What if we stopped treating assessment like an event and started treating it like a pulse?
Embedded assessment (also known as formative assessment) is the practice of weaving quick, actionable checks for understanding directly into the fabric of your daily lesson. It transforms assessment from something you do to students into something you do with them, providing real-time data to steer your instruction in the moment.
Here is how you can seamlessly embed assessment into your daily math routine without losing a single minute of instructional time.
If you are still calling on individual students who raise their hands, you are only assessing your most confident learners. To get a snapshot of the entire room, pass out dry-erase boards. Instead of asking, "Does anyone know the slope of this line?" have everyone calculate it on their slate. On your cue, have the entire class hold their boards up simultaneously. In three seconds, you get a visual dashboard of the room. If 80% of the slates show the correct slope, you can safely move on. If half the room made the exact same sign error, you can immediately pivot to clear up the confusion before it hardens into a habit.
Use a hinge question with the class. A hinge question is a carefully crafted diagnostic question placed at a critical juncture in the lesson—the "hinge" where the lesson will either move forward or loop back based on student data.
To make this work, the question must be multiple-choice, take less than two minutes to answer, and feature clever distractors.
Example Hinge Question (Fraction Addition):
What is 1/3 + 1/4?
A) 2/7 (Distractor: Student added numerators and denominators)
B) 7/12 (Correct Answer)
C) 2/12 (Distractor: Student found common denominator but added numerators as 1+1)By scanning student finger signals (holding up 1, 2, or 3 fingers) or digital clicker responses, you instantly know whichmisconception a student has based entirely on the wrong answer they chose.
You don't need a 10-question quiz to know if a student mastered the day’s objective. A single, well-targeted problem on an index card at the end of class—an Exit Ticket—is more than enough.
Keep the grading barrier incredibly low for yourself. Sort the collected cards into three piles on your desk before you leave:
Got it (Ready for enrichment)
Almost (Minor calculation errors; ready for a quick warm-up fix)
Not yet (Conceptual misunderstanding; needs a small-group intervention tomorrow)
When you embed assessment into every single day, something beautiful happens to your classroom culture: the fear of testing evaporates. Students begin to view mistakes not as a permanent scar on a report card, but as useful data points that guide their next steps.
By making assessment invisible and continuous, you create a responsive, agile math classroom where no student falls through the cracks.