Thursday, 25 August 2016

SOLO taxonomy hand signals



We use SOLO taxonomy to assess our writing and show us where we are and what our next steps are. Students of all ages can use SOLO levels, rubrics and frameworks to answer the following questions:
  • What am I learning?
  • How is it going?
  • What do I do next?
SOLO Taxonomy (structure of observed learning outcomes) provides a simple, reliable and robust model for three levels of understanding – surface deep and conceptual (Biggs and Collis 1982).
At the prestructural level of understanding, the task is inappropriately attacked, and the student has missed the point or needs help to start. The next two levels, unistructural and multistructural are associated with bringing in information (surface understanding). At the unistructural level, one aspect of the task is picked up, and student understanding is disconnected and limited. The jump to the multistructural level is quantitative. At the multistuctural level, several aspects of the task are known but their relationships to each other and the whole are missed. The progression to relational and extended abstract outcomes is qualitative. At the relational level, the aspects are linked and integrated, and contribute to a deeper and more coherent understanding of the whole. At the extended abstract level, the new understanding at the relational level is re-thought at another conceptual level, looked at in a new way, and used as the basis for prediction, generalisation, reflection, or creation of new understanding (Hook and Mills 2011).

                        Couper and Keeley using given success criteria for Instruction Writing to make a                                                           rubric showing the steps at each stage.


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