âBecause we have to.â
Please donât tell me thatâs your answer.
âSo the kids know how they can achieve the Learning Intention...â
Thatâs a good start. Why else?
âAnd take ownership of their learning. Self-motivated and all that stuff.â
You sound unconvinced.
As teachers, we often feel like ideas, methods, pedagogical practices and approaches are thrown at us left, right and centre with the expectation that we will implement them all. But in reality, we end up trying new things once or twice and then carrying on with the way weâve always taught.
Most teachers already use success criteria in their classrooms in one form or another either because they believe in them or because they think itâs something they should do.
If youâre in the latter camp, Iâd like to challenge you to take another look into success criteria and actually use them because you want to.
First thingâs first, letâs clarify:
What are success criteria?
Success criteria are a set of criteria we can use to measure whether students have met a specific Learning Intention (LI).
They are often written in child-speak language in the form of âI canâ statements and cover the key skills, knowledge and understandings students need to demonstrate to achieve the LI.
How do we use success criteria?
Used effectively, success criteria are referred to at all stages of a lesson; the beginning, middle and end.
They may be prepared in advance by the teacher then shared with students or, even better, co-constructed with the students during the lesson. In this case, materials such as finished products or exemplars may be provided as an example of what success looks like and the teacher along with the students construct a set of criteria based on this.
Why should we use success criteria?
There are huge benefits to using success criteria in your classroom.
Success criteria...
create a clear focus to support purposeful learning
effectively scaffold students by breaking down the LI into actionable, measurable steps
actively engage students in the process of learning
provide grounds for relevant and actionable feedback
increase student motivation
đ Clear focus
Success criteria create a clear focus to support purposeful learning
When both the teacher and the students know what they are trying to achieve in a lesson, they are immediately going to be in a stronger position to get there.
When this end point âdestinationâ is not known by the student, they are essentially going through your lesson blind, waiting for you to guide them (or waiting to get told off for not doing what theyâre supposed to be doing).
As a teacher, you need to know what the steps to success are and focus on helping your students hit each of these during your lesson. When your intent is clear and method at the forefront of your mind, you are going to be set to teach with purpose.
đď¸ Effective scaffolding
Success criteria effectively scaffold students by breaking down the LI into actionable, measurable steps
By breaking the often broad Learning Intention (LI) into actionable steps, we make the learning more manageable for students. Success criteria are specific to a task so we include tangible actions which students can use to move their learning forward or demonstrate their acquisition of new knowledge, skills or understandings.
Using child-speak language and âI canâ statements deliberately makes the learning process accessible to our students. When success criteria make sense to our students, sound achievable and are easy to follow, we are providing an effective scaffold for successful learning.
đ§ Student engagement
Success criteria actively engage students in the process of learning
Us educators talk a lot about developing students who are self-managing, self-motivated, self-regulating, can self-assess, self-whatever - you name it - but do we actually set them up to develop these skills and attitudes?
Independence only comes when students take ownership of their actions. When it comes to learning, thatâs through knowing how to bridge the gap between what they currently know and what they need to know.
Actively using success criteria means that students are engaged in the process of self-assessment. Used effectively, students themselves will be able to identify when they have achieved success, rather than passively relying on the external approval of a teacher.
If students know that they are in the driverâs seat for extending their own learning and they experience success doing this, they are much more likely to adopt a lifelong learner mindset.
đŁď¸ Feedback
Success criteria provide grounds for relevant and actionable feedback
Hands up who has done this before: A student has brought you a piece of writing where theyâve tried their best to do what you asked them to do during the lesson, yet the first thing that comes out of your mouth is âOoh remember your capital letters. What needs to go here? Thatâs right, a full stop!â. Feedback unrelated to what you taught.
By getting clear on what weâre looking for each lesson, we are better positioned to give relevant and timely formative feedback. Our success criteria are our ready-to-go reference for evaluating studentsâ work against.
Students who always struggle to think of peer feedback can use the lesson success criteria as a framework for their responses. Better still, the student receiving feedback will be more receptive to feedback that they know is related to their success in the task at hand.
đŞ Motivation
Success criteria increase student motivation
Presenting success criteria in formats such as a tick box can be particularly motivational for students who like a bit of healthy competition. I know the term âtick boxâ probably sends all kinds of red flag signals in your brain, however it is a strong visual motivational tool you can utilise and if it makes your students try harder, thatâs surely better than the opposite.
But itâs not just extrinsic motivation at play here. When students can see the path to success and believe that they can get there, they are infinitely more likely to try. Learning is hard but achieving a challenge within their reach is whatâs going to fill them with that glowing feeling of success and motivate them intrinsically time and time again.
Summing up
At the end of the day, what is it that we want for our students? For them to learn while theyâre in our care and for them to continue to learn and grow once they move on.
Being deliberate in our approach to teaching and bringing the learning to our students in easily digestible chunks is going to bring us that much closer to getting the outcome we want.
Letâs bridge the gap between where our students are and where they need to be. And include our students in the process of building that bridge.
Be purposeful teachers
Who are in control
Feel inspired
And know theyâve done enough.