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What is
Assessment? Basic Concepts RAFAEL C. RODRIGUEZ Assessment is used to determine students’ learning needs, monitor the progress of students and examine their performance against identified learning outcomes.
It may be implemented at different phases of instruction
such as: a. before (pre-assessment) b. during ( formative assessment) c. after instruction (summative) Assessment came from the Latin word “assidere” which means “to sit beside a judge” this implies that assessment is tied up with evaluation. It pertains to any method utilized to gather information about student performance, all activities undertaken by teachers – and by their students in assessing themselves – that provide information to be used to modify the teaching-learning activities(TLA) in which they are engaged and aid teachers to make informed decisions and judgements to improve TLA. When you hear or read the words EDUCATIONAL ASSESSMENT What comes into your mind? EDUCATIONAL ASSESSMENT It does not just simply confine to the scopes and meanings of exams and tests but also to learners’ knowledge or learnings acquired during the process of learning. Assessment is a process of documenting knowledge, skills, attitudes and beliefs in measurable terms. The purpose of assessment in education is to improve both the teaching process for teachers and the learning process for the students. Therefore, we can say that educational assessment is the process of FORMS OF Educational Assessment • It may involve formal tests or performance-based activities • It may be administered online or using paper and pencil or other materials • It may be objective (requiring one answer) or subjective (there may be many possible answers, like essays) • It may be formative (carried out over the course) or TYPES OF Educational Assessment 1. Formative Assessment – used throughout the educational process, with the goal of identifying problem areas and improving teaching and learning 2. Summative Assessment – used at the end of the learning block, as a final test of student’s knowledge 3. Standardized Assessments – provide a path to discover struggles, successes, accelerations on specific elements 4. Performance-based Assessment – measure student’s ability to apply skills and knowledge learned from a unit or units of study TYPES OF Educational Assessment 5. Norm-Versus Criterion Referenced Assessments - • referenced assessments are given for the purpose of comparing student’s results to a particular standard • norm-referenced tests – standard is based on a large sample of students, whose score is referred to as the norm • criterion-referenced tests – compare individual students’ results to a standard, but this time standard is based on the curriculum and is often designed as a cut off for demonstrating efficiency 6. Alternative Assessments - used to determine what students can or can not do with respect to what they already know PRINCIPLES OF Educational Assessment 1. Must be based on defined objectives and outcomes 2. Must be valid PURPOSE OF ssessmen Assessmen for learning ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING These are the assessment tasks which are used to determine learning needs, monitor academic progress of students during a unit or block of instruction, and guide instruction. e.g. Diagnostic Assessment Formative Assessment Assessmen as learning ASSESSMENT AS LEARNING • Employs task or activities that provide students with an opportunity to monitor and further their own learning – to think about their personal learning habits and how they can adjust their learning strategies to achieve their goals • Formative which may be given at any phase of the learning process • Involves metacognitive processes like reflection and self regulation to allow students to utilize their strengths and work on their weaknesses by directing and regulating their learning • Students are accountable and responsible for their own Assessmen as learning ASSESSMENT OF LEARNING • Summative and done at the end of the unit, task or process or period • Purpose is to provide evidence of a student’s level of achievement in relation to curricular outcomes • Used for grading, evaluation and reporting purposes o provides the foundation for decisions on student’s placement and promotion e.g. Summative Assessment Measurement • Refers to the “limit or quantity”. Quantitative description of an object’s characteristics or attribute. • Determines how much learning a student acquired compared to a standard (criterion) or in reference to other learners’ in a group (norm-referenced) • Use tools or instruments like tests, oral presentation, written reports, portfolios and rubrics to obtain pertinent information Evaluation • Process of judging the quality of a performance or course of action. • Finding the value of an educational task. • Carried out both by the teacher and the student to uncover how the learning process is developing. Formative Assessment • Judging the worth of the program while the program is in progress • Focuses on the process • Determine deficiencies so that the appropriate interventions can be done • Used in analyzing learning materials, student learning and achievements and teacher effectiveness ummative Assessment • Judging the worth of the program at the end of the program activities • Focus is on the result • Tools used for data gathering: questionnaire, survey forms, interview/observations guide and test • Determine the effectiveness of the program based on its objectives • Techniques for summative evaluation: pretest- posttest with experimental and control group; one group descriptive analysis Testing A formal, systematic gathering information procedure for Testing A formal and systematic procedure for gathering information with a use of a test tool. Test • A tool comprised of a set of questions administered during fixed period of time under comparable conditions for all students • Most dominant form of assessment • Traditional assessment • An instrument used to measure a construct and make decisions Test • Used to measure the learning progress of a student which is formative in purpose, or comprehensive covering a more extended time frame which is summative • It may not be the best way to measure how much students have learned but they still provide valuable information about learning and their progress pes of Te Type of Test ORAL TEST • Answers are spoken • Measure oral communication skills • Used to check students’ understanding of concepts, theories and procedures • Plagiarism is less likely • Consumes time and may be stressful to some students • Favors extrovert and eloquent students Type of Test WRITTEN TEST • Activities wherein students either select or provide a response to a prompt • Can be administered to a large group at one time • Can measure students’ written communication skills • Can be used to assess lower and higher levels of cognition provided that questions are phrased properly enables assessment of a wide range of topics Type of Test FORMS OF WRITTEN TEST • Alternate response (true/false) • Multiple choice • Matching Type • Short answer • Essay • Completion • Identification Type of Test PERFORMANCE TEST • Are activities that require students to demonstrate their skills or ability to perform specific actions • Task are designed to be authentic, meaningful, in-depth and multidimensional • Cost and efficiency are some of the drawbacks • Includes problem-based learning, inquiry task, exhibits, presentation task and capstone Type of Test PERFORMANCE TEST • Are activities that require students to demonstrate their skills or ability to perform specific actions • Task are designed to be authentic, meaningful, in-depth and multidimensional • Cost and efficiency are some of the drawbacks • Includes problem-based learning, inquiry task, exhibits, presentation task and capstone of quantification OBJECTIVE of E • Corrected and quantified easily • Scores can be readily compared • It includes true-false, multiple choice, completion and matching items • Test items have single or specific convergent response of quantification SUBJECTIVE of E • Elicits varied response • May have more than one answer • Includes restricted and extended-response essays • Its not easy to check because students have the liberty to write their answers • Answers are divergent • Scores are likely to be influenced by personal opinion or judgement by the person doing the scoring Administration of Test INDIVIDUAL TEST • Given to one person at a time • Individual cognitive and achievement test are administered to gather extensive information about each student’s cognitive functioning and his/her ability to process and perform specific task • It can help identify intellectually gifted students • It can pinpoint those with learning disabilities (LDs) • It can also observe students closely during the test to gather additional information Administration GROUP TEST of Test • Administered to a class or group of examinees simultaneously • Developed to address the practical need of testing • Test is usually objective and responses are more or less restricted • It does not lend itself for in-depth observations of individual students • Less opportunity to establish rapport or help students maintain interest in the test • Students are assessed on all items of the test • Students may become bored with easy items and anxious over difficult ones PROPERTIES STANDARDIZED TEST NON-STANDARDIZED TEST Prepared by Specialist who are versed in teachers who may not be the principles of assessment adept at the principles of test construction Learning outcomes & Serve as an indicator of Not thoroughly examined for content measured instructional effectiveness validity and reflection of the school’s performance Quality of test items Consists of multiple choice Uncertain quality; one or items used to distinguish several formats are used; between students items not entirely objective Reliability Can be used for a long period Scores are not subjected to of time any statistical procedure to determine reliability; not intended to be used repeatedly for a long time Administration and Administered to a large group Administered to one or few scoring of students; scoring and classes to measure subject or procedures consistent; course achievement; no manuals and guides are established manuals for e of Interpreting Res NORM-REFERENCED INTERPRETATION • Evaluation instruments that measure a student’s performance in relation to the performance of a group on the same test • Comparisons are made and the students relative position is determined de of Interpreting Res CRITERION-REFERENCED INTERPRETATION • Describe each student’s performance against an agreed upon or pre established criterion or level of performance • The criterion is not actually a cutoff score but rather the domain of subject matter- the range of well-defined instructional objectives or outcomes • In a mastery test, the cut score is used to determine whether or not a student has achieved