Teachers often focus on what students will learn during a lesson. Rarely, do we stop and ask ourselves, “What will I learn about what my students know or can do during this lesson?” This is a critical question that teachers should ask themselves as they design the parts of their lesson. We need to build in mechanisms into our lessons to collect formative assessment data.

In my previous post, I focused on strategies teachers can use before a lesson to assess prior knowledge. In addition to determining where each student is starting in terms of their content knowledge or skills, teachers should collect data during the lesson to gauge what students know. That data allows us to make adjustments on the spot or guide the design of the next lesson or sequence of lessons.

Checking for understanding and collecting formative assessment data during a lesson can be tricky if the teacher is engaged with a small group or working one-on-one with students. I recommend leaning on technology whenever possible to streamline this process. Technology tools have the benefit of quickly collecting, surfacing, and storing data. Some technology tools, like polling or quiz tools, provide immediate results that can be used during the lesson. Other technology tools can capture and store information for teachers to reference after the lesson. Teachers can use this data to design subsequent lessons to ensure individual students get exactly what they need in terms of follow up instruction, coaching, scaffolds, and personalized practice.

Below are strategies I have used during my lessons to learn about what my students know or can do.

1. Poll the Class with Mentimeter

Polling is a quick way to assess what your students think about a topic, vocabulary word, or problem. I like Mentimeter’s polling feature, which updates in real-time as students select their answers. Simply type the question and options you want to appear on the Mentimeter slide and project it.

Students can use any device to select an option. The results change as students enter their responses creating a visually dynamic experience. You can use the results of the Mentimeter poll to guide the direction of the lesson.


Mentimeter does not allow teachers to view individual student selections, so this strategy works best to get a general picture of what the group thinks or knows.

2. Post a Picture on Padlet

When students are working offline, it’s useful to have them share a picture of their work so you can assess the quality and accuracy. I suggest teachers use a tool like Padlet to have students share a snapshot of their learning. That way all of the pictures are in one place for quick reference.

Math teachers can have students share photos of a math problem. Science teachers can ask students to share images from a lab or STEM challenge. English teachers can ask students to share an image of an annotated poem. These photos provide an overview of where the class is at, while also allowing you to see individual student work.

Another aspect of this strategy that I like is that learning can be shared and made public. Students can see what their peers have done or created. Teachers can design a follow-up activity in which students post comments to each other’s Padlet Wall images, videos, or explanations. This can be used to drive inquiry, reflection, or thoughtful critiques.

3. Quick Check with Google Forms or Schoology

I avoid the word “quiz” intentionally because it is a word the arouses anxiety. Plus, the students’ scores on a “quick check” are not something I would put into a grade book. This is a strategy I use to get a clear picture of what students know. I encourage teachers to explain that a quick check is a teaching tool, not an assessment tool. It is designed to gather information that can help the teacher to identify gaps in understanding and improve the lesson.

Teachers can use Google Forms and run the quick check like a quiz. If they use a combination of multiple-choice, true/false, and short answer questions, the Google Form will grade itself providing immediate data. Similarly, teachers using Schoology can create short quick checks using the assessment tool, which also allows them to include matching and sorting questions that can be graded automatically.

For a quick check, I design questions with one correct answer because I want the software to automatically grade the students’ responses and spit out immediate data I can use. Once I identify where the gaps are, I can pull individual students into a coaching session or design follow-up lessons to support students who need additional instruction, reteaching, and/or practice.

4. Video Check-in with FlipGrid

FlipGrid makes it possible for students to record themselves doing a variety of activities. These video recordings provide insight into what they know or can do. When I was coaching a second-grade teacher, we used FlipGrid to capture a sample of each student reading to assess their fluency. The students selected a passage, read it three times on their own, partnered up and took turns reading with their partner, then recorded themselves reading the passage on FlipGrid. This all happened at a station that was not the teacher-led station. FlipGrid made it possible for the teacher to collect reading samples from every student in a single class period.

Teachers can ask students to:

  • Explain how they solved a problem.
  • Describe the strategies they used to complete a task.
  • Summarize the main ideas from a chapter in a textbook.
  • Make predictions about what they expect to happen in a lab or in a novel.
  • Identify a new vocabulary word and explain it to their peers.
  • Reflect on what they understand as well as what is confusing about a topic, text, or task.

Instead of relying solely on written explanations to assess what students know or can do, video requires that students communicate verbally. For some students, this is easier and for others, it is more challenging. It’s important to mix it up, so that students who struggle to communicate their ideas verbally have opportunities to practice when the stakes are low. On the flip side, it gives students who excel at verbally articulating their thoughts the opportunity to surface their learning that way.

5. Observe and Capture Data with a One Skill Rubric

Observation is one of the most powerful tools in a teacher’s toolbelt. Watching students navigate tasks or engage in conversation with peers can provide a clear picture of their content knowledge and skill set. The biggest challenge is capturing what a teacher sees in the moment, especially when working with a large class.

When I coach teachers, I encourage them to use one skill rubrics to quickly capture data as they observe students at work. For example, teachers who are observing a Socratic seminar or a small group discussion can create a rubric aligned with a speaking and listening standard. In advance of the activity, the teacher must identify the standard they want to focus on, decide on a grading scale, and describe what the standard/skill “looks” like at each level. I use a four-point scale that breaks down the learning into 1–beginning, 2–developing, 3–proficient, and 4–mastery.

I suggest teachers make photocopies of these single skill rubrics, so they have a stack during class. As they observe students engaged in conversation, they simply circle the language that most closely aligns with what they are seeing. I encourage teachers to share this formative assessment data with students, so the students understand where they are in terms of their skills and what they need to do to develop.

Teachers can make single skill rubrics for any standard/skill they want to assess in a lesson. The most challenging part of this strategy is articulating what the learning looks like at each level. That said, the descriptions will save you time and help students understand what they need to do to progress to the next level.

6. Connect the Dots & Share Work in a Google Slide Deck

Give students a list of key concepts, dates, important people, and/or academic vocabulary from a chapter and ask them to “connect the dots” or concepts by creating a flowchart, timeline, or concept map (their choice) to show the connections between the various ideas.

This can be done individually, in pairs, or in a small group at a station. When students are done, ask them to take a photo of the visual they have created and insert it into a shared Google Slide deck. That way, it’s easy for you to reference the students’ work in a single location and the slide deck becomes a resource for the class.

If you have a favorite strategy you use to check understanding during a lesson, please post a comment and share it!

23 Responses

  1. I think these are good suggestions to find out the learning that goes on with our students as we teach. I’ve used a few of these, such as the class poll, showing their diagrams through my iPad’s camera, or even observing the way they converse or discuss among themselves on an assigned problem. I’ve also used game-style checks such as Kahoot! which instantly shows if they’re understanding the content of the lesson and processing the information properly. Whatever it is I get to use, formative assessment tools really make students’ learning more visible to the teacher, who now learns whether they are moving forward towards the expected learning outcomes or otherwise.

  2. I’ve used Kahoot to gives me an idea of if they understand the content that I’ve taught and they students love it. Going over the rubric as a whole class always gives the students an idea as to what I’m looking for as far as grading. Flip Grid was a fun one too during remote learning as well.

  3. All of the tips are great! They help bridge the tech gap so our kids can stay interactive with their learning.

  4. I am finding this information to be very helpful. I feel like if I have to go back to remote learning, I will be more prepared.

    • Thanks for sharing the same and using these tools in my day to day classes has made me so transparent about the teaching learning process. On the other hand, theses methods cater to understanding of a child’s concept too which is ultimately our goal. So thanks to technology which made all of us believe n grow even in these hard times.

  5. I think connecting the dots would be an effective tool to use to help students connect places and periods in time to historical events.

  6. I think that this article is correct. Sometimes teachers do forget to ask how is this helping students.
    I do find that being a music teacher makes it easier to get direct feedback right away and therefore we can adjust accordingly.

  7. When we had to do school work at home my grandchildren’s teachers utilized Flipgrid. We had a blast creating videos for the teachers and how the teacher as well as other students were able to interact with this digital tool. If this ever happens again I want to utilize Flipgrid because of the way everyone can interact.

  8. I believe the article has a point in the fact at the same time we are using formative assessments to find out what our students are learning, we as educators are learning more about how each individual learns.

  9. I’m looking forward to learning more about Mentimeter. It looks similar to Kahoots, but with perhaps more data presented.

  10. Most of this I feel pretty comfortable with already, but I think I could improve on my physical checks for understanding. The digital space is a nebulous one and resources like these help to check in with students for sure. Good list of resources.

  11. Flip grid is a fun way to engage students to share with their classmates and love Kahoot to build skills and use as checkups and pretest review.

  12. Technology has indeed helped teachers a lot in assessing students’ learning. With Mentimeter. google form. Padlet and others, feedbacking become easy.

  13. I have used a few of these methods such as Flipgrid, Mentimeter, and Nearpod. I also used Whiteboard.fi and Jamboard. I like the idea of the one skill rubric especially for that oral language piece. That is always something that is so difficult to “grade”.

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