vendredi 1 avril 2011
Multiple Methods of Assessment - Volante
I believe rummaging through the curriculum guides would be a worthwhile experience for most teachers regardless of years of experience. It is easy to get into a routine by repeating the sheets and tests of yesteryear. The challenge is to continually search for other ways of reaching our students. We need to know them. What works for one group, may be ineffective with another. During my student teaching experience, I was a bit shocked that my cooperating teacher was using a very old program with her students. I thought surely there was something more modern she could be using. She explained to me that she had all the modern stuff and that this program was the one her students best responded to. Lesson learned. I have always remembered that the method I use is based as much on who my students are and what they need as it is on what my style and knowledge tell me to use.
The curriculum guides provide a multitude of assessment tools to be selected by the classroom teacher. If we go back from time to time and become familiar with them, we are expanding our own repertoire as well as providing more opportunity for students to demonstrate their learning.
When designing an assessment tool, we need to be aware of the skills we are measuring - not only the content. As a new teacher, a colleague once told me, "Remember, you are teaching the child - not the curriculum." It has always stuck with me and the content becomes secondary to the person when you realize that it doesn"t really matter what year a historical event occurred, but it does matter that a student has the necessary skills to find the year.
In summary, we need to be sure that what and how we are assessing reflects what the student needs to grow.
Publié par DD-QA à 05:37 0 commentaires
Libellés : Assessment, Évaluation, Grading, Principles, Student-Centred, Volante
mardi 29 mars 2011
Learning Target Alignment - Volante


Publié par DD-QA à 11:01 0 commentaires
Libellés : Damian Cooper, Principles, Tiered Assessment, Volante
lundi 28 mars 2011
Student-Centered Assessment - Volante
The first of the seven principles suggested by Volante is that assessment be student-centered. The ultimate goal is that we make students responsible for their learning and having them take ownership in the assessment process is the first step in seeing this through. According to his research, this approach will positively influence motivation and learning.

- Give a pretest before a unit of study: This allows us to make necessary adjustments to the personal learning goals for each student.
- Be aware of students who are in need of more assistance or practice. They will more likely need to be monitored more closely.
- Continually revise instruction based on assessment results. If some students are not getting it, what do they need to learn in order to get it?
- Convey strengths and weaknesses to students. Effective feedback will allow them to grow from where they are.
- Match students in groups that will encourage growth. These groupings can become a ressource for students to use independently once they learn how to work together.
- Allow opportunity for self-assessment. This is key in order for students to take ownership of their work. They are able to direct their own learning this way and they become responsible for what they have done and how they plan to grow with each susequent assignment.
All of these conditions make sense. Most would not argue that when a student becomes responsible for his or her own learning, he or she becomes a lifelong learner, capable of assuring continuous growth in life. I can picture it in my head, running smoothly, a motivation-filled classroom guiding the students to a state of independence they want to reach.
Conversely, I also have questions about how this motivation occurs when the inclusion of a student is not enough. How do we cope when a student dares you to make them care and then sets up camp behind a granite wall of resistance? And what of class sizes? When teachers are facing groups beyond 30 students, they are overwhelmed with duties leading to learning and other academic and behavioural issues. Teachers slip into survival mode and find it difficult to make the time to consult with each student in the goal of guiding their next steps.
Publié par DD-QA à 15:22 0 commentaires
Libellés : Assessment, Principles, Student-Centred, Volante
vendredi 25 mars 2011
Principles for Effective Classroom Assessment - Louis Volante
As a middle years team in my school, we have rummaged through the curriculum guides and filtered out the essential learning outcomes in the various content areas. I am increasingly aware that the content is less important than the skills and attitudes that accompany a lifelong learner - which is what we are encouraging after all. The content provides us with a means to explore and develop these skills as the student becomes more and more independent.
Having done this, we are finally on the same page (or at least in the same chapter) and heading in a common direction. We know what a student will experience from one year to the next and this continuum helps us to be aware of what other teachers are doing. Students will see their education as a continuous flow rather than bits and pieces of information thrown at them over the years.
So, I now know what I need to assess, things that matter. And I know that I need to assess for specific reasons. To be sure I am assessing for the right reason, I ask myself the three following questions:
- Will this assessment help guide me to teach better (or differently) in order to meet the needs of my students?
- Is this assessment useful to promote learning? That is, does the student learn from having experienced it and is he or she able to improve upon what has been learned for the next phase of learning?
- And finally, how does this assessment allow me to accurately report to parents on the achievement of their child?
The seven principles include the need for classroom assessment to be:
- student-centered
- aligned with clear learning targets
- based on multiple methods
- able to account for a variety of student skills
- aimed at reducing bias
- reliable and valid
- efficient
Publié par DD-QA à 05:52 0 commentaires
Libellés : Assessment, Principles, Volante