues.)
1. Identify the long‐term learning goal(s) for this unit.
2. Identify the learning goals for each of the lessons.
Activity 11 Read the scenario below; then consider the questions
Overall Expectations
that follow:
A1. The Creative
Teachers examined the overall expectations for a cycle of learning,
Process: apply the
and then identified “we are learning to produce a musical
stages of the creative
composition” as their long‐term learning goal. They decided that
process when
the production of a musical composition would be the best way for
performing notated
students to demonstrate their learning on the overall expectations.
and/or improvised
They chose to scaffold the learning using the following progression
music and composing
of incremental learning goals, based on a cluster of related specific
and/or arranging music;
expectations (identified in brackets).
A2. Elements of Music:
apply elements of music
I am learning to:
when performing
• use the creative process when composing; (A1.2)
notated and improvised
• apply the steps in the creative process to produce a musical
music and composing
composition (A1.2);
and/or arranging music;
• use the elements of music to plan a composition (A2.3);
A3. Techniques and
• use a compositional tool to create a composition (A3.3). Technologies: use a
variety of techniques
1. Examine the long‐term learning goal and apply the criteria and technological tools
for effective learning goals. Identify what the writers have when performing music
done well and a possible area for improvement. and composing and/or
2. What observations can you make about the four incremental arranging music;
goals and how they have been scaffolded?
3. Select one of the incremental goals above and unpack it into two or more incremental goals
that might support a student needing more support for his or her learning.
16 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
Segment 3 Sharing and Clarifying Learning Goals
Once teachers have identified the learning goals from the curriculum expectations, it is critical that
these learning goals be shared and clarified with the students so that their understanding of the
goals deepens as they progress through the learning cycle. Students’ understanding of the learning
goals is a prerequisite to their ability to monitor their learning through self‐assessment. When
teachers ensure that what they are teaching coincides with what their students think they are
learning, the end result is improved learning for all.
Key Questions
Teachers should continually How can teachers ensure that each student has an opportunity to
help students clarify the clarify his or her understanding of the learning goal(s)?
intended learning as lessons How does sharing and clarifying learning goals build a common
unfold – not just at the understanding of the learning and help students internalize the
beginning of a unit of study. learning?
Why is a common understanding of the learning essential to
(Chappuis & Stiggins, 2002) improved learning, student ownership of learning, and
independent learning?
What’s in This Segment?
Teachers use a variety of strategies to share and clarify the learning goals with students before,
during, and at the end of the learning, depending on the nature of the learning goal. The time
taken to clarify with students precisely what they are learning, and to employ strategies that build
a common understanding of the learning, leads to improved learning and helps to develop
independent learning skills. The process of sharing and clarifying learning goals builds a common
understanding of the learning. It helps make the learning explicit and visible to students and
answers the question “Where am I going?” When students have clarity on what they are supposed
to know, understand, and be able to do at the end of a given learning period, they will be better
able to judge where they are in relation to where they are going.
A. Sharing and Clarifying Learning Goals (1:17–5:50)
Teachers can share learning goals with students orally, visually, and in writing. Some teachers
choose to display a long‐term goal for a cycle of learning, together with a cluster or progression of
related incremental goals. This practice can serve as a “roadmap” for students, helping them to
contextualize daily learning activities and to monitor their progress towards attaining the long‐
term goal.
Sharing the learning goals with students is only the first step in developing their understanding of
what they are to learn. Moss and Brookhart (2009, p. 25) point out:
Most students will, of course, be able to repeat back to the teacher what she said the
objective was, and that can be somewhat useful. What we mean by sharing learning targets
17 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
and criteria for success, however, is that students comprehend what those objectives mean
… It’s not a goal if the student can’t envision it.
While Viewing
Activity 1
Use Appendix F: Sharing and Clarifying Learning Goals to record your observations and thinking
while watching this segment.
After Viewing
Activity 2 Use Appendix G: Sharing and Clarifying Learning Goals – Reflecting on My Practice to
consider how you might apply some of the strategies shown in the video.
Activity 3 Developing learning goals with students is one way to begin to build a common
understanding of what is to be learned. Consider a lesson you will be teaching. Have your students
deconstruct and reconstruct some specific expectations into simple learning goals, as follows:
1. Identify a specific expectation to be addressed in the lesson.
(You may decide to select a less complex expectation the
first time you try this activity.) Many teachers who have
tried to develop their
2. Ask students to copy the specific expectation in their
students’ self‐assessment
notebook and circle any words that may be unclear or
skills have found that the
confusing to them.
first and most difficult task is
3. Have students work in pairs to discuss the meaning of any
to get students to think of
circled words.
their work in terms of a set
4. Then, have students, working in groups of four, substitute a
of goals.
simpler synonym for any of the circled words.
5. Once each group has a completed learning goal statement,
display the groups’ statements in the classroom. (Black et al, 2004)
6. As a class, discuss any questions students might have, and
come to consensus on the learning goal. As part of the discussion, ask students questions to
help them see how this learning connects to the “big ideas” of the course or unit.
You may wish to model applying the criteria for effective learning goals to one of the revised
statements. As a follow‐up activity, you might have a discussion with the students about the
effectiveness of the strategy. What did they learn? Did it help clarify the learning for them? How
might this strategy be modified to support their learning?
Try to integrate this and other strategies for sharing and clarifying the learning goals into learning
activities planned for the learning cycle.
Activity 4 In certain learning contexts, it could be counter‐productive to share the learning goal at
the outset of the learning. For example, when students are involved in inquiry, sharing the learning
goal in a way that identifies what is to be discovered might make the inquiry unnecessary.
18 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
In these situations, you may decide to share the learning goal in a way that emphasizes the inquiry
process and sets the context for learning – e.g., “We are learning to investigate the relationships
found in the properties of shapes”. This learning goal, which can be shared at the outset of the
inquiry, focuses the learning on skills such as problem solving, reasoning and proving – skills
students will use and develop during the inquiry phase of the lesson. When debriefing, you might
ask students to identify the learning goal relating to the mathematical concepts (e.g. properties of
shapes) by posing the question “What do you think we are learning today?” or “What did you
notice about …?” The teacher and students in this example might collaboratively develop a second
learning goal, “We are learning to sort and classify quadrilaterals”.
Consider providing students with an organizer they can use to record their ideas about the learning
goal as the learning evolves.
1. What are you learning today?
2. Which activity(ies) helped you most in learning?
3. How does what you are learning connect with what you already know and can do?
Activity 5 According to Moss and Brookhart (2009, p. 25), the most important method for sharing
the learning goal is designing assignments that match the learning goals. Through assignments that
are well‐aligned with the learning goals, the teacher “translates the learning goal into action for
the student”.
As students are working on an assignment, invite them to write a learning goal in their own words
based on what they think they are learning. This activity can provide critical assessment
information by identifying those who are learning and those needing additional support. The same
activity might be used to make adjustments to the instruction or differentiate for students based
on the feedback.
B. Students’ Assessment of Progress in Relation to the Learning Goal (5:50–7:01)
When students have a clear understanding of what they are supposed to learn, they are able to
track their progress towards achieving their goals. Teachers regularly ask students to reflect on
their progress with respect to the
learning goals using a variety of Exit Card
assessment strategies and tools (e.g.,
exit card, individual display boards, and Learning Goal:
learning goal organizers). _____________________________________________
Activity 6 An exit card can be used by Today I learned … / Today I learned more about … /
students to monitor their progress Today I improved at …
towards a learning goal. Inviting
students to reflect on their learning at Some of the steps I took to get there are …
the end of a lesson can help them
further internalize and personalize the Some evidence that I am meeting the learning goal is …
learning goal.
I need to learn more about …
19 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
Activity 7 Have your students monitor their progress on a cluster of learning goals as they move
through a unit of learning. A “Learning Gains” tracking template (Keeley, 2008, p. 183) is one
assessment tool students can use to assess their progress towards each learning goal in a cycle of
learning. This assessment strategy can support self‐assessment when the learning goals are
scaffolded to identify the incremental steps or discrete knowledge and skills comprising the
expected learning.
1. Model how the template may be used.
2. Ask students to assess their progress.
3. Have students share their reflections at some point during learning and after the learning
has been completed.
4. Design a similar template for a cluster of learning goals for your next cycle of learning.
Appendix H: Tracking Progress provides some samples of tracking templates.
Extending the Learning
Activity 8 When planning a lesson, teachers frequently ask the question “What am I going to teach
next?” Reframing the question to focus on learning rather than doing, begins to re‐culture the
classroom environment and profiles the students as active partners in the learning: “What do I
want my students to learn?” Planning assessment and instruction with this question in mind
naturally leads to related questions like: How can I make success on this learning goal transparent
and visible to my students? Will students be able to explicitly link what they are doing to what they
are learning?
Select a lesson you may have taught before or one you are very familiar or comfortable with. Apply
the three questions to your planning:
1. What do I want my students to learn?
2. How can I make success on this learning goal transparent and visible to my students?
3. Will students be able to explicitly link what they are doing to what they are learning?
Share with your students what you are doing differently and possibly record the way you are
changing your approach to the learning. Discuss this different approach with your students using a
PMI* strategy.
*PMI (De Bono, 1987) is a strategy that encourages students to think about an issue from a variety of perspectives by
having them identify what might be a “Plus” (something positive), a “Minus” (something negative), or something they
find “Interesting”.
Activity 9 There are a number of different types of learning goals identified in the assessment
literature. Arter and Chappuis (2006, p. 14) identify four kinds of learning targets (goals) that might
naturally occur individually or collectively in a cycle of learning:
1. Knowledge – e.g., individual facts, a body of knowledge
2. Reasoning proficiencies – e.g., problem solving, critical thinking
3. Performance skills – e.g., applying technical skills, working collaboratively
4. Products – e.g., research papers, maps, artwork
20 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
It is useful to consider these different types of goals when identifying long‐term and short‐term
learning goals. Long‐term goals are learning goals where knowledge, application of that
knowledge, critical thinking, and communication interact in combination. Long‐term goals occur
over time and are supported by smaller incremental goals. Short‐term goals might best be
described as learning goals that incrementally support achievement of long‐term goals by focusing
on the acquisition of the skills and knowledge necessary to succeed. Both types of goals are
supported by success criteria which clearly describe what successful achievement of the goal might
look like.
If the long‐term goal for a particular learning cycle is “to design and build a functioning electrical
circuit that includes both parallel and series circuits”, the associated short‐term goals might be the
following:
• We are learning to identify and describe the characteristics of parallel and series circuits.
• We are learning to design and build circuits.
• We are learning how to test and troubleshoot problems relating to circuits.
Reflect on (and discuss if learning with others) each of the following questions:
1. What type of learning goal does each of the above goals represent?
2. What implications do the different types of goals have for developing short‐ and long‐term
goals?
3. What are the implications for scaffolding the learning, and developing incremental learning
goals, in relation to long‐term learning goals?
4. How do we align the learning goals, the success criteria, and the assessment tasks to ensure
reliable and valid evidence is gathered (i.e., does the type of learning goal affect the nature
of the success criteria and how we gather evidence of learning)?
21 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
Segment 4 Developing Success Criteria
Criteria are the characteristics or attributes of a student’s product or performance that
demonstrate the degree to which the student has achieved the expectations. Success criteria
describe those characteristics or attributes in a way that is meaningful to students.
In assessing the quality of a Key Questions
student’s work or What are success criteria, and how are they used by teachers or
performance, the teacher students in assessment for learning, assessment as learning, and
must possess a concept of assessment of learning?
quality appropriate to the Why is it so important that students be engaged in the
task, and be able to judge development of success criteria?
the student’s work in How are success criteria linked to learning goals, descriptive
relation to that concept. feedback, rubrics, and self‐assessment?
(Sadler, 1989)
What’s in This Segment?
Whereas learning goals help students identify and understand what they are expected to learn,
success criteria provide the tools for students to monitor their progress towards achieving the
learning goals. Hattie and Timperley (2007) identify three questions to guide student learning:
“Where am I going?”, “How am I going?”, and “Where to next?” While learning goals help students
answer the question “Where am I going?”, success criteria help students answer the question
“How am I going?” Both teachers and students benefit from a clear understanding of what
constitutes success.
A. What Are Success Criteria? (0:46–2:14)
Students use success criteria to make judgements about the quality of their performance. Criteria
describe what success “looks like”, and allow the teacher and student to gather information about
the quality of student learning.
After Viewing
“… a guide to
Activity 1 Students are asked, “What are success “They help us to your learning
criteria? How are success criteria helpful in doing realize what we goal”
the task?” Consider the students’ responses – need to do so we
reflect on (and discuss if viewing with others) the know what we’re
doing well.”
following:
“… guidelines
1. What do the students’ responses tell us What are to help you
about the culture of learning that has success do the
been established in this classroom? criteria? assignment”
2. What value is there in students knowing,
in advance, what they are expected to
learn and what it will look like when they have successfully learned it?
22 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
How do we 3. How does explicitly teaching students to be
“If we didn’t do
use success something on the “assessment literate” lead to independent
criteria to success criteria learning?
figure out then that would 4. What significance do learning goals and success
next steps? be our next step.” criteria have in your classroom assessment and
instruction?
B. Teachers Developing Success Criteria (2:47–3:54)
Before students can have a deep understanding of criteria, teachers need to be clear on what
success looks like. Working with colleagues to develop success criteria for significant performance
tasks is one way teachers can develop and agree on the success criteria.
i. Using the achievement chart to develop success criteria (2:47–3:23)
The achievement chart in each of the curriculum documents outlines performance standards and
broad criteria that teachers can use as a starting point when identifying success criteria. Chapter 3
in Growing Success: Assessment, Evaluation, and Reporting in Ontario Schools suggests the
following examples of more specific descriptors of effective performance that can be used to guide
the development of criteria:
Appropriateness Significance
Clarity Fluency
Accuracy Flexibility (This information is also found in the front matter of
Precision Depth all curriculum documents, in the section entitled
Logic Breadth Assessment and Evaluation of Student Achievement.)
Relevance
After Viewing
Activity 2 Examine an assessment task that your students recently completed. Reflect on (and
discuss if learning with others) the following questions:
1. What were some of the criteria on which the students’ performance was assessed or
evaluated?
2. How were the criteria connected to the achievement chart? (Consider the categories and
the broad criteria in the achievement chart.)
3. To which of the above specific descriptors of effectiveness did the criteria relate?
4. Were the criteria specific enough that students could use them to self‐assess and
determine next steps?
5. Were the criteria expressed in language meaningful to students?
Activity 3 Rubrics are frequently used for the purpose of identifying and sharing success criteria.
However, the criteria used in rubrics may sometimes be too broad, generic, or vague to be
meaningful to students, or may be expressed in language they don’t understand. As a result, the
criteria in the rubric may not help students to give specific descriptive feedback, identify concrete
next steps, and set individual goals.
Examine a rubric that you have used to assess and evaluate a task.
23 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
1. Are the criteria clearly connected to the task and to the learning goals?
2. Do they identify “look‐fors” that are specific enough to be applied by students to their
learning?
3. Do they describe, in language that students understand, what successful performance looks
like?
Activity 4 Examine the broad descriptors listed below. Try to list more specific criteria that paint a
richer picture for students of what success looks like. A sample response is provided:
Generic Criteria Success Criteria for Students
Makes revisions with considerable effectiveness – Highlighted main ideas and checked for logical
ordering (e.g., most important to least
important)
– Checked that each main idea is presented in a
separate paragraph
– Looked for transition words to connect the
ideas from one paragraph to the next
– Checked if writing contained too much
explaining, and removed extra words
– Checked if writing was unclear or vague, and
added details to provide more information
– Used revising strategies to delete, reposition,
and add text (e.g., cross‐outs, arrows,
underlining, cutting‐and‐pasting)
Uses appropriate problem‐solving strategies
Demonstrates logical thinking
Makes relevant connections
24 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
ii. Using student samples to develop success criteria (3:24–3:55)
Collaboratively examining student work is a powerful way
for teachers to begin to develop a list of success criteria
for a task. Teachers have implicit knowledge of the success
criteria for achieving learning goals. Articulating these Setting clear targets for
criteria in a way that is meaningful to students can, student learning involves
however, be challenging. By examining samples of student more than posting an
work, teachers can: instructional goal for
students to see. It also
• identify the significant traits of successful
requires elaboration of the
performance;
criteria by which student
• agree on the focus of the criteria;
work will be judged.
• express in consistent, clear language what they are
looking for in a performance or product.
(Shepard et al, 2005)
Samples may be saved from previous classes, or shared
among colleagues.
After Viewing
Activity 5 In teacher moderation, teachers collaborate with colleagues to establish criteria for
assessing student work. Join with a colleague(s) to engage in this process. Samples can take many
forms – artefacts, projects, presentations, research papers, and performances in oral, written, and
video form – and can come from a variety of sources – previous years’ work, texts, teacher
resources, professional publications. Choose those samples that directly relate to your work with
your students.
For more information, see Literacy and Numeracy Secretariat, Teacher Moderation: Collaborative
Assessment of Student Work (2007), available at:
http://www.edu.gov.on.ca/eng/literacynumeracy/inspire/research/Teacher_Moderation.pdf
Extending the Learning
Activity 6 Select a task that you will be asking students to perform for which you or a colleague
may have some samples. What learning are students expected to demonstrate? How are the
knowledge and skills connected to the achievement chart? What are the characteristics of
achievement that form the basis of the criteria? With a colleague, develop a list of “look‐fors” for
the task.
Activity 7 Consider the following questions when reflecting on your assessment practices:
• What value is there in students knowing, in advance, what they are expected to learn and what
it will look like when they have successfully learned it?
• How does explicitly teaching students to be “assessment literate” lead to independent
learning?
• What significance do success criteria have in your classroom assessment and instruction?
25 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
Segment 5 Helping Students Understand Criteria
Once teachers have identified the success criteria relating to a task and its learning goals, these
criteria need to be shared with students. Why is it crucial that students understand the learning
goals and the success criteria relating to a given task? First, as
… when students take part Butler and Cartier (2004, p. 1735) explain, “students’
in developing criteria, they interpretation of tasks drives their planning (e.g., objectives they
are much more likely to set), the strategies they select and implement, and the criteria
understand what is expected against which they judge their performance during monitoring
of them, “buy in”, and then and self‐evaluation.”
accomplish the task
successfully. Secondly, for students to be able to use criteria to self‐assess and
improve their learning, they need to have a clear understanding
(Gregory, Cameron, & of the criteria. In fact, the more they share a common
Davies, 1997) understanding of the criteria with the teacher, the greater their
ability to monitor and direct their learning will be.
Key Questions
Why do students need to have a deep understanding of success criteria?
How can teachers help students develop their understanding of success criteria?
What’s in This Segment?
Teachers use a variety of strategies to help students develop a deeper understanding of the criteria
for a learning goal or task.
While Viewing
Activity 1
Use Appendix I: Helping Students Understand Success Criteria to record your observations and
thinking while watching this segment.
A. The Benefits and Challenges of Communicating Criteria to Students (1:10–2:50)
This clip shows a common strategy used by teachers to communicate criteria to students:
providing a written list of criteria, accompanied by an oral explanation. However, Nicol and
Macfarlane‐Dick (2006) point out that “many studies have shown that it is difficult to make
assessment criteria and standards explicit through written documentation or through verbal
descriptions in class … Most criteria for academic tasks are complex, multidimensional (Sadler,
1989) and difficult to articulate”. They suggest that students need to interact with the criteria in a
variety of ways. In fact, the more students interact with the criteria, the more they are able to
internalize the look‐fors and apply them when assessing the quality of their work or performance.
After Viewing
Activity 2 Anything you do in the classroom to help students engage in discussions about quality
work and what it looks like assists students in understanding what it is they are supposed to be
learning. Answering the question “What does quality work look like?” is central to understanding
26 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
the criteria that will be used to assess and ultimately evaluate student work. For example, some
teachers use acronyms such as A.P.E. (Answer, Prove, Extend) to encourage students to think more
deeply about their answers and to give them a framework for checking their own work.
Brainstorm all of the ways you help students explore various aspects of quality answers, quality
products, quality performance tasks, quality conversations, etc. Once you have generated a list,
share the list with a colleague. As you are sharing, use the following framework to help guide your
thinking:
1. Compare similarities and differences.
2. Ask for clarification on those strategies that are not clear.
3. Analyse whether any strategies suggested might be applicable in a different context. If so,
record where and how you might use them.
In your conversation try to keep the focus on how you are helping students understand the criteria
associated with quality work.
B. Strategies to Help Students Understand the Success Criteria (2:51–5:53)
A variety of strategies are shown to help students develop a deeper understanding of criteria.
While these take time to introduce and implement with students, there are tremendous benefits.
Shepard (2006, p. 631) points out:
… when teachers help students understand and internalize the standards of excellence in a
discipline – that is, what makes a good history paper or a good mathematical explanation –
they are helping them develop the metacognitive awareness about what they need to
attend to as they are writing or problem solving. Indeed, learning the rules and forms of a
discipline is part of learning the discipline, not just a means to systematize or justify
grading.
After Viewing
Activity 3 Use Appendix J: Sharing and Clarifying Success Criteria – Reflecting on My Practice to
consider how you might apply some of the strategies shown in the video.
Activity 4 When asking students to apply criteria to a sample, teachers can help students develop a
deeper understanding by focusing on a single criterion at a time, rather than asking students to use
all of the criteria identified for a task.
Consider a task that students will be completing. Provide
Are the criteria fully and
students with a sample of student work. Identify a single
carefully defined and open to
success criterion and ask students, working in pairs, to
all or are they nebulous and
assess the sample only in relation to the identified criterion.
guarded so that students
must guess what is being
Bring the class together to debrief the discussions. When
taught?
debriefing with students:
1. ask them to explain their thinking;
(Arter & Spandel, 1992)
2. elicit questions they may have;
27 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
3. if students vary in their assessments, ask them to discuss, in pairs, how they applied the
criterion, and their justification for their assessment.
Keep in mind that the focus of the debrief is not whether an assessment is right or wrong, but
rather the learning that ensues as a result of applying the criterion, and exploring different
judgements. While debriefing, the students or teacher may identify additional criteria that clarify
the original criterion. Record these ideas for display with the success criteria for this task.
Activity 5 One way that students come to an understanding of the success criteria for a task is by
doing the task and noting what they did to be successful. (Teachers can also use this strategy to
identify the criteria.)
1. Select a task that involves a skill or a process that students develop over time (e.g., solving a
math problem; revising a piece of writing; conducting an investigation).
2. Have students work on a task related to the identified skill or process.
3. When they have finished, ask students to think about what they did to be successful.
Record their ideas and display for future reference.
4. Over a period of time, ask students to practise the skill or process, and as a result, to add to
or revise the list of success criteria.
Extending the Learning
Activity 6 In certain learning contexts, it may be counter‐productive to share the success criteria
with students at the outset of the learning. For example, when students are involved in
collaborative inquiry, or investigation, teachers may choose to share the success criteria for the
inquiry process at the beginning of the task, and to share the success criteria relating to the
knowledge and skills students are to learn as a result of the inquiry after students have finished
conducting their investigations. While students are conducting the investigation, teachers can
prompt students to:
• use the process criteria to self‐assess their use of the inquiry process;
• think about, identify, and/or record any success criteria relating to the results of the inquiry.
Chappuis (2009, p. 41) suggests: “Make sure they [students] can describe the intended learning
before you ask them to engage in sustained independent practice and before the summative
assessment.”
1. Think about a learning context where students are conducting an inquiry (e.g., discovering
relationships in mathematics; investigating the growth of plants; conducting research in
Canadian history).
2. Identify the learning goals. What are students expected to learn?
3. Identify criteria relating to the successful completion of the inquiry:
• What might be criteria relating to the inquiry process?
• What might be criteria relating to the learning that results from the inquiry?
The chart below provides an example of an inquiry question, the learning goals, and some possible
criteria:
28 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
Inquiry question: How do different materials conduct electricity?
Learning goals:
We are learning to plan and carry out an inquiry.
We are learning to explain how different materials conduct electricity.
Criteria for investigation Criteria relating to the learning that results from
(We are learning to plan and carry out an the inquiry
inquiry.) (We are learning to explain how different
materials conduct electricity.)
• Make predictions • Define “conductors” and “insulators”
• Select appropriate equipment • Identify the characteristics of materials that
• Use equipment and materials safely are conductors or insulators
• Identify and control variables • Explain how materials allow static charge to
• Gather data accurately build up or be discharged
• Record data in an organized way
• Interpret data (explain the meaning)
How will you share and clarify the criteria with students?
29 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
Segment 6 Co‐constructing Success Criteria
Collaborating to develop criteria, sometimes referred to as co‐constructing criteria (Gregory et al,
1997), helps students and teachers to reach a common understanding of the criteria by which
performance will be judged. By directly involving students in the development of criteria, teachers
help students to deepen their understanding of what success looks like. The process invites
students to share their initial ideas and understandings about the
… to the extent that criteria characteristics of successful performance. As learning progresses,
are shared, students [receive teachers guide students in exploring and refining their
the] power to recognize understanding of the criteria by having them continuously reflect
strong performance, power on and apply the criteria as part of their learning activities.
to identify problems in weak
performance, and power to Key Questions
use criteria to change and Why is student engagement in defining success criteria crucial to
improve performance. learning?
How are success criteria linked to learning goals and self‐
(Arter & Spandel, 1992) assessment?
What’s in This Segment?
The teachers and students in this video use the following process outlined by Gregory, Cameron,
and Davies (1997) to identify and understand success criteria:
• Step 1: Brainstorm.
• Step 2: Sort and categorize.
• Step 3: Make and post a T‐ chart.
• Step 4: Add, revise, refine.
Additional information and activities relating to co‐constructing criteria are presented in the “Self‐
Assessment” video in this series (see Segment 2).
A. Benefits of Involving Students in Defining Success Criteria (0:47–1:07)
Research confirms the benefits of involving students in defining the success criteria for a goal or
task. By collaborating with the teacher to define the criteria, students begin to develop an
understanding of what quality means in the context of their own work. Wiliam (2007) emphasizes
that simply sharing criteria with students is not enough because “the words do not have the
meaning for the student that they have for the teacher”.
B. Co‐constructing Criteria
i. Generating criteria (1:08–5:21)
The process of co‐constructing criteria begins with having students brainstorm a list of possible
“look‐fors” for a learning task or goal. In this clip, teachers have shared the learning goal with
students, and have presented them with a task (i.e., writing an opinion piece; conducting a
scientific inquiry relating to molar mass). They begin the brainstorming process by asking students
to think about what success looks like (e.g., “What does it look like when we do this well?” or “How
do we know we have learned to ____________?”).
30 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
After Viewing
Activity 1 Reflect on (and discuss if viewing with others) the following:
1. How do the teachers in the video help initiate and guide students’ thinking about criteria?
2. How does this learning activity enhance students’ assessment knowledge, skills, and
literacy?
3. Is there anything that surprised you?
4. What prior learning might the teachers have addressed to get the students to this point in
their learning?
Activity 2 The video clip shows a variety of approaches you might take when asking students to
brainstorm success criteria. If students have prior experience with the knowledge or skills being
addressed, you might simply ask them to think about what success looks like. Giving students time
to think and discuss with peers prior to brainstorming as a whole class (e.g., using a Think‐Pair‐
Share* strategy) may help those who need extra time to process their thinking.
Providing anonymous samples of student work is another way to initiate students’ thinking about
success criteria. By examining stronger and weaker samples, students are able to identify the
characteristics or traits that embody successful performance.
Another way to develop criteria with students is to ask them to think about and make jot notes
about the criteria as they are working through a task or assignment. This is a particularly effective
way of generating criteria when:
• students have limited prior knowledge or experience with the learning
• students are identifying criteria for a skill that they are developing over an extended period
of time and will be using repeatedly (e.g., a problem‐solving skill, an inquiry skill).
At the end of the task, ask students to share their notes on what the criteria might be. Post these
criteria for ongoing reference, review, and revision.
Another approach teachers can take is to provide the categories and ask students to brainstorm
related criteria. An example is provided below:
Category Possible criteria students may generate
Expresses mathematical • Use different ways to explain ideas (e.g., pictures, numbers, words,
ideas in an organized way graphs, diagrams)
• Show all steps
• Use mathematical symbols correctly
• Use mathematical words from the word wall when explaining
• Show the steps you did or your thinking in order from first to last
• Use different colours to show different ideas
Try the first step of the co‐construction process, brainstorming criteria, with your students. Select a
task or activity that is familiar to students (e.g., setting class rules, conducting a science
31 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
investigation, descriptive writing, taking notes). Have students brainstorm criteria (“look‐fors”) for
quality performance.
1. Begin with a Think‐Pair‐Share‐Square* strategy. Ask, “What would it look like to do this
well?”
2. After they have had some time to think and discuss in their quartets, record all responses
from the students during the brainstorming.
3. Encourage discussion to elicit students’ understanding, to clarify meaning, and to build
consensus on the criteria.
4. Guide the conversation and, if necessary, add your own criteria to ensure that the list
reflects what is significant for a successful performance.
*Think‐Pair‐Share (Lyman, 1981) is a strategy that gives students the opportunity to reflect on a question
and process their thinking by sharing with another student. Think‐Pair‐Share‐Square adds an additional step
by having pairs share with each other.
ii. Sorting and categorizing (5:21–6:48)
Once students have generated ideas for criteria, the list needs to be organized so that it is
manageable for use in providing feedback, self‐ and peer‐assessing, and goal setting. By grouping
like or related criteria into categories, students are better able to internalize the characteristics of
successful performance on the task and/or learning goals. Clustering “like” criteria under a single
heading can help students to identify aspects of their work that need improvement, while at the
same time prioritizing and limiting the number of criteria they need to attend to. Organizing the list
helps students to remember, prioritize, and internalize the criteria. It can also increase students’
commitment to the instructional goals (Rolheiser & Ross, 2001).
After Viewing
Activity 3 Reflect on (and discuss if viewing with others) the following:
1. How does “sorting and categorizing” exemplify the seamless integration of assessment and
instruction?
2. What benefits might come from engaging students in this exercise?
Possible benefits could be:
• a higher degree of students’ ownership of and responsibility for their learning;
• development of a common and meaningful set of standards;
• deeper understanding of criteria and quality work;
• a redefined student–teacher partnership.
Activity 4 Revisit the brainstormed list of criteria resulting from Activity 2 in this segment. Have
students group criteria that are similar. Ask them to suggest a name for each group and be
prepared to explain their choice during class discussion.
Alternatively, provide students with a list of brainstormed criteria relating to a current learning
goal or task, and ask students to work in pairs to sort and categorize the list. Encourage them to
justify their choices to their partner, and to share their thinking during class discussion.
32 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
iii. Sharing and displaying criteria (6:49–7:02)
Once organized, the co‐constructed criteria can be shared and displayed in a variety of ways,
depending on how the criteria are to be used. Displaying the criteria in the classroom using an
anchor chart or T‐chart makes the “look‐fors” easily accessible to students during learning.
Teacher‐developed templates, checklists, and rubrics make the criteria accessible to students for
use in self and peer assessment. Some samples of teacher‐developed materials are available in the
Viewing Guide for the Self‐Assessment video in this series (pp. 36 – 39).
After Viewing
Activity 5 Review the categorized criteria resulting from Activity 4 in this segment. Decide how best
to share the criteria with students. Use one of the teacher‐developed templates referenced above,
or design your own.
iv. Revisiting and revising criteria (7:03–7:54)
As students work with the criteria, apply them to samples, and gain a deeper understanding of the
learning goals and criteria, it may be necessary to review and revise the descriptors and the
language of the criteria. Some students may benefit from limiting the number of criteria or
prioritizing specific success criteria at appropriate times depending on how they are progressing in
their learning.
Reviewing the criteria as students are learning provides
opportunities for the teacher and students to:
• further clarify the “look‐fors”;
• prioritize those criteria with greatest impact on
the learning;
• add additional criteria based on new learning;
• ensure that criteria details facilitate meaningful
feedback;
• readily highlight next steps.
A criterion is added to the list
After Viewing
Activity 6 Consider the success criteria chart (template, checklist, etc.) developed as a result of
Activity 5 in this segment. Use the criteria to provide feedback to students about a task or
performance. Alternatively, have students use the criteria to self‐ or peer‐assess their learning.
Afterwards, decide whether the criteria need revision.
1. Is the list complete?
2. Did something occur to you or to the students that might be missing?
3. Do any of the criteria on the list need further clarification?
Make the necessary revisions together with the students.
Activity 7 Once you have co‐created criteria with students, reflect on the experience to identify
what went well and what was challenging. Consider (and discuss if learning with others) how you
might respond to the challenges. Some sample challenges and responses are listed below.
33 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
Possible Challenges Responding to the Challenges
Students may not know enough • Activate prior knowledge by engaging students in a
about the knowledge and skills they Think‐Pair‐Share activity to discuss the goals and/or task
are to demonstrate in order to with a partner.
identify the success criteria. • Provide anonymous samples of the task or performance
for students to analyse.
• Ask students to identify success criteria while they are
working on a task or practising a skill.
Students may identify criteria that • Keep in mind that this is the first step in the process of
are not relevant to the goals or task, developing and refining the success criteria – as learning
or may leave out criteria that are progresses, teachers identify opportunities to refine
significant for successful students’ thinking about the criteria so that students can
demonstration of the learning. focus on more significant aspects of the criteria.
• When co‐constructing criteria, teachers are not
relinquishing their role as lead learner – if significant
criteria are not generated, teachers should contribute
them to the list.
Students may not engage in the • Prior to co‐constructing, discuss with students the
process because they see the task of benefits of knowing the success criteria.
developing the success criteria as
the teacher’s responsibility.
Co‐constructing criteria with Black et al (2003) note that while “any non‐trivial change in
students can be time‐consuming. classroom teaching involves the teacher both in taking risks
Some teachers might find it difficult and, at least during the process of change, in extra work”,
to justify the time it takes to co‐ improving assessment practices results in improved student
construct the criteria. achievement and engagement. Working with teachers
implementing assessment for learning in their classrooms,
they found that the “work involved turns out to be a
redistribution of effort”. Consider making changes step by
step, starting small, and then adding further refinements to
practice.
• Have students discuss what they learned or what doing
the learning activities “looks like”.
• Discuss with colleagues other approaches to co‐
construction that preserve the students’ active role and
balance the time commitment.
• Highlight and integrate assessment language and skills
into all learning experiences.
• Share with students up front what you are doing with
criteria, and why.
• Begin small and build on success and engagement.
34 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
• Begin slow and let the momentum drive the learning.
• Provide frequent, focused opportunities to practise
generating and applying criteria.
Showing students samples of work • Align the tasks with the success criteria and the learning
may limit creativity or encourage goal(s).
imitation. • Ensure assessment tasks provide the evidence you
require.
• Open up the possibilities and use a diversity of samples.
• Incorporate “originality and creativity” as a success
category, if applicable.
• Provide open‐ended tasks and choice in how students
demonstrate their learning.
Sharing learning goals and success • Students may record success criteria “en route” as they
criteria at the outset of learning progress through their inquiry/investigation.
may not be possible for inquiry and • Poster paper or sticky notes can be used to record
problem‐solving activities. potential success criteria as they are identified during the
inquiry. Consensus can be reached following the
investigation.
• An exit card requiring each student to write a learning
goal for the inquiry and a number of success criteria will
help the teacher assess who has learned what.
• Alternatively, in groups of four, use a mix and match:
Each student records one distinct criterion on a piece of
paper. Pairs of students from each group rotate, visiting
every other group, and gather similar success criteria to
their own that might belong to the same category.
Following the mix and match, all return to their home group,
name the category, list the criteria on poster paper, and
post them for all to see. Students and teacher share their
observations, comments, recommendations, and questions
prior to coming to consensus.
Extending the Learning
A. Using Rubrics as Assessment Tools
Rubrics are frequently used for the purpose of evaluation to judge the quality of students’ work.
The criteria used in rubrics may sometimes be too broad, generic, or vague to be useful to students
in their learning, or may be expressed in language they don’t understand. However, rubrics can
also be used in a student‐centred environment as an assessment tool to deepen understanding
and improve their learning. Once students have generated success criteria, it is a natural next step
to engage them in co‐developing the rubric. As a result, the language used in the descriptors and
qualifiers will be student‐friendly and will make it easier for students to give specific descriptive
feedback, identify concrete next steps, and set individual goals.
35 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
Activity 8 Examine a rubric you have been using with your students for some time. Is there a
criterion that may be too broad or expressed in language challenging to your students?
Ask students to examine the rubric, and have them identify one criterion they understand and one
criterion that they do not understand. Have them try to rewrite both criteria in student‐friendly
language. Engage your students in a class discussion and have them share their observations after
the discussion. Next have them apply the revised criteria to an anonymous sample, giving specific
feedback on what was done well and what needs to improve.
In the following example, Grade 6 students are learning to write a persuasive text. They have
completed their first draft and are in the revision stage of the writing process. The example below
shows a criterion from the original rubric for this task, with descriptors at each level:
Rubric Criterion
Level 1 Level 2 Level 3 Level 4
Revises writing to Makes revisions with Makes revisions with Makes revisions with Makes revisions with
improve limited effectiveness some effectiveness considerable a high degree of
organization and effectiveness effectiveness
clarity
When teacher and students engaged in rewriting the above criterion in student‐friendly language,
the result was the following checklist:
Checklist
Working on it
Getting there
Persuasive Writing Task
On target
Wow!
I…
• Highlighted main ideas
• Checked for logical ordering of main ideas
• Checked to see that each main idea is presented in a separate paragraph
• Looked for transition words to connect the ideas from one paragraph to the next
paragraph (e.g., also, finally, as a result)
• Checked if writing contains too much explaining and removed extra words
• Checked if writing was unclear and added details to provide more information
• Used revising strategies to delete and add text (e.g., cross‐outs, arrows,
underlining, cutting‐and‐pasting)
B. Using Samples to Generate Criteria
Analysing samples of other students’ performances of a task is one way to make success criteria
visible, both to students and to teachers. This segment shows students examining samples to
identify success criteria.
36 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
Activity 9 Work with colleagues to identify success criteria for the task that the students in this
video segment are assigned.
1. Review 1:58–2:58 of the segment, in which the Sharing the design process,
teacher gives students the instructions for examining weaving the access to and
the samples. use of quality criteria
2. Read Appendix K: Identifying Success Criteria for a throughout learning, and
Task, which provides information about the task, the keeping expectations and
overall and specific expectations, and the learning criteria present and public
goal to be addressed, as well as two sample pieces. propel the concept of
3. Provide copies of the two sample pieces. “explicit criteria” into the
4. In pairs, brainstorm possible “look‐fors”. practice of powerful
5. Next, sort and categorize your list. teaching and learning.
6. After brainstorming, sorting, and categorizing your (Martin‐Kniep & Picone‐
list, review 3:15–5:22 of the segment, in which the Zochia, 2009)
students share their ideas for criteria. While viewing,
consider the following:
• How does the teacher draw out student responses?
• Is co‐creation a partnership or is it simply students dictating the criteria?
• Does it appear that the teacher has identified the criteria prior to co‐constructing with
students? What evidence is there that the teacher has done this planning?
7. Compare your list with the list generated by the students and the teacher. Discuss your
observations with the group.
• How are your lists different? Why might this be?
• Are there criteria that you think are missing or that should not be included? What are
your reasons for adding or excluding these criteria?
List of criteria created by the students and the teacher
Opinion Clear, strong point of view
Supported with examples and facts from research
Uses comparisons
Presents a variety of facts and examples
True and believable
Describes consequences
Includes a call for action
Language Uses advanced vocabulary
Descriptive words and phrases
Correct spelling and grammar
Varied sentence lengths and types
Activity 10 Now that you have become familiar with the practices of identifying, sharing, and
clarifying learning goals and success criteria, take some time to reflect on your learning and to
determine next steps.
37 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
1. What have been some of the key learnings for you?
2. What has been the impact on your students?
3. What aspect of learning goals or success criteria will be the focus for future professional
learning?
4. What do you need in order to do this? Where can you get what you need? Whose help do
you need to engage?
5. How will you know that you have improved? (i.e., What will you see?)
6. What are some of the next steps in order to further develop these practices? For you? For
your students?
38 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
APPENDIX A Where Am I Now? (Segment 1)
Consider each of the following statements, and indicate R (Rarely), S (Sometimes), or U (Usually).
A. Developing, Sharing, and Clarifying Learning Goals R S U
I/We ensure that students know what they are expected to know, understand, and do
by:
• Identifying learning goals based on overall and specific expectations
• Writing clear concise learning goals in student‐friendly/grade‐appropriate language
• Stating learning goals from the students’ perspective (e.g., “We are learning to …)
• Designing the learning in incremental steps to build student knowledge and skills
• Developing learning goals that identify a progression of incremental, scaffolded
knowledge and skills
• Sharing the learning goals at appropriate times in each cycle of learning, usually at
the beginning
• Posting the learning goals visibly in the classroom
• Having students record the learning goals in their notebooks or on their task
• Making connections to the learning goals during instruction and when students are
engaged in learning activities
• Clarifying learning goals with students to ensure that students and teacher share
the same understanding of what is to be learned
• Providing students time and opportunity to reflect on and discuss the learning
goals
• Asking students to monitor their progress in relation to the learning goals
B. Success Criteria R S U
I/We ensure that students understand what successful learning looks like by:
• Identifying the criteria for success on the learning goals and the assessment tasks
when planning assessment and instruction
• Sharing and clarifying success criteria with students
• Co‐constructing the success criteria with students for significant tasks and learning
goals
• Describing the success criteria in student‐friendly language and observable
behaviours
• Using samples, models, and exemplars to identify and clarify success criteria
• Providing opportunities for students to discuss, review, revise, and come to
agreement on the success criteria
• Modelling applying criteria to concrete samples of strong and weak work
• Having students practise applying criteria to anonymous work samples
• Using success criteria as the basis for teacher feedback and for self and peer
assessment
39 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
APPENDIX B My Learning Plan (Segment 1)
After completing Appendix A: Where Am I Now?, use this template to develop a learning plan.
Begin with small steps and build gradually and progressively on your successes as you and your
students become comfortable with the practices. Continue to use Appendix A: Where Am I Now?
to inform your learning plan as your learning progresses.
1. What is the immediate next step you
have identified?
2. What do you need to know more
about?
3. What specific actions will you take to
get there?
4. What specific support will you need?
5. What evidence will you look for to
demonstrate growth and progress in
your learning?
6. How does your plan involve shifting
responsibility for learning from you to
your students?
7. How will you model the knowledge
and skills involved in self‐ and peer‐
assessing in your learning and
practice?
40 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
APPENDIX C Learning Goals & Success Criteria Quotations
(Segment 1)
Learning is easier when learners understand what goal they are trying to achieve, the purpose of
achieving the goal, and the specific attributes of success.
(Chappuis & Stiggins, 2002)
Assessment for learning is about far more than testing more frequently or providing teachers with
evidence so that they can revise instruction, although these steps are part of it. In addition, we now
understand that assessment for learning must involve students in the process.
(Stiggins, 2002)
Students can hit any target they can see that holds still for them.
(Stiggins et al, 2006)
When we invest time up front to build the vision [of what students are to be learning], we gain it
back later in increased student motivation and the resulting higher‐quality work.
(Chappuis, 2009)
Teachers should continually help students clarify the intended learning as the lessons unfold – not
just at the beginning of a unit of study.
(Chappuis & Stiggins, 2002)
Many teachers who have tried to develop their students’ self‐assessment skills have found that the
first and most difficult task is to get students to think of their work in terms of a set of goals.
(Black et al, 2004)
In assessing the quality of a student’s work or performance, the teacher must possess a concept of
quality appropriate to the task, and be able to judge the student’s work in relation to that concept.
(Sadler, 1989)
Setting clear targets for student learning involves more than posting an instructional goal for
students to see. It also requires elaboration of the criteria by which student work will be judged.
(Shepard et al, 2005)
… when students take part in developing criteria, they are much more likely to understand what is
expected of them, “buy in”, and then accomplish the task successfully.
(Gregory, Cameron, & Davies, 1997)
Are the criteria fully and carefully defined and open to all or are they nebulous and guarded so that
students must guess what is being taught?
(Arter & Spandel, 1992)
41 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
… to the extent that criteria are shared, students [receive the] power to recognize strong
performance, power to identify problems in weak performance, and power to use criteria to change
and improve performance.
(Arter & Spandel, 1992)
Sharing the design process, weaving the access to and use of quality criteria throughout learning,
and keeping expectations and criteria present and public propel the concept of “explicit criteria”
into the practice of powerful teaching and learning.
(Martin‐Kniep & Picone‐Zochia, 2009)
Students can only achieve learning goals if they understand those goals, assume some ownership of
them, and can assess progress.
(Nicol & Macfarlane‐Dick, 2006)
Learning is more likely to be fostered when feedback focuses on features of the task (success
criteria) and emphasizes learning goals.
(Kluger & DeNisi, 1996)
42 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
APPENDIX D Learning Goals Concept Attainment (Segment 2)
1. Examine the sample learning goals below. Identify the common attributes of the more effective
goals. Jot down your thoughts on what makes an effective learning goal. As you view the rest of
this segment, refer back to your list and add or revise.
Less effective More effective What makes it more effective?
We are learning to use stated We are learning to use clues
and implied information and in the text to know what the
ideas in texts to make simple author is saying without
inferences. (Gr. 2 Language) writing it in words.
I can identify and compare I can explain what a
different types of quadrilateral is.
quadrilaterals and sort and I can identify several
classify them by their geometric properties related
geometric properties. (Gr. 4 to quadrilaterals.
Mathematics) I can use geometric properties
to describe how quadrilaterals
are the same and different.
I can sort and group
quadrilaterals using different
geometric properties.
We are learning to read We are learning to make
labels on foods. (Gr. 5 Health healthier personal food
and Physical Education) choices by using information
on food labels.
We are studying the creative We are learning to rework a
process. (Gr. 8 Arts) piece using feedback from our
teacher and classmates.
Students will know how to We are learning to create and
create and perform phrases perform phrases that explore
that explore two or more two or more elements of
elements of dance. (Gr. 9 dance.
Dance)
I will be able to use I will be able to use descriptive
appropriate descriptive and words, phrases, and
evocative words, phrases, expressions to clearly describe
and expressions to make a scene or situation.
writing clear and vivid for the
intended audience. (Gr. 10
English)
We will understand the uses I can identify and describe
of buttons, labels, and text common controls used in
fields. (Gr. 12 Computer graphical user interfaces.
Studies) I can use buttons, labels, and
text fields when designing
graphical user interfaces.
43 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
2. Using your observations from the “What makes it more effective?” column, brainstorm a list of
criteria for effective learning goals. (If learning with others, do this as a group.)
3. Are there criteria that are similar or related? Categorize and sort the list.
44 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
APPENDIX E Learning Goals Checklist (Segment 2)
The following checklist, developed by teachers, contains criteria for writing effective learning goals,
and can be used to guide the development of learning goals. As you apply the criteria to the
development of learning goals, you may add to or revise the list.
• linked to the overall and specific expectations
to be addressed
• connected to a big idea
• identifies incremental steps to build student
knowledge and skills
• uses clear, concise language
Language
• uses language that is student‐friendly and
grade‐appropriate
• uses verbs that describe specific and
observable actions
• stated from a student’s perspective (e.g., “We
are learning to …)
45 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
APPENDIX F Sharing and Clarifying Learning Goals (Segment 3)
Questions to Consider Observations
What strategies do teachers
employ to share the learning
goals with their students?
(1:17–2:05)
What strategies do the
teachers employ to help
students clarify their overall
understanding of the learning
goals?
(2:06–5:50)
46 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
APPENDIX G Sharing and Clarifying Learning Goals – Reflecting
on My Practice (Segment 3)
Use the following Think‐Pair‐Share‐Square* activity to reflect on your current practice and to set a
goal for implementing next steps.
1. Reflect on your current practices using the questions in the chart below. Record your thoughts
in the space provided. (Think)
2. Pair up with another person and share your observations. (Pair)
3. As an extension of your sharing, find areas where your thinking “squares” with your partner’s
thinking – i.e., where your thinking is similar and reflects a common understanding. Also,
explore areas where your thinking does not necessarily reflect a common position. Clarify your
thinking with your partner, keeping in mind that you might end in a position where you can
agree to disagree agreeably. (Share)
4. Square up with two other people who have just gone through a similar process. Try to “square”
your thinking with them using the same process as above. (Square)
Reflect on your current practice: In my practice …
How do I help my students clarify their
understanding of the learning goals established?
What opportunities do my students have to
reflect on the meaning of the learning goals?
What opportunities do my students have to
connect the learning goals to the big ideas of
the course or subject?
What opportunities are there for students to
give and receive feedback (peer, self, teacher)
about their learning in relation to the learning
goals?
*Think‐Pair‐Share (Lyman, 1981) is a strategy that gives students the opportunity to reflect on a question and process
their thinking by sharing with another student. Think‐Pair‐Share‐Square adds an additional step by having pairs share
with each other.
47 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
APPENDIX H Tracking Progress (Segment 3)
Below are examples of formats designed by teachers to help students track their progress in
achieving learning goals. By dating their self‐assessments, students can keep a record of their
progress over time.
Sample 1
Learning goals Just beginning Making progress Got it
We are learning to:
• identify polynomial
expressions
• identify like and unlike
terms
• group like terms
• simplify polynomial
expressions by addition
and subtraction
Sample 2
Learning goal(s)
I am learning to set individual learning goals and monitor my progress.
Criteria Just Making Got it Questions I have /
starting progress I need to know:
I set goals that are
reasonable.
I identify what success looks
like on a goal.
I use the criteria to see how I
am doing.
I get feedback from my
teacher and peer to help me
improve.
I act on the feedback to make
the improvements.
I think about where I need to
go next.
48 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
Sample 3 (Used by students in the video)
Tracking My Learning
Learning goal:
49 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
APPENDIX I Helping Students Understand Success Criteria
(Segment 5)
Use this organizer to record the strategies used by teachers in the video to share and clarify
success criteria. After viewing, reflect on (and discuss if viewing with others) how the strategy
affects students’ understanding of the criteria.
What strategies do teachers employ to help How might this strategy affect students’
students deepen their understanding of the understanding?
success criteria?
(1:10–5:53)
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
50 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
APPENDIX J Sharing and Clarifying Success Criteria – Reflecting
on My Practice (Segment 5)
Use the following Think‐Pair‐Share‐Square* activity to reflect on your current practice and to set a
goal for implementing next steps.
1. Reflect on your current practices using the questions in the chart below. Record your thoughts
in the space provided. (Think)
2. Pair up with another person and share your observations. (Pair)
3. As an extension of your sharing, find areas where your thinking “squares” with your partner’s
thinking – i.e., where your thinking is similar and reflects a common understanding. Also,
explore areas where your thinking does not necessarily reflect a common position. Clarify your
thinking with your partner, keeping in mind that you might end in a position where you can
agree to disagree. (Share)
4. Square up with two other people who have just gone through a similar process. Try to “square”
your thinking with them using the same process as above. (Square)
Reflect on your current practice: In my practice …
How do I help my students clarify their
understanding of the success criteria?
What opportunities do my students have to
practise applying the success criteria?
What opportunities are there for students to
receive feedback from me in relation to the
success criteria?
What opportunities are there for students to
give and receive feedback about their learning
in relation to the success criteria? (peer, self,
teacher)
*Think‐Pair‐Share (Lyman, 1981) is a strategy that gives students the opportunity to reflect on a question and process
their thinking by sharing with another student. Think‐Pair‐Share‐Square adds an additional step by having pairs share
with each other.
51 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
APPENDIX K Identifying Success Criteria for a Task (Segment 6)
The Task* Learning Goal
Students were asked to write a letter to the We are learning to identify and express a
editor giving an opinion about a current issue. point of view that is supported by research.
They were reminded to support their points of
view with relevant facts and to be clear and
persuasive.
Expectations from the Ontario Curriculum, Grade 7 Writing
1. generate, gather, and organize ideas and information to write for an intended purpose and
audience
Research
1.3 gather information to support ideas for writing, using a variety of strategies and a wide
range of print and electronic resources (e.g., use a timeline to organize research tasks; interview
people with knowledge of the topic; identify and use appropriate graphic and multimedia
resources; record sources used and information gathered in a form that makes it easy to
understand and retrieve)
Classifying Ideas
1.4 sort and classify ideas and information for their writing in a variety of ways that allow them
to manipulate information and see different combinations and relationships in their data (e.g.,
by underlining or highlighting key words or phrases; by using a graphic organizer such as a
“Plus/Minus/Interesting” chart)
Organizing Ideas
1.5 identify and order main ideas and supporting details and group them into units that could be
used to develop a multi‐paragraph piece of writing, using a variety of strategies (e.g., making jot
notes; grouping according to key words; making charts; drawing webs) and organizational
patterns (e.g., combined/multiple orders such as comparison and cause and effect)
Review
1.6 determine whether the ideas and information they have gathered are relevant, appropriate,
and sufficiently specific for the purpose, and do more research if necessary (e.g., check for errors
or omissions in information using a T‐chart)
Point of View
2.5 identify their point of view and other possible points of view, evaluate other points of view,
and find ways to acknowledge other points of view, if appropriate
Teacher prompt: “How could you let your audience know you have thought about other points of
view?”
52 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
Student Samples
Sample 1 have a choice whether to stop the kid or just give
Dear Editor, him a friendly wave. If the person is driving safely
Do you understand why we have to wear don’t stop him, but if he is driving like a crazy wild
those pain in the neck bike helmets? Me either. child, I give them all rights to stop them or give him a
I myself don’t wear a bike helmet and I don’t warning.
see why a teen of any age should have to wear one Sure a helmet will protect your head, but if
either. When most people become teenagers they you’re driving slowly and safely I don’t see why we
start to mature and quit driving bikes like a wild have to wear them. One consequence though would
child. be, that there are still some crazy drivers and with
In my opinion, only children under the age of one wrong turn of the wheel, well you never know.
12 should have to wear them. I feel this way because In conclusion, I would like to say that, if you
most kids around this age are still a little bit wacked feel that you can drive a bike without having too bad
and doing crazy things. Also most children around of an accident, that you should have a choice
the age of 6 and under are probably still learning to whether or not to wear one.
ride a bike. The law people should also do something Sincerely,
about that fine, maybe, like lowering it. If they don’t
change the laws and they keep the age at 16, the
police should
Sample 2 equipment, and about $160 more to sign up. On the
Dear Editor, other hand, in Thunder Bay, it costs almost $500 just
I believe that the prices for recreational to try out! What is this? The price is wrong?
activities are outrageous! People are saying that We have one small pool here, and it’s not
Canada’s children are becoming “couch potato kids,” even indoors. So why do we have to pay $2.50 per
but really all that’s happening is that the kids’ swim, when two years ago it was about $2.00? That
parents are taking one look at the sport prices and really adds up over the summer.
turning the other way! At the closest indoor pool, it costs around
In our small town, prices are sky‐high! For $5.00 for kids, and $7.00 for adults. How many
figure skating you have to pay a user fee (for the use people love traveling so much that they’ll drive for
of the ice), group lesson fees, and, if you are a high‐ an hour every weekend (or less), to spend two hours
level skater, you need a pair of $500 skates. If you in an indoor pool? More than you’d expect, that’s for
really want to improve, you need to pay again for sure!
“Club Ice,” and private lessons for 15 minutes, it If we don’t do something about the prices of
costs about $8.00, per lesson. Then there are those recreational sports, the children of Canada will
darn expensive competitions! become couch potatoes. What can we do? We can
I’ve been told that we’re lucky to live in a fund raise. We can help the children who already do
small town, because in cities, prices are even higher! (not that it’s only kids, it’s adults as well). If you
I say, that if the prices rise much more they’ll be don’t help, well, then don’t complain when your kid
standing on the moon, waving at us! is a couch potato.
As for hockey, well, the hockey players pay Sincerely,
more for their equipment than the rest altogether.
In our small town they pay about $600 for (good)
*The task and the student samples are taken from The Ontario Curriculum – Exemplars, Grades 1–8: Writing,
pp. 141 and 146.
53 ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING VIDEO SERIES Learning Goals and Success Criteria Viewing Guide
APPENDIX L Suggested Reading
Brookhart, S. M. (2008). How to give effective feedback to your students. Alexandria, VA:
Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development.
While this book focuses on feedback, it emphasizes the importance of learning goals and
success criteria in providing quality feedback and supporting students in developing their
self‐ and peer‐assessment skills (pp. 72–73).
Clarke, S. (2008). Active learning through formative assessment. London: Hodder Education.
Clarke focuses on the critical importance of students playing an active role in the learning
and assessment processes. Specific examples of how teachers involve students of all ages in
understanding learning goals and success criteria are provided.
Gregory, K., Cameron, C., & Davies, A. (1997). Knowing what counts: Setting and using criteria.
Courtenay, BC: Building Connections Publishing.
Provides a four‐step process for co‐constructing criteria with students, and explains how to
use the criteria with students to assess their learning. It also includes a variety of templates
for tools for teachers and students to use when assessing, providing feedback, and planning
next steps.
Moss, C., & Brookhart, S. (2009). Advancing formative assessment in every classroom: A guide for
instructional leaders. Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and Curriculum
Development.
Chapter 2, “Leveling the Playing Field: Sharing Learning Targets and Criteria for Success”,
defines what is meant by sharing and clarifying goals and criteria; explains the connection
between clear, shared goals and criteria and motivation to learn; provides specific
strategies for helping students understand goals and criteria; identifies and dispels common
misconceptions; and sets out a process for modelling the use of goals and criteria in
professional learning.
Stiggins, R., Arter, J., Chappuis, J., & Chappuis, S. (2006). Classroom assessment for student learning
– Doing it right, using it well. Portland, OR: Educational Testing Service.
Chapter 3, “Assess What? Clear Targets”, describes the benefits of clearly identifying
learning goals for teachers, students, and parents; suggests a process for stating goals in
student‐friendly language; describes different types of learning goals; and models how to
deconstruct a curriculum standard.
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References
Andrade, H. (2010). Students as the definitive source of formative assessment: Academic self‐
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Handbook of formative assessment (pp. 233–250). New York: Routledge.
Arter, J., & Chappuis, J. (2006). Creating and recognizing quality rubrics. Portland, OR: Educational
Testing Service.
Arter, J., & Spandel, V. (1992). Using portfolios of student work in instruction and assessment.
Educational Measurement: Issues and Practices, NCME Instructional Module (Spring), 201–
209.
Black, P., Harrison, C., Lee, C., Marshall, B., & Wiliam, D. (2004). Working inside the black box:
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