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Assessment

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Assessment COURSE ED 1203: INTRODUCTION TO TEACHING COURSE INSTRUCTOR SAID A.S.YUNUS * * ED 1203 - INTRODUCTION TO TEACHING The word assess comes from the Latin ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Assessment


1
Assessment
  • COURSE
  • ED 1203 INTRODUCTION TO TEACHING
  • COURSE INSTRUCTOR
  • SAID A.S.YUNUS

2
What is Assessment?
  • The word assess comes from the Latin verb
    assidere meaning to sit with.
  • In assessment one is supposed to sit with the
    learner. This implies it is something we do
    with and for students and not to students
    (Green, 1999).
  • Assessment in education is the process of
    gathering, interpreting, recording, and using
    information about pupils responses to an
    educational task. (Harlen, Gipps, Broadfoot,
    Nuttal,1992)

3
What is Evaluation?
  • Evaluation is the process of analyzing,
    reflecting upon, and summarizing assessment
    information and making judgments and/or decisions
    based on the information collected about student
    achievement in relation to outcomes.

4
Assessment vs. Evaluation
  • "Evaluation usually occurs when students finish a
    task, whereas assessment goes beyond evaluation
    to include gathering information about student
    performance as they work as well as when they are
    finished. Assessment is also usually done with
    the student, while evaluation is done to the
    students' work."
  • Source AASL AECT. (1998). Information Power,
    Building Partnerships for Learning. Chicago and
    London American Library Association, page 173.

5
Assessment Shifts
  • Assessment of
  • At the end of learning, summative, performance in
    reference to a standard
  • Assessment for
  • During learning, used to inform instruction and
    learning, student is a partner in the assessment
    process
  • Assessment as
  • is about reflecting, discussing together before,
    during and after teaching and learning.

6
Assessment
OF Learning FOR AS Learning
Evaluation Summative (after) Judging Assigning grades reporting on achievement Assessment Diagnostic (before) Formative (during, ongoing) Coaching Providing feedback to students teachers to make decisions about next steps in learning
7
The Assessment-Instruction Process
Pre Assessment finding out
Summative Assessment making sure
Formative Assessment checking in feedback
student involvement
8
Pre-Assessment Strategies
  • Student Products
  • Student Work Samples
  • Show of hands/EPR (Every Pupil Response)
  • Standardized Test Data
  • Teacher Observation
  • Writing Prompts
  • Writing Samples
  • Checklist
  • Pre-test
  • KWL Charts
  • Graphic Organizers
  • Pre-test
  • Student Discussions
  • Student Demonstrations

9
Formative Assessments
  • Assessments FOR learning happens while learning
    is still underway.
  • These are assessments that
  • are conducted throughout teaching and learning
    to diagnose student needs
  • plan the next steps in instruction
  • provide students with feedback they can use
    to improve the quality of their work
  • help students see and feel how they are in
    control of their journey to success

10
Definition
  • Formative assessment delivers information during
    the instructional process, before the summative
    assessment. Both the teacher and the student use
    formative assessment results to make decisions
    about what actions to take to promote further
    learning. It is an ongoing, dynamic process that
    involves far more than frequent testing, and
    measurement of student learning is just one of
    its components.
  • Almost any assessment instrument can be used for
    summative or formative purposes, but some, by
    design, are better suited to summative use and
    others to formative use.

11
Formative Assessment Strategies
  • Learning Logs
  • Oral Attitude Surveys
  • Oral Presentations
  • Peer Evaluations
  • Problem Solving Activities
  • Products
  • Questioning
  • Quiz
  • Response Groups
  • Self-Evaluations
  • Conference
  • Cooperative Learning Activities
  • Demonstrations
  • Exit Card
  • Graphic Organizers
  • I Learned Statements
  • Interviews
  • Journal Entry
  • KWLs

12
Effective Formative Assessments Provide the
Following
  • Provide a clear and understandable vision of the
    learning target
  • Use examples and models of strong and weak work
  • 3. Offer regular descriptive feedback.
  • Teach students to self-assess and set goals.
  • 5. Engage students in self-reflection, and let
    them keep track of and share their learning.

13
Summative Assessment
  • A summative assessment/evaluation is referred as
    assessment OF learning which conducted at the end
    of the progrsmme. Summative assessment is
    designed to
  • provide information
  • make judgments about student achievement at the
    end of a sequence of instruction, (e.g., final
    drafts/attempts, tests, exam, assignments,
    projects, performances)
  • It is a means to determine a students
    mastery and understanding of information,
    skills, concepts, or processes.

14
Summative Assessment Strategies
  • Unit Test
  • Performance Task
  • Product/Exhibit
  • Demonstration
  • Portfolio Review

www.stcloudstate.edu/oce/teaching/documents/FORMAT
IVEASSESSMENT.ppt
15
Assessment Instruments
Pre-assessment (diagnostic) Formative (ongoing) Summative (final)
Pretests Quizzes Teacher-made test
Observations Discussions Portfolios
Journals/logs Assignments Projects
Discussions Projects Standardized tests
Questionnaires Observations
Interviews Portfolios
Journal logs
Standardized tests
16
Informal and Formal Assessment
  • Informal assessment can take a number of forms
  • unplanned comments, verbal feedback to students,
    observing students perform a task or work in
    small groups, and so on.
  • Formal assessment are exercises or procedures
    which are
  • systematic
  • give students and teachers an appraisal of
    students achievement such as tests.

17
Traditional Assessment
  • Multiple-choice
  • True-false
  • Matching
  • Norm-referenced and criterion referenced tests

18
Norm and Criterion-referenced tests
  • Norm-referenced test
  • standardized tests (college board, TOEFL, GRE)
  • Place test-takers on a mathematical continuum in
    rank order
  • Criterion-referenced tests
  • give test-takers feedback on specific objectives
    (criterea)
  • test objectives of a course
  • known as instructional value

19
Authentic Assessment
  • Authentic assessment
  • reflects student learning, achievement,
    motivation, and attitudes on instructionally
    relevant classroom activities
  • Examples
  • performance assessment
  • portfolios
  • self-assessment

20
Purposes for Assessment
  • Diagnose students strengths and needs
  • Provide feedback on student learning
  • Provide a basis for instructional placement
  • Inform and guide instruction
  • Communicate learning expectations
  • Motivate and focus students attention and effort
  • Provide practice applying knowledge and skills

21
Purposes continued
  • Provide a basis for evaluation for the purpose
    of
  • Grading
  • Promotion/graduation
  • Program admission/selection
  • Accountability
  • Gauge program effectiveness
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