Assessment portfolio: A world where I know how to share
This is a text version of Year 2 teacher guidelines. Along with this accessible version, which you can either print or use online, we also have the same guidelines available as a PDF – Year 2 teacher guidelines (PDF, 268KB)This link will download a file.
Assessment description
The assessment that has been developed for this resource is drawn from activities in the resource itself. Activities from each topic have been identified to form a portfolio of work. Each activity enables teachers to gather evidence of student performance in relation to aspects of the Australian Curriculum achievement standards for English, Mathematics, HASS, HPE and/or The Arts. Teachers can select activities and related assessment items that best suit their student and programming needs. The unit of work was developed using the Backwards design process as detailed below.
Stage 1: Desired results
Achievement standard for English
Students – Productive modes:
- students use everyday language features and topic-specific vocabulary when discussing their ideas and experiences
- create texts that show how images support the meaning of the text.
- create texts, drawing on their own experiences, their imagination and information they have learnt.
- use a variety of strategies to engage in group and class discussions and make presentations
- accurately spell words with regular spelling patterns and spell words with less common long vowel patterns
- use punctuation accurately, and write words and sentences legibly using unjoined upper and lower-case letters.
Achievement standard for Mathematics
Students:
- recognise increasing and decreasing number sequences involving 2s, 3s and 5s
- represent multiplication and division by grouping into sets
- associate collections of Australian coins with their value
- identify the missing element in a number sequence
- perform simple addition and subtraction calculations using a range of strategies
- collect, organise and represent data to make simple inferences.
Achievement standard for HASS
Students:
- locate information from observations
- interpret data to draw simple conclusions.
Achievement standard for Health and Physical Education
Students:
- identify how emotional responses impact on others’ feelings
- describe how to keep themselves and others healthy, safe
- demonstrate positive ways to interact with others.
Achievement standard for the Arts
Students:
- make and present drama using the elements of role, situation and focus in dramatic play and improvisation
- describe artworks they make.
Students make artworks in different forms to express their ideas, observations and imagination, using different techniques and processes.
Source
ACARA, The Australian CurriculumExternal Link v8.3
Transfer
Students will be able to independently use their learning to:
- be fair, be kind and respect others
- follow rules and be responsible
- make considered choices about spending, saving and sharing
- contribute to their classroom community.
Meaning
Students will understand that:
- fairness and sharing are good for everyone.
- their community shares
- rules protect their rights and the rights of others
- they have a responsibility to follow rules.
- they can choose to spend or save but to buy want they want, they may need to save
- they can contribute to their classroom community by behaving respectfully and following rules.
Essential questions:
- What is fairness and what does it look like?
- How do I choose to share?
- How is a world without sharing different from a world with sharing?
- Why are rules and responsibilities important?
- Why should I choose to save?
- How do I contribute to our classroom community?
Acquisition
Students will know:
- the difference between fair and unfair and what actions are needed to make unfair situations fair
- the difference between fair sharing and equal sharing
- how the sharing of resources nurtures their community and world
- the different ways that people in the classroom share, and the importance of sharing to them
- how classroom rules help all students to be safe, happy and learn
- the difference between spending and saving money
- how responsible students behave to support their classroom and community.
Students will be skilled at:
- recognising fair and unfair situations, how these situations make people feel and what actions they can take to be fair
- modelling sharing in practical situations and making choices on how to share limited resources
- applying mathematical understanding and reasoning to practical or real-world situations
- making connections between rules and responsibilities
- making informed decisions by weighing up the pros and cons of different choices
- collecting and representing data to draw conclusions
- communicating their experiences and views about values in a range of forms.
Stage 2: Assessment evidence
Topic |
Activity |
Product |
---|---|---|
Topic 1: Fairness |
Activity 5: Unfair situations – role play Activity 6: Reflection – freeze frame and thought tracking |
Observation record: Observations of students as they interact, communicate and work collaboratively Annotated photographs: Students role play an unfair situation and freeze when asked. They annotate their freeze frames revealing thoughts and feelings of characters |
Topic 2: Sharing is a choice |
Activity 4: Sharing preferences – Individual T Charts and group problem-solving Activity 5: Reflection – Class pictograph and ten frame sharing |
Individual T Chart: Students complete a T Chart of what sharing looks like and feels like to them Ten frame templates: Students count, and show fair and unfair sharing scenarios using 10 frames |
Topic 3: A world with or without sharing |
Activity 5: A school without sharing – Individual literary Response |
Storyboard: Students create A school without sharing' storyboard, using a repetitive noun and verb sentence structure |
Topic 4: Rules and responsibilities in the classroom |
Activity 2: Classroom rules – student illustrations. Activity 3: A classroom without rules – sentence construction |
Poster: Students illustrate what a classroom rule 'looks like' and writes a matching sentence Observation record: Students read aloud their group’s story of a classroom with rules |
Topic 5: Spending and saving for needs and wants |
Activity 7: Reflection – collecting and displaying data |
Skip counting worksheet: Students skip count to find missing numbers in a sequence and identify and order Australian notes and coins Spend or save survey: Students collect data and create and interpret a pictograph of the class spending and saving preferences |
Topic 6: How I contribute to my classroom Community |
Activity 2: Demonstrating learning –Performances Activity 3: Documenting learning – Construction of Class Big Book Activity 4: Celebrating learning |
Photographs and written descriptions: Students describe photographed actions of a value or responsibility Presentation: Students present their descriptions to peers, parents and community members |
There are several opportunities throughout this resource for students to work with others, either in pairs, groups or as a class. Interactions, discussions and participation in groups should be observed when appropriate. The rubrics indicate when observations may be required.
Judgements about performance
When making judgments about evidence of student performance, teachers are advised to use the assessment rubrics.
Stage 3: Learning plan
The content descriptions and general capabilities that teachers may include in their teaching programs can be drawn from the linked curriculum mapping documents on each topic page.
Topics:
- 1. Fairness
- 2. Sharing is a choice
- 3. A world with or without sharing
- 4. Rules and responsibilities in the classroom
- 5. Spending and saving for needs and wants
- 6. How I contribute to my classroom community
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