Contents
Assessment
· Assessment instruments do not dictate the decisions to be made.
· Teachers, administrators, government officials, parents, and even students interpret assessment results and make decisions based on the results.
· Assessments are tools that allow us to make informed decisions about how best to help our students learn and achieve
· Assessment interpretation can be abused.
Three Types of Assessment
· Summative Assessment
· Interim Assessment
· Formative Assessment
Summative Assessment
Examples: Standardized testing (MEAP, MME, ACT, Work Keys, Terra Nova, etc.); Final exams; Major cumulative projects, research projects, and performances.
Interim Assessment
Examples: Chapter test; extended essay; a project scored with a rubric.
Formative Assessment
Examples: a very interactive class discussion; a warm-up, closure, or exit slip; an on-the-spot performance; a quiz.
Purposes of Assessment
· To promote learning
· In order for assessment to promote students’ learning and achievement, it should:
1. Provide specific & concrete feedback
2. Act as a learning experience, letting students know what they have and have not mastered
3. Act as a motivator—students should know what to study and when
4. Act as a review mechanism
5. Influence cognitive processing
6. To guide instructional decision making
7. To assist in the diagnosis of learning and performance problems
8. To promote self-regulation
9. To determine what students have learned
Student Assessment
Assessing student performance
Assessment can be based on writing an individual paper, preparing a group presentation, class participation, attendance, homework problem sets, exams (essay, short answer, multiple choice, true/false), and so on. Alternatively, when a student performs a task rather than taking a test, it is called performance assessment. Examples of performance assessment include: debating a topic; demonstrating a skill; conducting an experiment and writing the results; doing a project; or compiling a portfolio of work.
Ideally the assessment process informs the teacher and the learner about learner progress and at the same time, contributes to the learning process. In theory, good assessment:
· measures meaningful learning outcomes
· does so in a fair, reliable, accurate way
· is easy to administer, score, and interpret
· informs the teacher about student performance and how they are interpreting course experiences
· results in meaningful feedback to the learner
· is itself a learning experience
Feedback on assessment
Feedback is a very important part of learning. Feedback is the mechanism that lets the learner know whether they are on the right track. Assessment and measurement strategies provide feedback to both the student and instructor. Students learn more effectively if they receive frequent, meaningful, and rapid feedback. Feedback may come from the instructor directly, from assignments and assessments which have feedback built into them, or even from other students.
Feedback to learners about where they are and where their instructors want them to be comes in many different ways, such as:
· instructor participation in a discussion assignment
· writing assignments that require submission of a draft for instructor comments and suggestions for improvement
· self-mastery tests and quizzes that include informative feedback with each answer choice
· interactive games and simulations that have feedback built in
Technology can provide automated assessments which provide instant right or wrong feedback. Interactive media provide feedback when they add a visual change to indicate mouse over, or a sound to accompany an action. This very simple form of feedback lets the learner know their input has been received. More sophisticated technologies can offer constructive criticism. Technology can also help by gathering and organizing student performances and making it easy to offer feedback. However, human participation is often a necessary part of feedback.
Methods of Assessment
Pre-testing
You might find it helpful to find out whether your students meet the basic knowledge and skill levels required to learn your materials. Use a pre-test to find out. Pre-tests are often paired with remedial materials.
Some instructors offer self-assessment pre-tests prior to the beginning day of class and offer students ways to catch up before the first day. Others provide time during the first week for students to do such things. Alternatively, you could pre-test prior to each module, week or topic.
Practice exams
Practice exams and problem set homework are popular with students in courses which use exams for grading. Students who complete a practice exam usually encounter fewer problems on the official exam. Technical problems have been worked out, and the student knows what to expect in terms of types of questions.
Subjective assessment
In subjective assessments the teacher's judgment determines the grade. These include essay tests. Essay tests take longer to answer and they take longer to grade than objective questions and therefore only include a small number of questions, focusing on complex concepts.
Objective assessment
Objective assessments (usually multiple choice, true false, short answer) have correct answers. These are good for testing recall of facts and can be automated. Objective tests assume that there are true answers and assume that all students should learn the same things.
Self-assessment
Self-assessment types of assignments are provided for quick student feedback. Self-assessments:
· help the learner check if they have mastered a topic
· provide opportunity to measure learning progress
· are usually voluntary and may allow multiple attempts
· inform the learner, but not the teacher
· can occur whenever a performance activity is linked with feedback about that performance.
Self-assessment
examples:
· practice quizzes
· games, simulations, and other interactive exercises
· practice written assignments
· peer reviews
· true-false questions
Interactive
assessments
Interactive experiences can be designed as spaces within which learners can perform a task. These experiences can be graded or not. Interactive software can administer quizzes and give instant, usually fun, right-wrong feedback and perhaps explanations of right answers. Examples of interactive assessment:
· A simulator that lets learners virtually drive, facing the full range of driving challenges along the way. Simulators can be used both to teach and to test through performance in the simulation.
· students could conduct a virtual experiment rather than an experiment in a physical laboratory
· language software might have sophisticated speech recognition software to provide feedback about pronunciation
· Creation of an online tool, such as a virtual instrument. Students could perform a song, and the software provides feedback about accuracy and timing.
· A game where the goal is to find life in other solar systems. Making sound decisions about where to search, how to get there, and what to look for earns points but also shows that you are learning.
Group projects
Group projects are more challenging in a fully online course because the online tools often must handle all collaboration. Students do not necessarily live in the same time zone or even on the same continent, there is no set class meeting time, and they may have vastly different schedules. Some online students do their classwork during the week, others work only on weekends. Some like the idea of meeting in-person with their group, others prefer asynchronous collaboration. A majority prefer not to do group work at all. Some students start and finish projects early (they always turn things in first) and others wait until the last minute. Invariably there will be complaints about group members who are not participating.
In real life many projects are team efforts. There is a great deal of learning value in discussion and collaboration. Tools which can facilitate group collaboration include asynchronous discussion tools for group communication, file sharing to share and revise documents, and chat tools for real-time discussion.
Smaller groups are more manageable. Teams of two are easier to coordinate than larger teams, although some courses do groups of 5 or 6. It is important to carefully assign the groups based on when they like to work and how they prefer to collaborate. Define clear roles, and include peer review of group participation as part of the grade. You can ask students to keep a log of their process and procedures. Provide a "panic button" for students whose team members have disappeared, so you can help them either decide to work alone or connect with another group.
Proctored exams
One anti-cheating strategy is to require students to arrange for a proctor at a local community college, university or library. The proctor is typically located by the student and approved by the instructor. The proctor checks photo ID and monitors the student while they take the exam. Exams are submitted online, or in some cases, printed and faxed by the proctor to the instructor. This can be inconvenient for distant students to arrange and for the instructor to coordinate. MSU testing office participates in a free referral service that facilitates distance learning. If you’re interested in learning more about this service please visit the MSU Testing Office and inquire about Distance Testing.
MSU Example
The LearnDAT online remedial math course, jointly offered by MSU and San Francisco State University, used five online exams and two proctored in-person exams. The math faculty at San Francisco State University have compared grades between the online and in person exams and found a high level of consistency in the grades, suggesting cheating is not occurring in the online exams. The instructional team is now much more confident in the integrity of the online exams. Their online exams have 20 questions; each question is drawn from a separate pool of five choices. The order of the questions and answers are randomized.
Students as audience
and peer review
In the classroom, time constraints prevent students from being able to review each other’s projects in detail. It is easy to post projects online where everyone can see them. The work is thus a public performance, a potential source of pride or embarrassment. It is helpful for other students to see the scope of work produced by others. They may be motivated on the next assignment by seeing other outstanding projects.
Peer review can be an effective learning technique. Taking on the role of judge is a different mode of understanding the goals of an assignment.
Participation
Class participation can be an alternative method of assessing the student. A good way to encourage class participation is to make it part of the overall course grade. Class participation may include answering reflective questions in a course module, taking part in weekly class discussions, providing peer review critiques of fellow students' assignments, or locating and contributing online resources to a class-created knowledgebase.
The quality and quantity of submissions can be used to determine the grade. Some LMSs can track the number of posts a student makes to a discussion forum or live chat.
Other kinds of
assessment
Alternative methods of assessment are limited only by your imagination. Consider assigning reflective journals, one minute papers, contributions to digital archives, or portfolios.