Event Information
(0-5 min) Introduction & The Hook
Quick Mentimeter asking, "What's the most inauthentic assessment you give?"
This immediately connects to the pain point of traditional tests. Establish rapport and identify the audience's current assessment challenges.
(5-15 min) Presentation & Storytelling
Briefly introduce the session's thesis ("Beyond the Test") and provide a concise overview of the Design Thinking process, focusing heavily on the power of the Prototype phase as a communication tool.
Introduce the Prototype Phase as a method to validate content retention, not just recall.
(15-35 min) Activity 1: The Mini-Prototype Challenge (Hands-On)
Hands-On & Peer-to-Peer: Attendees work in pairs or trios at their tables. Challenge: Using only paper/pipe cleaners (provided if possible, or imagined), prototype the concept of a complex idea in 7-10 minutes. Quick table shares on what their prototype communicates.
Participants physically experience how prototyping reveals deep understanding vs. surface-level knowledge. (Increased time allows for deeper exploration.)
(35-55 min) Scaffolding the Design Challenge & Differentiation
Present real-world examples of low-tech and high-tech prototypes demonstrating content mastery.
Demonstrate how to differentiate by offering choices of medium and materials, and discuss how to set clear expectations for demonstrating content.
Provide a step-by-step scaffolding guide for teachers to set up their own prototyping challenges, emphasizing accessibility and choice. (Increased time allows for more case studies and Q&A.)
(55-60 min) Wrap-up, Q&A, and Resources Resource Access: Share the final presentation, all templates, and a curated list of low-barrier prototyping tools (digital and physical) via a QR code. Final Polling: Ask a closing question about their first step in implementing the strategy.
Design a scaffolded prototyping challenge that replaces a traditional assessment, shifting the focus from rote recall to an active, demonstrable communication of content mastery.
Implement the Design Thinking process—specifically the Prototype phase—as a flexible framework to offer students differentiated ways to express and confirm their learning.
Develop clear criteria or a rubric that effectively measures content retention and the communication skills demonstrated within a student-created prototype.
Access and apply a curated set of immediately usable resources, templates, and low-barrier strategies to initiate Design Thinking and prototyping in their classrooms across any subject.
1. Book: Brown, T. (2009). Change by Design: How Design Thinking Transforms Organizations and Inspires Innovation. Harper Business.
2. Journal Article: Hasso Plattner Institute of Design at Stanford (d.school) Resources.
3. Journal Article: Kelley, T., & Kelley, D. (2013). Creative Confidence: Unleashing the Creative Potential Within Us All. Crown Business.
4. Journal Article: Wiliam, D. (2011). Embedded Formative Assessment. Solution Tree Press.
5. Journal Article: Honey, M., & Kanter, D. E. (Eds.). (2013). Design, Make, Play: Growing the Next Generation of STEM Innovators. Routledge.
6. Journal Article: Linder, T. W. (2016). Design thinking in the classroom: a systematic literature review. Journal of Research in Innovative Teaching & Learning, 9(3), 195-212.
7. Book Chapter: Vander Ark, T., & Schneider, C. (2012). Designing for Deeper Learning. In Getting Smart: How Digital Learning is Changing the World.