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We started this course with the image of a reef (and the acronym A-REEF) because a reef is a place teeming with life and possibility, as is this process.
The first letter of the acronymn A -REEF stands for A ssessment.
Assessment is the process of gathering information about what students know and can do. (Evaluating - the third letter in the acronym - is the process of interpreting and making judgements about that assessment information.)
There are numerous assessment models. The three most often used are:
Asking What do I know? What do I want to know? What have I learned? is an informal way to assess students' knowledge and learning.
Here are some ways to approach the answers to those questions:
Student journal entries (pre and post) can be compared. If a focus question is used in the journal, the post-unit question should have the same form, but reflect time that has passed (i.e. "What do I know about [this topic]... now?")
Interpreting a picture (drawing or photograph) of a scene before and after a unit of study can be a tool of assessment. For example, students see a picture of a woodland scene and are asked, "How would this scene change if humans settled here?" Then students are asked the same question after studying ecosystems and humans impacts on them. The students' interpretations can be very revealing.
Document science attitudes and skills using a checklist system before a unit and after it. In the same way, compare student data tables or lab reports from the beginning of the year and the end.
A teacher or a student can perform the same simple task at the beginning and at the end of a unit and the class can use the same worksheet to explain or describe the task. The responses and explanations can be compared.
Have students create a concept map as a class and then compare it to the map students make at the end of a unit. Accept both correct and incorrect information for the first map. When the second map is created, try to reflect all information gleaned from a unit of study and ferret out all inaccurate information (without exposing students who provide incorrect information to censure). Pose this as a process of discovery, not a search for an error-free first document.
Student self-evaluations encourage self-reflection and better learning for students. They can encompass a variety of formats. The content of self-evaluations should never be graded. However, there is a kind of evaluation that can be graded for depth of analysis - i.e., how seriously did you take this task? Did you attempt to understand you own thinking and writing processes? Were you able to contextualize your own acts as a writer and thinker within course themes? The grade is for the application of insight and course themes to his/her own practice.
FOR EXAMPLES, click here
In addition to pre and post assessments, teachers can institute many other types of alternative assessment.
Post-unit assessments can include "lab tests." Student interpretation of data (especially data which they collected) can expose their understanding. Hands-on experiments that replicate a process used in the unit allow teachers to measure ability to use skills that were taught. Given certain materials, students can construct a model of the current topic of study, i.e. the cell. Students could work alone or in pairs to design and/or carry out an experiment.
A culminating activity such as a presentation, skit or teaching of others allows exhibition of student learning. The teacher should use the rehearsal for the public activity as the actual assessment, so that any nervousness won't hinder an accurate assessment of students' knowledge.
Things to Consider
When you start using alternative assessment, start small. One example of this is to use an old multiple choice question without providing the answers. This eliminates the "guessing factor" for which multiple choice tests are famous.
Look for things that you already do to find evidence of students' thinking and learning.
Be realistic about the values of your school community.
If graded report cards are emphasized, be sure that you can translate your assessments into traditional grades.
Assignment 4: Your Current and Future Assessment Tools
HOW TO GET TO ASSIGNMENT 4:
One Way
Click on the link in color at the top of this page. When it appears, press "Save" and name the file so that you can work on this assignment "off-line." You can type right on the assignment template. Be sure to save your assignment on a disk or on your computer hard drive.
Another Way
Copy the text below, and save it to your disk or computer.
GOAL: To review forms of assessment you already use. To expand upon or try a new assessment (or combination of assessments) for an upcoming lesson or unit of study.
GIVE: Feedback to others on their assignments at the TWB Learning Cafe
Assignment 4: Your Current and Future Assessment Tools
Generative
Students and their teachers create the assessment criteria and/or tools so that they are meaningful and generate knowledge. For more on this subject, as well as example, click here.
Seamless and Ongoing
Instruction and assessment are integrated; assessment of the process and products occurs throughout the instruction. To read more about this subject, click here.
Authentic Assessment
Authentic assessment is geared toward assessment methods that correspond as closely as possible to real world experience. The instructor observes the student in the process of working on something real; provides feedback; monitors the student's use of the feedback; and adjusts instruction and evaluation accordingly. Authentic assessment takes this principle of evaluating real work into all areas of the curriculum.
Performance-Based
Assessments are meaningful, challenging experiences that involve presenting students with an authentic task, project, or investigation, and then observing, interviewing and/or examining their artifacts and presentations to assess what they actually know and can do. For an example using mathematics, click here.
Suggested Reading:
Performance Assessment: A strong overview of the field.
PDF version of Performance Assessment below:
When we hear the name, "portfolio," we often think of artists carrying around a large valise of their creations, or of a business-person carrying around a thin briefcase of financial papers. The portfolio in education is a powerful assessment technique, as well, and includes evidence from one's work on major topics, successes, challenges, and questions. The key word is evidence that can show - far more than tests - what students know and what they need to do in order to improve.
What can be in a Portfolio?
A good question, serving as the central core of a course, is best combined with a portfolio from individual students - or a team - to demonstrate progress.
Here are some examples of core questions:
Below is a general outline for a portfolio's contents:
Porfolios are creative efforts and show the individuality of student work. They can take many forms and should tap into the cultural themes of the students themselves. Consider, too, how the forms below may fit into your subject:
Recommended Reading: Using Portfolios in the Classroom
PDF File below
Using Portfolios in the Classroom
This article talks about the ability to use the Internet and computers to create and edit student portfolios.
To see an example of a science-related student portfolio, click here.
To see examples of teacher portfolios, click here .
HOW TO GET TO THE NEXT MODULE:
Usually, you just click "Next" to go to the next page. When you finish a section, however, (as you're about to do when you finish reading these two paragraphs), you need to click on the "Outline" button, which is on the bottom, right-hand side of the page. Look underneath the blue bar and click on the word "Outline."
When you click on "Outline," a screen will come up that will show you the outline for Course 3. Look for the next section to read and click on the first topic in that next section. For example, when you get to the outline now, look under the next section called "A-REEF: Reflection" and look for the first topic in black lettering called "A Teacher's Story." Click on "A Teacher's Story."