Preliminary Concepts and Recent Trends: Lesson 1. What Is Educational Assessment?
Preliminary Concepts and Recent Trends: Lesson 1. What Is Educational Assessment?
In the classroom, assessment refers to all the processes and products which are
used to describe the nature and the extent of pupils’ learning. This also takes
cognisance of the degree of correspondence of such learning with the objectives of
instruction. Some educationists in contrasting assessment with evaluation opined that
while evaluation is generally used when the subject is not persons or group of persons
but the effectiveness or otherwise of a course or programme of teaching or method of
teaching, assessment is used generally for measuring or determining personal
attributes (totality of the student, the environment of learning and the student’s
accomplishments). A number of instrument are often used to get measurement data
from various sources. These include Tests, aptitude tests, inventories, questionnaires,
observation schedules etc. All these sources give data which are organised to show
evidence of change and the direction of that change. A test is thus one of the
assessment instruments. It is used in getting quantitative data.
Basic Principles
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2. Assessment should be reliable and consistent
There is a need for assessment to be reliable and this requires clear and
consistent processes for the setting, marking, grading and moderation of
assignments.
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Types of Assessment
The philosophy behind assessment for learning is that assessment and teaching should
be integrated into a whole. The power of such an assessment doesn't come from
intricate technology or from using a specific assessment instrument. It comes from
recognizing how much learning is taking place in the common tasks of the school day –
and how much insight into student learning teachers can mine from this material.
(McNamee and Chen 2005, p. 76)
After teaching a lesson, we need to determine whether the lesson was accessible to all
students while still challenging to the more capable; what the students learned and still
need to know; how we can improve the lesson to make it more effective; and, if
necessary, what other lesson we might offer as a better alternative. This continual
evaluation of instructional choices is at the heart of improving our teaching
practice.(Burns 2005, p. 26)
Teachers also use assessment for learning to enhance students’ motivation and
commitment to learning. When teachers commit to learning as the focus of assessment,
they change the classroom culture to one of student success.
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individualized programs, or to certify proficiency and make decisions about students’
future programs or placements. It is designed to provide evidence of achievement to
parents, other educators, the students themselves, and sometimes to outside groups
(e.g., employers, other educational institutions)
With the help of their teachers, students can look forward to assessment of
learning tasks as occasions to show their competence, as well as the depth and
breadth of their learning.
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best‖ (self-referenced, making learning referenced, making learning highly
more personal). competitive) or the standard for a grade
level (criterion-referenced, making learning
more collaborative and individually
focused).
Involves the student. Does not always involve the student.
Adapted from Ruth Sutton, unpublished document, 2001, in Alberta Assessment Consortium, Refocus: Looking at Assessment for Learning (Edmonton, AB: Alberta
Assessment Consortium, 2003), p. 4. Used with permission from Ruth Sutton Ltd.
Assessment as Learning
Assessment as learning develops and supports students' metacognitive skills. This form
of assessment is crucial in helping students become lifelong learners. As students
engage in peer and self-assessment, they learn to make sense of information, relate it
to prior knowledge and use it for new learning. Students develop a sense of ownership
and efficacy when they use teacher, peer and self-assessment feedback to make
adjustments, improvements and changes to what they understand.
Through this process students are able to learn about themselves as learners and
become aware of how they learn – become megacognitive (knowledge of one’s own
thought processes). Students reflect on their work on a regular basis, usually through
self and peer assessment and decide (often with the help of the teacher, particularly in
the early stages) what their next learning will be. Assessment as learning helps students
to take more responsibility for their own learning and monitoring future directions.
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1. Instructional assessments: Assessment used to modify and adapt instruction to
meet students' needs. It can be an informal or formal assessment and usually takes
place within the context of a classroom. Informal instructional assessments can
include teacher questioning strategies or reviewing classroom work. A more formal
instructional assessment could be a written pre-test in which a teacher uses the
results to analyze what the students already know before determining what to teach.
Example: Quiz on reading assignment
2. Diagnostic assessments: Assessment used to determine a student's academic,
cognitive, or behavioral strengths and weaknesses. These assessments provide a
comprehensive picture of a student's overall functioning and go beyond exclusively
focusing on academic achievement.
Example: Assessment to identify a student for special education or English language
Services
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matter may as well be measured through perceptions (using scale of 1 to 5 with 1 being
the lowest and 5 the highest).
Measurement can therefore be objective (as in testing) or subjective (as in
perceptions). In the example cited, testing produces objective measurements while
expert ratings provide subjective measurements. Objective measurements are
measurements that do not depend on the person or individual taking the measurement.
Regardless of who is taking the measurement, the same measurement values should
be obtained when using an objective assessment procedure. In contrast, subjective
measurements often differ from the assessor to the next even if the same quantity or
quality is being measured.
Objective measurements are more stable than subjective measurements in the
sense that repeated measurements of the same quantity or quality of interest will
produce more or less the same outcome. However, there are certain facts of quantity or
quality of interest that cannot be successfully captured by objective procedures but
which can be done by subjective methods (e.g. aesthetic appeal of a product, student’s
performance in a drama, etc.). It implies that it may be best to use both methods
whenever the constraints of time and resources permit.
Testing
Testing is an instrument of assessment A test or quiz is used to examine
someone's knowledge of something to determine what he or she knows or has learned.
It is an assessment tool that reflects the records of the students’ learning outcomes.
Testing measures the level of skill or knowledge that has been reached.
A standardized test is any form of test that (1) requires all test takers to answer
the same questions, or a selection of questions from common bank of questions, in the
same way, and that (2) is scored in a ―standard‖ or consistent manner, which makes it
possible to compare the relative performance of individual students or groups of
students. In addition to the familiar multiple-choice format, standardized tests can
include true-false questions, short-answer questions, essay questions, or a mix of
question types. While standardized tests were traditionally presented on paper and
completed using pencils, and many still are, they are increasingly being administered on
computers connected to online programs. Many test experts and educators consider
them to be a fair and objective method of assessing the academic achievement of
students, mainly because the standardized format, coupled with computerized scoring,
reduces the potential for favoritism, bias, or subjective evaluations.
A high-stakes test is any test used to make important decisions about students,
educators, schools, or districts, most commonly for the purpose of accountability—i.e.,
the attempt by federal, state, or local government agencies and school administrators to
ensure that students are enrolled in effective schools and being taught by effective
teachers. In general, ―high stakes‖ means that test scores are used to determine
punishments (such as sanctions, penalties, funding reductions, negative publicity),
accolades (awards, public celebration, positive publicity), advancement (grade
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promotion or graduation for students), or compensation (salary increases or bonuses for
administrators and teachers).
Evaluation originates from the root word ―value‖ and so when we evaluate, we
expect our process to give information regarding the worth, appropriateness, goodness,
validity or legality of something for which a reliable measurement has been made. It is a
process designed to provide information that will help us to make a judgment about a
particular situation. The end result of evaluation is to adopt, reject or revise what has
been evaluated.
Evaluations are often divided into two broad categories: formative and
summative.
Formative evaluation is a method of judging the worth of a program while the program
activities are in progress. This type focuses on the process. Its main objective is to
determine deficiencies so that the appropriate interventions can be done. Formative
evaluation may also be used in analysing learning materials, student learning and
achievements and teacher effectiveness.
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and tests. This category is designed to determine the effectiveness of a program or
activity based on its avowed purposes. The subject of evaluation is wider than
assessment which focuses specifically on student learning outcomes.
Types of Tests
1. Achievement tests are designed to measure the knowledge and skills students
learned in school or to determine the academic progress they have made over a
period of time. The tests may also be used to evaluate the effectiveness of a schools
and teachers, or identify the appropriate academic placement for a student—i.e., what
courses or programs may be deemed most suitable, or what forms of academic
support they may need. Achievement tests are ―backward-looking‖ in that they
measure how well students have learned what they were expected to learn.
4. Placement tests are used to place new students in the right class in a school. It
assesses students’ productive and receptive skills and designed to show how good a
student is in English in relation to a previously agreed system of levels.
6. Proficiency Tests are not necessarily based on certain courses that students may
have previously taken. Most students take this type of test to admit to a foreign
university, get a job, or obtain some kind of certificate. Teachers design this test to
measure students’ knowledge and ability in a language.
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Lesson 3. High Quality Assessment Components
Clear and Appropriate Targets
Assessment can be made precise, accurate and dependable only if what are to
be achieved are clearly stated and feasible. It starts with clear and appropriate learning
targets which include both what the students know and can do and the criteria for
judging student performance. The learning targets, involving knowledge, reasoning,
skills/performance, products and affects, need to be stated in behavioral terms which
denote something which can be observed through the behavior of the students.
There are many benefits based on the existence of learning’s that are CLEAR
and USABLE in order to build clear learning targets:
1. Knowledge targets begin with words like: know, list, name, identify, recall.
Procedural knowledge targets call for knowing how to do something.
2. Reasoning targets deal with the skilful use or application of knowledge. These
targets start out with mental processes like: predict, infer, classify, hypothesize,
compare, conclude, summarize, etc.
3. Performance skills targets require the student to demonstrate their mastery of
a learning target and to be observed.
4. Product targets are tangible and concrete evidence of student’s ability. These
are not used as frequently as other types but are highly valued, calling for
creation of a product. There is a need to specify the level of workmanship as
expert, skilled, or novice.
5. Dispositional targets rarely show up on state standards but are important
because they reflect students’ attitudes about school and learning.
1. Bloom’s Taxonomy
a. Cognitive – mental skills (Knowledge)
b. Psychomotor – manual or physical skills (Skills)
c. Affective – growth in feelings (Attitude)
2. National, regional, and district standards
3. Textbooks
Appropriate Methods
a. Written-Response Instrument
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Objective tests – appropriate for assessing the various levels of
hierarchy of educational objectives
Essays – can test the students’ grasp of the higher level cognitive skills
Checklists – list of several characteristics or activities presented to the
subjects of a study, where they will analyze and place a mark opposite
to the characteristics.
b. Product Rating Scales
- used to rate products like book reports, maps, charts, diagrams, notebooks,
creative endeavors
- need to be developed to assess various products over the years
c. Performance Tests
- Performance checklist consists of a list of behaviors that make up a certain
type of performance. It is used to determine whether or not an individual
behaves in a certain way when asked to complete a particular task
d. Oral Questioning – appropriate assessment method when the objectives are
to: i) Assess the students’ stock knowledge and/or determine the students’
ability to communicate ideas in coherent verbal sentences.
e. Observation and Self Reports - useful supplementary methods when used in
conjunction with oral questioning and performance tests
Adequate Sampling
Sampling facilitates the assessment process when it is not feasible to assess all
students—for example when programs/courses have large numbers of students or
when artifacts take a long time to review. The portion evaluated is the sample of the
entire population.
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2. Choose an appropriate sample size based on percentage, artifact size and
complexity.
3. Choose an appropriate sampling method.
Objectivity
Purposes
1. To avoid bias
2. To ensure accurate conclusion or results
3. To ensure out comes purely based on facts
Characteristics of Objectivity
1. Based on scientific facts rather than on one’s opinion.
2. Factual, free from personal biases.
3. Judgment based from observable phenomena uninfluenced by emotions or
personal prejudices
4. Being objective is to be or to do something that is not primary about one self
5. Has multi-dimensional viewing
6. Its results and data is based on continuous testing, then demonstrated or
confirmed by a third party.
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should lead itself to one and only one interpretation by students who know the material
involved.
Assessments generate information and, depending on the nature and use of the
information obtained, can play multiple roles in education. Accountability involves
using some of this information to generate incentives to validate or change the
behaviors of students and educators. Taken together, assessments and accountability
policy constitute a third channel through which education reform ideas may flow.
Various types of assessments— formative classroom assessment, classroom tests,
state and local tests, college entrance and placement practices, tests for teacher
certification—all interact with other elements in the education system, sometimes in
unanticipated ways.
When assessments are aligned with learning goals, accountability systems can
motivate classroom instruction to focus on those outcomes (Stecher, Barron, Kaganoff,
and Goodwin, 1998). Thus, policy makers and educators in many states view
assessment linked with accountability as a powerful strategy for ensuring that all
students are held to the same set of high standards (Grissmer and Flanagan, 1998;
Massell et al., 1997; Olson, 2001).
In the field of education there are three main types of accountability system:
(a) Compliance with regulations - compliance systems view the school as the
embodiment of constant processes and allow for variation in results, generally
attributed to the varying characteristics of students. Simply stated, educators were
accountable for adherence to rules and accountable to the bureaucracy.
(b) Adherence to professional norms - Within this system, educators are accountable for
adherence to standards and accountable to their peers.
(c) Results driven. The third accountability system is based upon results, with results
defined in terms of student learning. In these systems educators are
accountable for student learning and accountable to the general public.
Fairness
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Fairness refers to the consideration of learner’s needs and characteristics, and
any reasonable adjustments that need to be applied to take account of them. It is
important to ensure that the learner is informed about, understands and is able to
participate in the assessment process, and agrees that the process is appropriate. It
also includes an opportunity for the person being assessed to challenge the result of the
assessment and to be reassessed if necessary. Ideally an assessment should not
discriminate between learners except on grounds of the ability being assessed.
1. Democratic
While examinations have not historically always
been fair or democratic in intent or consequence, a democratic
imperative for fairness in assessment has evolved from the tradition of
selection by examination.
2. Measurement
The quality of information that assessments provide is
affected by stakeholders’ perceptions of fairness. Students’ perceptions
influence their motivation in the assessment process, their degree of
engagement, and thus the degree to which they demonstrate learning.
Perceptions of fairness should be taken into account in the development and
revision of an assessment tool for the same reason that face validity and
credibility are considered. When stakeholders view an assessment as fair
and meaningful, genuine participation is more
3. Pedagogical
The beliefs and knowledge that teachers and students bring to teaching
and learning interact with different elements of fairness. The fairness of
classroom assessment, regardless of purpose, is affected by classroom
relationships and interactions, which in turn influences the learning
environment. When this circular process is scaled up from classrooms to
systems, based on the assumption that all educational assessments should
ultimately inform teaching and learning, the pedagogical imperative for fair
assessment is at the heart of the enterprise.
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Standards-Based Education
Outcomes-Based Education
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Procedure in implementing outcomes-based education on the subject or course.
1. Identification of educational objectives of the subject/course. Educational
objectives are the broad goals that the subject/course expects to achieve, and
defining in general terms the knowledge, skills and attitude that the teacher will
help the students to attain. The objectives are stated from the point of view of
the teacher such as ―to develop, to provide, to enhance, etc‖.
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Guide Questions
1. What is assessment?
2. What does assessment of learning mean? Assessment for learning? And
assessment as learning?
3. Describe the significant role of fairness in assessment.
Key Points/Summary:
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learning targets, (ii) appropriate methods, (iii) adequate sampling, and (iv)
objectivity in evaluation.
7. The recent trends and focus of educational assessment are on accountability
and fairness, high regards on standards-based education and shift in education
system from traditional to outcomes-based education in the higher education.
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REFERENCES
Books
Internet Sources
The Glossary of Education Reform (2015, December 11). Standardized Test. Retrieved
from https://www.edglossary.org/standardized-test/
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Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia, Personality Test. Retrieved from
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personality_test
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