Importance of Affective Assessments: Item Writing Guidelines
Importance of Affective Assessments: Item Writing Guidelines
Importance of Affective Assessments: Item Writing Guidelines
Assessment seemed so simple when I first began this journey in education. It didnt seem at
all complicated; teachers mark assignments, test, projects, reports, etc. either right, wrong
or with the comment could you expand on this please. This, of course, was based on what
my schooling was like way back in the eighties and nineties. Since delving into the subject, I
have begun the process of analyzing how my teachers assessed my work and how
teachers today are doing it. Education has made a dramatic change from being subject
centred only, to student oriented. This has change their views on assessment as well. If the
process by which teaching students has changed, then the assessment must be re-
evaluated, as well, in order to ensure the goals, objectives and standards are being met.
This brings up the issue of affective assessment. What does it truly mean? For me, affective
assessment is the ability for a teacher to take the material being taught, developing a unit
plan, subsequently the lesson plans, and developing a scheme or a strategy that
encompasses material that is being taught, the academic level of students in the class and
creating an assessment strategy that
3) ensures the material being taught is assess effectively for understanding, completeness
or comprehension,
5) nurtures a desire for the student to continue in their process of learning either in the
subject at hand or in other areas of their academic or personal life.
Business education seems to be a subject that has been based on write or wrong answers.
Through my learning process of assessment and the understanding of affective
assessment, I have realized the potential that is available for students to gain the cross-
curricular support. Assessment does not have to be based only on right or wrong. Nurturing
a students English skills through response journals, letter preparation, case studies and
group work can develop some of the necessary skills required to work in a business
environment today. As the students are investigating business issues, they are developing a
greater sense of social comprehension and global awareness. These are only two
examples of how the horizontal curriculum can be addressed. With cognitive, affective and
psychomotor domains needing to be met, collaboration with colleauges who teach your
students in other subjects can help to ensure your teaching strategies are affective in
encouraging students learning process in other areas.
Competency-based learning is generally seen as an alternative to more traditional
educational approaches in which students may or may not acquire proficiency in a given
course or academic subject before they earn course credit, get promoted to the next
grade level, or graduate. For example, high school students typically earn academic
credit by passing a course, but a passing grade may be an A or it may be a D,
suggesting that the awarded credit is based on a spectrum of learning expectations
with some students learning more and others learning lessrather than on the same
consistent standards being applied to all students equally. And since grades may be
calculated differently from school to school or teacher to teacher, and they may be
based on divergent learning expectations (i.e., some courses might be harder and
others easier), it may be possible for students to pass their courses, earn the required
number of credits, and receive a diploma without acquiring important knowledge and
skills. In extreme cases, for example, students may be awarded a high school diploma
but still be unable to read, write, or do math at a basic level. A competency-based
diploma would be a diploma awarded to students only after they have met expected
learning standards.
While the goal of competency-based learning is to ensure that more students learn what
they are expected to learn, the approach can also provide educators with more detailed
or fine-grained information about student learning progress, which can help them more
precisely identify academic strengths and weakness, as well as the specific concepts
and skills students have not yet mastered. Since academic progress is often tracked
and reported by learning standard in competency-based courses and schools,
educators and parents often know more precisely what specific knowledge and skills
students have acquired or may be struggling with. For example, instead of receiving a
letter grade on an assignment or test, each of which may address a variety of
standards, students are graded on specific learning standards, each of which describes
the knowledge and skills students are expected to acquire.
Its strengths lie in its flexibility, as learners are able to move at their own pace.
This supports students with diverse knowledge backgrounds, literacy levels, and
other related aptitudes. Its challenges should sound familiar to most educators,
including the difficulty in identifyingand agreeing uponthe most important
competencies, how to best assess them, and how to support learners that
struggle.