Linking Classroom Assessment With Student Learning
Linking Classroom Assessment With Student Learning
Linking Classroom Assessment With Student Learning
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lassroom assessment is among an instructors most essential educational tools. When properly developed and interpreted, assessments can help teachers better understand what their students are learning.
By providing the means to gather evidence about what students know and can do, classroom assessment can help teachers Identify students strengths and weaknesses Monitor student learning and progress Plan and conduct instruction Ongoing informal and formal classroom assessment Is the bond that holds teaching and learning together Allows educators to monitor teaching effectiveness and student learning Can motivate and shape learning and instruction Can help teachers gauge student mastery of required skills Can help teachers determine whether students are prepared for tests that are used for high-stakes decisions Can help students improve their own performances
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Designing informative assessments requires strategic planning and a clear understanding of ones assessment goals. What needs to be assessed and why? When planning instructional strategies, teachers need to Keep learning goals in mind Consider assessment strategies Determine what would constitute evidence that students have reached the learning goals All of this needs to be considered within the context of instruction, rather than as an isolated step in the instruction cycle. To get the most out of assessments, you need to know how to choose the right one for each situation, and how to make that test as effective as possible. A poorly chosen or poorly developed assessment will fail to provide useful evidence about student learning. It could even provide misleading information. Only with good, properly chosen assessments will teachers gather evidence of what their students have learned. You can begin to create a process for developing and using classroom assessments by asking the following basic but essential questions: What am I trying to find out about my students learning? What learning goals or outcomes do I want to measure? What kind of evidence do I need to show that my students have achieved the goals that Im trying to measure? What kind of assessment will give me that evidence?
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Make it relevant.
Before administering an assessment to measure what students have learned in class, it is useful for instructors to ask themselves: Based on what Ive taught in class, can my students be expected to answer this? For example, asking English language learners to carry on a discussion in English about a class trip they took or a book that they all read would be very appropriate. It would not be appropriate or effective, however, to ask the same students to carry on a conversation in English about highway construction, if that topic has nothing to do with what they learned in class.
The goal is to discover what students know and can do, not to create tricky questions.
An assessment should also reflect real-world ways that knowledge and understanding are used. Assessments based on situations relevant to students own experiences can motivate them to give their best performances.
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No single form of assessment works well in all situations and for all purposes. Some assessments will fit certain assessment goals and situations better than others. Reasons for using a variety of assessments include the following: Each type of assessment has its own strengths and weaknesses. Each form of assessment provides a different type of evidence about what students know and can do. Taking advantage of more than one or two assessment methods increases your ability to fully understand the range of student knowledge and skills. Some students will perform better on one type of assessment than another. For example, some students will excel in a performance situation. Others are strongest when responding to multiple-choice questions. Similarly, what teachers can learn from an oral presentation about how students communicate may be very different from what they can find out when asking students to write an essay. This concept the need to use different sources of evidence is true of all assessment types. Even multiple-choice assessments yield better information if several different questions are used to assess each concept.
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1. Have the purpose of the test clearly in mind. 2. Determine what type of assessment would be most appropriate for the situation based on the nature of what you are teaching, the purpose of the instruction, and what you want to measure. (You can use the chart on pages 8-9 to help you with this step.) 3. If the purpose of the assessment is to determine how well students have mastered a particular unit of study, make sure the test parallels the work covered in class. 4. If the assessment is a selected-response or fill-in-the-blank test that will be used to diagnose basic skills, it should contain at least 10 questions preferably more for each skill area. The questions pertaining to each skill area should be considered a subtest, and those subtests should yield separate scores. 5. If the major purpose of the test is to rank a selected group of students in order of their achievement, the questions should cover critical points of learning. Questions on critical points often require understanding implications, applying information, and reorganizing data.The questions should challenge students to do more than memorize and recall facts. 6. Focus on assessing the most important and meaningful information rather than small, irrelevant facts. For example, after students read a passage about nutrition, rather than asking a comprehension question such as,How many vitamins are essential for humans? A. 7; B. 13; C. 15; D. 23, consider asking,Name at least seven vitamins that are essential for humans and explain why they are essential. 7. Never use questions on inconsequential details just to trick students.
Use your professional judgment to weigh the benefits and drawbacks associated with each assessment strategy before deciding which one to use. Traditional selected-response or fill-in-the-blank test Advantages They are easy to administer and score, and they can test a broad range of knowledge and skills quickly. Disadvantages Developing such tests to accurately measure more complex, higher-level thinking skills is difficult and time consuming. Performance assessment Advantages They evaluate student understanding, reasoning, and communication, and they can be used to determine how well students can apply their knowledge.
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Disadvantages They are time consuming and costly to design, administer, and score. Also, designing complex assessments that are truly informative can be difficult.
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Selected-response assessments1
Memory, recognition, comprehension. Careful development permits assessment of higher-level cognitive skills. Can be administered and scored quickly. Allow teachers to efficiently assess students grasp of factual information, concepts, and principles, as well as their ability to apply and perform basic skills. Can sample a broad range of knowledge and skills in a limited amount of time. Do not favor students with stronger writing skills. Do not require special equipment or setup time. Can be administered to students individually or as a group.
Constructed-response assessments2
Memory, recall, comprehension, and thinking and reasoning skills, including ability to organize ideas and integrate points. Student responses more closely reflect skills needed in real life. Relatively easy to construct. Can be administered relatively quickly. Test skills such as ability to organize and communicate ideas, which cannot be assessed by selected-response assessments. More difficult to guess the correct answers.
Strengths
Potential Weaknesses
Cannot be used to measure certain learning outcomes, such as creativity, oral communication, and social skills. May penalize students who do not read well. Susceptible to guessing. May communicate the inaccurate message that recognizing the right answer is the primary goal of education. May encourage teaching that focuses on learning facts rather than on understanding concepts and on thoughtful application of knowledge.
Time consuming to score. Limited in their ability to assess complex thinking. Scoring may be subjective and susceptible to evaluator bias, which can affect fairness and validity. May penalize students who do not read or write well.
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multiple-choice, true/false, matching, etc. short-answer, labeling diagrams, show your work, etc.
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Essay assessments
Memory, recall, comprehension, and use of information in the demonstration of higher-level learning outcomes, including synthesis. Can require students to use their reasoning and writing skills. Can assess complex and higherlevel instructional outcomes (analysis, synthesis, evaluation, problem-solving, and cognitive strategies). Can reflect real-world tasks. Allow for active student involvement through self- and peer assessment, which make them useful instructional tools. Encourage students to move beyond the one correct answer way of thinking. Can provide evidence of students in-depth understanding of a topic.
Strengths
Weaknesses
Time consuming to score. Require the creation of a model answer and/or list of desired characteristics (rubric). Scoring can be subjective and susceptible to evaluator bias, which can affect fairness and validity. Favor students who have strong writing, spelling, and grammar skills. Fewer items can be answered in a given length of time. As a result, they tend to be less content-valid than selected-response assessments for assessing a broad base of topics.
Time consuming to construct, administer, and score. Require the creation of a model answer and a scoring rubric. Scoring may be subjective and susceptible to evaluator bias, which can affect fairness and validity. Not an effective or efficient way to assess factual knowledge. Are time intensive, so they yield a smaller sample of student behavior.
also called authentic, alternative, and direct assessments; include performance and portfolio assessments
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1. Before developing a performance task, determine what skills and/or knowledge need to be assessed. 2. Specify what decisions will be made with the information obtained from the assessment. 3. Decide whether to measure the process, the product, or both. 4. Decide what the ideal response should look like, then write a task or prompt that clearly defines those expectations. 5. Make sure the task or prompt is clearly defined and not too broadly stated.Too broad: Discuss the effect of oil spills on the environment. Better: Discuss the environmental impact of oil spills on coastal communities. 6. Clearly state time limits, length expectations, and the value of each task. 7. A well-written performance task will have a well-written set of evaluation criteria (often called a "rubric") that is clearly understood by the students. At the same time you're writing the task, develop a model response and an unambiguous scoring guide. For example, if the task is an essay, do you expect examples and/or supporting details? How many? Do you expect an interesting introduction? Include these requirements in the task. Developing the rubric will help you make sure the task is clearly defined. 8. Discuss the rubric and scoring guide with students before administering the assessment, and make sure the students clearly understand them. 9. Consider asking students to participate in developing the rubric and scoring guide. Doing so will help students think about what kind of performance is expected of them. 10. Limit the number of criteria in the rubric; lists of more than 10 tend to become unmanageable. 11. If possible, arrange criteria in the order in which they are likely to be observed. 12. After the task or prompt has been written, try responding to it yourself or have a colleague try it to find out whether it will really get the kind of results you desire. 13. After the assessment has been administered, analyze the kind of responses it produced. If it didn't elicit what you consider valuable outcomes, you might need to rewrite the task before using it again don't automatically assume the students did not learn or that the performance assessment is useless. 14. Provide feedback! This feedback needs to be more than just a number. It needs to provide descriptive, constructive information that can help students do better the next time.
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This type of question can also hurt students who are very quick and know their subject matter. They may read the first answer choice, recognize it as correct, and mark it, then move on to the next question without reading the other answer choices. Avoid repeating informational wording from the question in the correct answer choice. This is a sure giveaway to students who otherwise would not know the correct answer. 4. Eliminate irrelevant sources of difficulty. If possible, use questions rather than incomplete sentences. Questions let students know right away what kind of information is being sought. Plus, using the question format rather than the incomplete sentence format eliminates the possibility of inadvertently providing grammatical clues. Avoid using negatives in the question. Negative wording can confuse students, who are accustomed to looking for true statements and may not notice the not, making the question more difficult than intended. If theres a compelling reason for using a negative in the question, be sure to emphasize it by using a bold font, capping the word, or underlining it. Place answer choices in a logical, systematic order (e.g., chronological, ascending, descending, or alphabetical). Answers arranged in a haphazard manner force students who know the correct answer to waste time searching for it. CONFUSING: The cassette tape was invented in A. 1971 B. 1959 C. 1963 D. 1968 5. BETTER: The cassette tape was invented in A. 1959 B. 1963 C. 1968 D. 1971
In true-false or alternative-response questions: Make sure the question tests only one idea. To reduce guessing, for false questions, ask students to explain why the false answers are incorrect.
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When you begin to analyze assessment results, you should do two things:
ACKNOWLEDGE
THAT TESTS CAN HAVE FLAWS.
When assessments give unexpected results for example, the entire class does poorly on an assessment, or the students responses are not consistent with the type of work the teacher was looking for it is important to take a close look at the assessment to determine whether it is flawed in some way. Did all the students do poorly on the same question or set of questions? Did students who are more able, based on other evidence, do well on the assessment? Did students answer the assessment appropriately but fail to give the answers you were looking for? Was the task well defined and clearly written? If the entire class failed the test, it might indicate that the material was not taught adequately, or the assessment was so poorly written that the students were unable to apply their knowledge appropriately. Having students explain why they answered a question in a certain way can help the teacher determine whether the problem is in the question (or task), or in the students understanding of the concept being assessed.
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IDENTIFY
Take a look at each students strengths and weaknesses, based on his or her patterns of performance. This information can help you arrange for the next set of instructions to either remedy problems or build on strengths. For example, if a particular group of students has difficulty with one set of items that measures a similar set of skills, then these students might need extra instruction or a different kind of instruction. Or, if everybody in the class had difficulty with a particular issue that you thought was emphasized in class, then you need to determine if there was a problem with the instruction, the material, or both.
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