Elements of proximal formative assessment in learners' discourse about energy

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Abstract

Proximal formative assessment, the just-in-time elicitation of students' ideas that informs ongoing instruction, is usually associated with the instructor in a formal classroom setting. However, the elicitation, assessment, and subsequent instruction that characterize proximal formative assessment are also seen in discourse among peers. We present a case in which secondary teachers in a professional development course at SPU are discussing energy flow in refrigerators. In this episode, a peer is invited to share her thinking (elicitation). Her idea that refrigerators move heat from a relatively cold compartment to a hotter environment is inappropriately judged as incorrect (assessment). The "instruction" (peer explanation) that follows is based on the second law of thermodynamics, and acts as corrective rather than collaborative. © 2012 American Institute of Physics.

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Harrer, B. W., Scherr, R. E., Wittmann, M. C., Close, H. G., & Frank, B. W. (2012). Elements of proximal formative assessment in learners’ discourse about energy. In AIP Conference Proceedings (Vol. 1413, pp. 203–206). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.3680030

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