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Edit meta description Discover research-backed formative assessment activities that improve student learning by up to 18 months. Includes exit tickets, interactive polls, learning galleries, and practical implementation tips from a 10-year teaching veteran.

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7 efikasnih aktivnosti formativne procjene za bolje učenje u učionici u 2025. godini

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AhaSlides Team 01 July, 2025 9 min čitanje

Formative assessment activities are considered one of the essential elements of education because of their motivation for learners and their immediate effects on the learning-teaching process. These activities help instructors receive feedback to self-understand limitations, as well as current skills, to develop the next steps in the classroom. 

In this post, I'm sharing seven formative assessment activities that have transformed my classroom and those of educators I work with. These aren't theoretical concepts from a textbook—they're battle-tested strategies that have helped thousands of students feel seen, understood, and empowered in their learning journey.

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What Makes Formative Assessment Essential in 2025?

Formative assessment is the ongoing process of gathering evidence about student learning during instruction to make immediate adjustments that improve both teaching and learning outcomes.According to the Council of Chief State School Officers (CCSSO), formative assessment is "a planned, ongoing process used by all students and teachers during learning and teaching to elicit and use evidence of student learning to improve student understanding of intended disciplinary learning outcomes and support students to become self-directed learners." Unlike summative assessments that evaluate learning after instruction is complete, formative assessments happen in the moment, allowing teachers to pivot, reteach, or accelerate based on real-time data. 

The landscape of education has shifted dramatically since I first stepped into a classroom in 2015. We've navigated remote learning, embraced new technologies, and redefined what engagement looks like in our post-pandemic world. Yet the fundamental need to understand our students' learning journey remains unchanged—if anything, it's become more crucial than ever.

primjeri formativnog ocjenjivanja

The Research Behind Formative Assessment

The foundational research on formative assessment, beginning with Black and Wiliam's influential 1998 review of over 250 studies, consistently demonstrates significant positive effects on student achievement. Their research found effect sizes ranging from 0.4 to 0.7 standard deviations—equivalent to advancing students' learning by 12-18 months. More recent meta-analyses, including Hattie's review of 12 meta-analyses on feedback in classrooms, concluded that under the right conditions, feedback in a formative context can contribute significantly to students' achievement, with an average effect size of 0.73.

The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) has identified formative assessment as "one of the most effective strategies for promoting high performance in schools," noting that achievement gains attributed to formative assessment are "quite high". However, the OECD also notes that despite these benefits, formative assessment "is not yet practiced systematically" in most educational systems.

The key lies in creating a feedback loop where:

  • Students receive immediate, specific feedbackabout their understanding 
  • Teachers adjust instructionbased on evidence of student learning 
  • Learning becomes visibleto both teachers and students 
  • Students develop metacognitive skillsand become self-directed learners 

7 High-Impact Formative Assessment Activities That Transform Learning

1. Quick Formative Quizzes

Forget pop quizzes that induce panic. Quick formative quizzes (3-5 questions, 5-7 minutes) serve as learning diagnostics that inform your next instructional moves.

Principi dizajna:

  • Focus on one key conceptper quiz 
  • Include a mix of question types:multiple choice, short answer, and application 
  • Make them low-stakes:worth minimal points or ungraded 
  • Provide immediate feedbackthrough answer discussions 

Smart quiz questions:

  • "Explain this concept to a 5th grader"
  • "What would happen if we changed this variable?"
  • "Connect today's learning to something we studied last week"
  • "What's still confusing about this topic?"

Digital tools that work:

  • Kahoot for gamified engagement
  • AhaSlides for self-paced and real-time results
  • Google Forms for detailed feedback
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2. Strategic Exit Tickets: The 3-2-1 Power Play

Exit tickets aren't just end-of-class housekeeping—they're goldmines of learning data when designed strategically. My favorite format is the 3-2-1 reflection:

  • 3 things you learned today
  • 2 questions you still have
  • 1 way you'll apply this knowledge

Pro implementationtTips:

  • Use digital tools like Google Forms or Padlet for instant data collection
  • Create differentiated exit tickets based on learning objectives
  • Sort responses into three piles: "Got it," "Getting there," and "Need support"
  • Use the data to plan your next day's opening activities

Real classroom example:After teaching photosynthesis, I used exit tickets to discover that 60% of students still confused chloroplasts with mitochondria. The next day, I started with a quick visual comparison activity instead of moving to cellular respiration as planned. 

3. Interactive Polling

Interactive polling transforms passive listeners into active participants while giving you real-time insights into student understanding. But the magic isn't in the tool—it's in the questions you ask.

High-impact poll questions:

  • Conceptual understanding:"Which of these best explains why..." 
  • Primjena:"If you were to apply this concept to solve..." 
  • Metacognitive:"How confident are you in your ability to..." 
  • Misconception checks:"What would happen if..." 

Implementation strategy:

  • Use tools like AhaSlides for easy interactive polling
  • Ask 2-3 strategic questions per lesson, not just fun trivia
  • Display results to spark class discussions about reasoning
  • Follow up with "Why did you choose that answer?" conversations
Ahaslides poll

4. Think-Pair-Share 2.0

The classic think-pair-share gets a modern upgrade with structured accountability. Here's how to maximize its formative assessment potential:

Enhanced process:

  1. Think (2 minutes):Students write their initial thoughts 
  2. Pair (3 minutes):Partners share and build on ideas 
  3. Share (5 minutes):Pairs present refined thinking to the class 
  4. Reflect (1 minute):Individual reflection on how thinking evolved 

Procjena:

  • Watch for students who rely heavily on partners versus contributing equally
  • Circulate during pair discussions to eavesdrop on misconceptions
  • Use a simple tracking sheet to note which students struggle to articulate ideas
  • Listen for vocabulary usage and conceptual connections

5. Learning Galleries

Transform your classroom walls into galleries of learning where students display their thinking visually. This activity works across all subject areas and provides rich assessment data.

Gallery formats:

  • Concept maps:Students create visual representations of how ideas connect 
  • Problem-solving journeys:Step-by-step documentation of thinking processes 
  • Prediction galleries:Students post predictions, then revisit after learning 
  • Reflection boards:Visual responses to prompts using drawings, words, or both 

Assessment strategy:

  • Use gallery walks for peer feedback using specific protocols
  • Take photos of student work for digital portfolios
  • Note patterns in misconceptions across multiple student artifacts
  • Have students explain their thinking during gallery presentations

6. Collaborative Discussion Protocols

Meaningful classroom discussions don't happen by accident—they require intentional structures that make student thinking visible while maintaining engagement.

The Fishbowl protocol:

  • 4-5 students discuss a topic in the center circle
  • Remaining students observe and take notes on the discussion
  • Observers can "tap in" to replace a discussant
  • Debrief focuses on both content and discussion quality

The Jigsaw assessment:

  • Students become experts on different aspects of a topic
  • Expert groups meet to deepen understanding
  • Students return to home groups to teach others
  • Assessment happens through teaching observations and exit reflections

Socratic seminar plus:

  • Traditional Socratic seminar with added assessment layer
  • Students track their own participation and thinking evolution
  • Include reflection questions about how their thinking changed
  • Use observation sheets to note engagement patterns

7. Self-Assessment Toolkits

Teaching students to assess their own learning is perhaps the most powerful formative assessment strategy. When students can accurately evaluate their understanding, they become partners in their own education.

Self-assessment structures:

1. Learning progression trackers:

  • Students rate their understanding on a scale with specific descriptors
  • Include evidence requirements for each level
  • Regular check-ins throughout units
  • Goal-setting based on current understanding

2. Reflection journals:

  • Weekly entries addressing learning gains and challenges
  • Specific prompts tied to learning objectives
  • Peer sharing of insights and strategies
  • Teacher feedback on metacognitive growth

3. Error analysis protocols:

  • Students analyze their own mistakes on assignments
  • Categorize errors by type (conceptual, procedural, careless)
  • Develop personal strategies for avoiding similar mistakes
  • Share effective error-prevention strategies with peers

Creating Your Formative Assessment Strategy

Počnite s malim, mislite veliko- Don't try to implement all seven strategies at once. Choose 2-3 that align with your teaching style and student needs. Master these before adding others. 

Kvaliteta u odnosu na količinu- It's better to use one formative assessment strategy well than to use five strategies poorly. Focus on designing high-quality questions and activities that truly reveal student thinking. 

Zatvorite petlju- The most important part of formative assessment isn't the data collection—it's what you do with the information. Always have a plan for how you'll adjust instruction based on what you learn. 

Make it routine- Formative assessment should feel natural, not like an additional burden. Build these activities into your regular lesson flow so they become seamless parts of learning. 

Technology Tools That Enhance (Not Complicate) Formative Assessment

Free tools for every classroom:

  • AhaSlides:Versatile for surveys, quizzes, and reflections 
  • Padlet:Great for collaborative brainstorming and idea sharing 
  • Mentimetar:Excellent for live polling and word clouds 
  • Flipgrid:Perfect for video responses and peer feedback 
  • Kahoot:Engaging for review and recall activities 

Premium tools worth considering:

  • sokrativ:Comprehensive assessment suite with real-time insights 
  • Pear Deck:Interactive slide presentations with formative assessment 
  • Nearpod:Immersive lessons with built-in assessment activities 
  • Quizizz:Gamified assessments with detailed analytics 

The Bottom Line: Making Every Moment Count

Formative assessment isn't about doing more—it's about being more intentional with the interactions you already have with students. It's about transforming those throwaway moments into opportunities for insight, connection, and growth.

When you truly understand where your students are in their learning journey, you can meet them exactly where they are and guide them to where they need to go. That's not just good teaching—that's the art and science of education working together to unlock every student's potential.

Počnite sutra.Choose one strategy from this list. Try it for a week. Adjust based on what you learn. Then add another. Before you know it, you'll have transformed your classroom into a place where learning is visible, valued, and continuously improved. 

The students sitting in your classroom today deserve nothing less than your best effort to understand and support their learning. Formative assessment is how you make that happen, one moment, one question, one insight at a time.

reference

Bennett, R. E. (2011). Formative assessment: A critical review. Ocjenjivanje u obrazovanju: principi, politika i praksa, 18(1), 5-25.

Black, P., & Wiliam, D. (1998). Assessment and classroom learning. Ocjenjivanje u obrazovanju: principi, politika i praksa, 5(1), 7-74.

Black, P., & Wiliam, D. (2009). Developing the theory of formative assessment. Educational Assessment, Evaluation and Accountability, 21(1), 5-31.

Council of Chief State School Officers. (2018). Revising the definition of formative assessmentWashington, DC: CCSSO.

Fuchs, LS, & Fuchs, D. (1986). Efekti sistematske formativne evaluacije: Meta-analiza. Izuzetna djeca, 53(3), 199-208.

Graham, S., Hebert, M., & Harris, K. R. (2015). Formative assessment and writing: A meta-analysis. List osnovne škole, 115(4), 523-547.

Hattie, J. (2009). Visible learning: A synthesis of over 800 meta-analyses relating to achievement. London: Routledge.

Hattie, J., & Timperley, H. (2007). The power of feedback. Pregled obrazovnih istraživanja, 77(1), 81-112.

Kingston, N. i Nash, B. (2011). Formativno ocjenjivanje: Meta-analiza i poziv za istraživanje. Mjerenje obrazovanja: Problemi i praksa, 30(4), 28-37.

Klute, M., Apthorp, H., Harlacher, J. i Reale, M. (2017). Formativno ocjenjivanje i akademski uspjeh učenika osnovne škole: Pregled dokaza(REL 2017–259). Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Education, Institute of Education Sciences, National Center for Education Evaluation and Regional Assistance, Regional Educational Laboratory Central. 

OECD. (2005). Formative assessment: Improving learning in secondary classrooms. Pariz: OECD Publishing.

Wiliam, D. (2010). An integrative summary of the research literature and implications for a new theory of formative assessment. In H. L. Andrade & G. J. Cizek (Eds.), Handbook of formative assessment(str. 18-40). New York: Routledge. 

Wiliam, D., & Thompson, M. (2008). Integrating assessment with learning: What will it take to make it work? In C. A. Dwyer (Ed.), The future of assessment: Shaping teaching and learning(pp. 53-82). Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.