Eclectic Technology
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Eclectic Technology
Tech tools that assist all students to be independent learners & teachers to become better teachers
Curated by Beth Dichter
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Infographics as Assessments for Nonfiction Reading

Infographics as Assessments for Nonfiction Reading | Eclectic Technology | Scoop.it
This past weekend, my step-daughter Emily, who works in the field of non-profit fundraising, asked me out of the blue, "Do you you ever teach your students about infographics?" I beamed with pride as I showed off my students' hard work.
Beth Dichter's insight:

In this post learn how a teacher took a project where students created an infographic on a non-fiction book and took it from being a "nice digital poster" and observed students whom had finished early poll their classmates and create infographics that included their new results. To quote from the post "These students had made a leap of understanding I hadn’t asked for: the images on an infographic were meant to convey data and information with the powerful impact of visual design."

Read the post to learn about the process that followed and how you might have your students create infographic in your classroom for an assessment.

The Rice Process's curator insight, January 25, 2014 11:50 AM

Infographics can be an effective assesment across the board.

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History Poster Projects as Assessment Tools

History Poster Projects as Assessment Tools | Eclectic Technology | Scoop.it
Non-traditional tests, like Aaron Brock's 8th gr. history poster project, can help inner-city students build evaluative skills needed for new state assessments.
Beth Dichter's insight:

As the Common Core testing approaches and academic rigor is stressed it is great to have alternative ways to assess our students and that is teaching them skills that will be required in Common Core testing. This post provides a detailed look at how one teacher crafted a poster to assignment that required their students compare and contrast two leaders (unit Early American Leaders), exlaining whom they believed was the best leader and the worst leader, and providing a ranking for each level (explaining their ranking) as well as information from the text to support this. Many more details are provided in this post and you might also allow students to expand on the resources they utilized (as the Common Core will require that students look at more than one resource on a topic and then craft an answer to a problem). You might also have students create an infographic out of this work if you want to engage them online.

Kate Erricker's curator insight, January 24, 2014 5:18 AM

Could this approach also work for comparative poetry analysis and Literature study?