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Learning Targets and Success Criteria

This document discusses learning targets and success criteria based on Hattie's research on visible learning. It defines learning targets as the overarching goals of a lesson's learning presented in student-friendly language. Success criteria provide more specific details on what successful work looks like. Examples are given of learning targets and their aligned success criteria. The importance of learning targets and success criteria is that they help ensure students understand what is expected of them and can achieve the intended learning. Teachers are asked to develop these for their current units and provide feedback.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
230 views10 pages

Learning Targets and Success Criteria

This document discusses learning targets and success criteria based on Hattie's research on visible learning. It defines learning targets as the overarching goals of a lesson's learning presented in student-friendly language. Success criteria provide more specific details on what successful work looks like. Examples are given of learning targets and their aligned success criteria. The importance of learning targets and success criteria is that they help ensure students understand what is expected of them and can achieve the intended learning. Teachers are asked to develop these for their current units and provide feedback.

Uploaded by

api-310199974
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Learning Targets

and
Success Criteria
Hattie’s Research (Visible Learning)
● The largest summary of educational research ever conducted that provides the effect
sizes for various practices
● Effect size: quantifies the magnitude of the impact of an approach/strategy
○ The desired effect size is 0.40 or higher, this value implies expected learning of one school year
● Teacher Clarity
○ Explicitly explaining what learning should be taking place, why they need to know it, intentions of the
lessons, and what it looks like to be successful
○ Effect size: 0.89
○ Includes Learning Targets/Intentions and Success Criteria
Learning Targets (Intentions)

● A description of what students will learn by the end of day’s lesson


● Overarching goal of the learning
● Drives the lesson
● Tells students where they are going by summarizing or restating the standard (without
specific details) in kid-friendly language and including academic vocabulary
Developing or Reviewing Learning Targets
● Use the standard to help identify (then define) key vocabulary/terms
● Generate a list of concept/skills that students must possess to reach proficiency (can
use Achievement Level Descriptors from GADOE as well as Types of Achievement
Targets charts to help)
● Make sure LT presents the standard to students in language they can understand
● LT can be “I can” statements for intended learning of lesson
Success Criteria

● Description of what quality work looks like for the day’s lesson
● Addresses more specific details of the standard (really digs in) and provides a map for
arriving at the target
● May include details not explicitly mentioned in the standard but that are necessary to
achieve the learning
● The list you generated while establishing LT often become your success criteria
○ Prerequisite learning, foundational skills, building blocks of knowledge that lead to the desired level of
learning
○ A to-do list for the learning intentions
Examples
● I can understand the structure of a coordinate grid and relate the procedure of plotting
points in quadrants to the structure of a coordinate grid
○ I can talk and write about the process of plotting points.
○ I can plot and label points in each quadrant on a coordinate grid.
○ I can create a rule about coordinates for each quadrant.
● I can recognize the history, interactions, and trends of climate change
○ I can locate credible research about climate change.
○ I can share my research with peers.
○ I can demonstrate the interactions of climate change and how significant the interactions are.
○ I can use a graph to show and explain trends of climate change.
Examples Continued
● I can explain the Bill of Rights, its purpose, and its relevance in my life
○ I can annotate and paraphrase the BoR.
○ I can explain the importance of the BoR, in general and to me personally.
● Analyze visual images presented in the text and determine how this information
contributes to and clarifies information
○ I can discuss with a peer the way the author used visuals and how they helped me understand the text.
○ I can identify one place in the text that was confusing and a specific visual that helped me understand.
○ I can create a visual that will help someone else understand the text.
What Might This Look Like in the Classroom
● Checklists
○ Success Criteria
○ For the day, topic, unit
■ Study guide resources
● Checks for understanding
○ Sticky Note
○ Markerboards
○ Ticket out the door
● Self Assessments
○ Student samples for success criteria
○ Ratings/Simple Rubrics
Why Is This Important?
● Helps ensure that the learning we want students to get out of an activity/task is
actually attainable through the work we ask them to do
● We do not want, nor do we have time for, activities that do not directly align with the
lesson’s goal.
● Self-regulated learners (effect: 1.33)
● Having learning goals (effect: 0.51)
● Feedback (effect: 0.75)
● Students should be able to answer each of these questions for each day’s lesson:
○ What am I learning today? (learning intention)
○ Why am I learning it? (relevance)
○ How will I know that I have learned it? (success criteria)
Next Steps
● Begin to form Learning Targets and Success Criteria for current unit in courses
currently teaching
○ Place through department Shared Drive by January 21st
● Collect examples of the following
○ What worked/did not work?
○ Student responses/samples and corresponding intentions and success criteria
○ Relevant data form formative assessment(s)
○ Ways you found to intentionally focus students on the success criteria

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