At LEAD, it was a requirement that every lesson finish with an Exit Ticket ...
… but there was open disagreement about that.
I would love to render some of the awkward dialogue in meetings where I, the experienced 44-year-old, but nevertheless first-year charter-school teacher, and my 22-year-old fresh-out-of-college well-versed-in-Doug-Thompson partner met with the 32-year-old charter-school-veteran supervisor about our lesson-planning parameters. But for now I’ll boil the issue of good Exit Ticket design down to the following:
- Yes, finishing the lesson with an assessment that is … 1) formative (i.e. is not coercive, does not impact the students’ grades) 2) doesn’t take too long 3) summarizes for the students what was learned, and 4) yields actionable data, 5) and doing so every single lesson … is an excellent idea — one of the best that has been introduced into contemporary conversations about pedagogy — but they are neither necessary nor sufficient. That is to say ...
- No, you are not failing the students if you are not able to satisfy all of the five Exit Ticket criteria above.
- No, satisfying the five Exit Ticket criteria above does not mean that you have composed the perfect course plan.
- And you should not allow even a well-designed schedule of Exit Tickets to constrain other decisions that you might make.