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Concourse 2

Checking learning: the essentials

checking This guide is concerned with keeping your eye on the target language in a lesson and checking as you go along that what you want to be learned is really being learned.

It is not a particularly simple thing to do because it requires you to see inside your learners' heads in some way.

In tackling this guide, it will help if you have followed the guide to how learning happens.

why

Why is it important?

That's a pretty obvious question with straightforward answers.  Click here when you have some.


test

Ways to check

1. Asking

You can, of course, ask your learners what they think.  What's wrong with that?  Click on the table when you have thought of something to put in the right-hand column.

check task 1 answer

You see the problem.  Asking direct questions such as these may get the answer you want to hear (or the learner thinks you want to hear) or may simply demonstrate that the learner either doesn't know or won't give a straightforward answer.  Bear in mind, too, that learners from some cultural backgrounds expect you to expect them to say Yes.
Obviously, the better your learners know and trust you and the safer your classroom is as a place to take risks and be open, the better will be your success with questions like this but there are better ways to get at the data you need.

smart

Asking smarter questions

Display questions vs. Real questions
Display questions are those the teacher asks to which he/she already knows the answer.  The learner has to display his/her knowledge.  Real questions are those you ask for which you do not know the answer and may be more interesting for the learner to answer.
Asking display questions is a legitimate teaching technique but be aware that learners tire of them.
For example,
    What does it say in the text about the city?
is usually a display question because you know, and the learners know you know, the answer better than them.
    What do you think of this character?
is, however, a real question.  The learner knows that you don't know the answer but the response can still tell you how much the learner has understood about the character in a text.
Open vs. closed questions
Open questions require a much more elaborate answer than closed questions.  For example:
    Where is he?
simply requires a one-word answer like Margate unless you insist on making your learners produce inauthentic language ('Answer in a full sentence, please').  It's a closed question.
    Is he happy
is also a closed question.
    Why is he not happy?
is an open question because it demands a fuller response.  It may, of course, still be a display question.
We need to be slightly careful here because a question beginning with Why can be asking for purposes as in, e.g.:
    Why did John take the money?
or it can be asking for reasons as in, e.g.:
    Why was the house dirty?
Generally, questions which require the learner to say when, where, who, what are closed questions but questions that require them to state a reason or speculate about why or how are open questions and will give you more data about how the learners are thinking and understanding.
Questions which use the word if are also open questions requiring more data from the learners.  For example,
    What will/would happen if ... ?
Other types of questions
Clarifying questions:
    What do you mean by ...
    Can you tell me more about ...
etc. are open questions which will tell you more than closed questions and will stretch your learners.
Questions which ask for critical awareness such as:
    What are your reasons for saying that?
are useful to give you some insight into the thought processes of your learners.
Comparison questions:
    What is different about X from Y?
etc. also require the learners to demonstrate what they know or have understood about X or Y.
Affective questions are generally real:
    What do you feel about ... ?
    How did the story affect you?
etc. and these are important to engage and interest learners in a text's content rather than just using the text as a vehicle for something else.

Now try a little test.  Can you think of better questions to ask than the ones on the left?  Click the table when you have for some examples.

questions 1

Your suggestions will probably be different but you have the idea.


checking

Concept checking

This is brief.  There is a guide dedicated to checking questions, how to form them, when to use them and how to write them on this site, linked below.

It has been noted that asking a learner to come up with a dictionary definition of a word or a grammar rule is rarely successful.  Most native speakers will have trouble doing that and it's unfair to ask a learner of the language to attempt it.
However, we do need to check whether learners have understood a concept expressed through a particular structure or a piece of new lexis.
Concept-checking questions (CCQs in the trade) are one good way but they need to be thought about.  The more experience you have the easier it becomes to ask good concept-checking questions.
Two examples:

  1. You have just taught the meaning of the verb in
        They unearthed a whole new temple.
    Some possible CCQs:
    1. Did they dig the temple up or bury it?
    2. Does this verb take an object?  Always?
    3. What else can you unearth, for example?
    4. What's the opposite of unearth?
    5. Can you unearth an idea?  A fish?  A secret?  A reason?
  2. You have just introduced going to in a dialogue about someone's plans for the evening.
    Some possible CCQs:
    1. How sure is he that he is going to the restaurant on the corner?
    2. When did he make the decision to go?
    3. Has he just decided to go or did he decide yesterday when he was invited?
    4. When did Mary invite him?  Did he say Yes or No?  When did he say Yes?
    5. Why did he agree to meet at the restaurant?

and so on.  The purpose of a CCQ is to make it 100% clear to you and the learners that the concept has been grasped.  If it hasn't you may need to abandon the plan and re-present the language somehow or go back to the dialogue.
Notice that a good concept-checking routine will often include a check of meaning and form as in Example 1 above, which also checks collocation and transitivity.

Can you come up with some good CCQs for the teaching points on the left?  Click on the table when you have.

CCQ 1


end

By the end of a lesson

All the above is about checking learning as you go along but we also need to check at the end of a lesson somehow.  Learners, too, want some way of knowing whether their efforts have been successful.
The most obvious way is to give the learners a test of some sort but if the ability to use the target language or skill naturally was the objective of the lesson, that may not be a good guide.
Fortunately, there are ways to check which don't look like tests:

Reducing the amount of control
It's normal near the beginning of lessons (especially if the target is new to the learners) to get them to understand and use the language in very controlled situations.  This may be through things like recognition exercises, gap-fill texts or controlled writing of sentences and so on.
As the lesson progresses, it is also normal gradually to reduce the amount of control so that the learners start to engage with the language more personally.  For example, exercises such as
    Finish the sentences in a way that is true for you
    Find out three things that the other two people at your table used to do and have given up
etc.
Free(r) practice
By the end, the learners should have control of the form or skill so they can deploy it naturally in language which means something to them personally and which is produced entirely by them.  Very few exercises in classrooms are entirely free of course because you will still be bearing the targets in mind and requiring the learners to use language or a skill you have taught.
Examples of this kind of exercise are writing a personal note to each other, skimming a TV listing to find something they are going to watch tonight, talking to each other about future plans and hopes, a group discussion about what's wrong with the place they live in and so on.

When you plan a lesson, ask yourself whether you have included appropriate and clear ways to check learning.  If you haven't, go back and think again.

Your role when activities like this are happening is to monitor and listen / read very carefully.  You need to know if the learners have mastered the target language or skill and whether they feel happy and comfortable using it.



Related guides
testing: the essentials the essential guide to using tests in the classroom to check or aid learning
teacher talk for a general guide to being clear, simple and unambiguous
teacher roles for a guide to what role teachers need to be in at what stage of the lesson
checking questions the guide dedicated to forming instruction- and concept-checking questions
asking good questions for a guide to how to check learning through the use of questions


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