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Assessment for Learning
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Page 1: Reflection 5 Assessment for Learning

Assessment for Learning

Page 2: Reflection 5 Assessment for Learning

Assessment for Learner

IndependenceThoughtful use of a variety of assessment practices in the classroom can help students develop increasing autonomy as learners:

• involving students in the construction of learning targets, and in the formal and informal assessment of their progress (Clarke, Timperley and Hattie).

• providing exemplars, or very clear criteria for success (McGee and Fraser 2008).

• opportunities to assess progress through specific activities, and in general, with input from self, peer and teacher assessment.

This assessment can then be used to generate the next learning step, or locate gaps between the work completed and the success criteria.

Page 3: Reflection 5 Assessment for Learning

I am an independent learner in my daily life and I use all of these techniques to further my skills. I taught myself to sew by finding suitable exemplars and having in mind the success criteria for each item I created. I used critical self-assessment and sought opinion from peers to find the gaps in my knowledge and ‘next step’ projects to further my abilities.

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Assessment as a Great Motivator

Positive feedback after assessment, knowing how to improve and having clear direction for what learning steps to take next is a truly motivating force. This can take many forms:

• Visual evidence of assessed achievement such as progress charts, displayed work or written comments.

• Verbal comments, presentation to the class for peer assessment.

• Affirmative comments and a supportive classroom environment positively promote ‘next step’ learning.

Page 5: Reflection 5 Assessment for Learning

While visiting at my homeschool I have been involved in many aspects of classroom lessons and management. The teacher has taken the time to critically analyse my actions, and has provided me with verbal feedback that is both positive, and also shows me where there are gaps. This has allowed me to continually make adjustments to what I am doing, and has motivated me to continue to learn and improve

Page 6: Reflection 5 Assessment for Learning

Fair Assessment

Assessment must be fair to give the teacher an accurate understanding of her students’ achievement. For assessment to be fair students must know what the success criteria consist of. Students must all have had access to learning material, and the means of assessment itself must not disadvantage anyone taking part. Assessment must also be valid and measure the learning that has taken place (McGee and Fraser).

Page 7: Reflection 5 Assessment for Learning

While at University I had a lecturer who was a notoriously difficult marker. We were given a question, but no rubric, nor did he provide feedback with the grade. Not knowing the success criteria meant that the grades felt arbitrary and could not be relied on for an accurate measure of our understanding of the subject.

Page 8: Reflection 5 Assessment for Learning

Formative Assessment as a Learner-Centered Tool

Page 9: Reflection 5 Assessment for Learning

By making formative assessment central to classroom practices educators have the ability to carry out lessons that are relevant to the specific needs of their students (McGee and Fraser).

• Formative assessment focuses on the learner’s individual strengths, and shows areas which need improvement (Clarke, Timperley and Hattie).

• Formative assessment allows teachers to focus on how well students are learning and can make responsive adjustments to pedagogy (McGee and Fraser).

• Teachers can use assessment to recognise all forms of achievement and set individual targets (Clarke et al).

Individual assessment can be made using observation and interaction with the student as they work. It can also be made by a comparison of students’ work against the achievement objectives and standards.

Page 10: Reflection 5 Assessment for Learning

Formative Assessment Monitors Progress

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Rather than using only summative assessment to measure final achievement, it is more beneficial to monitor the progress of students before and during learning programmes. This allows the teacher to identify students who are not achieving well, and to monitor her own teaching. This can be done by comparing students’ work against national standards, using classroom observations to clarify students’ learning and the teacher’s efficacy, and listening to feedback from parents, and other staff (Clarke et al.)

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Formative

Assessment for

Raising Self-

Esteem

Page 13: Reflection 5 Assessment for Learning

Formative Assessment to Raise Self-Esteem

Self-esteem is one of the key factors in student achievement. Success builds upon success, and formative assessment can support this. For students who are struggling with an area of work, formative assessment can provide positive feedback for what has been achieved, raising self-esteem and providing motivation (Clarke et al). Feed forward shows students the steps they need to take while allowing them to continue to work towards their target, with self-esteem in tact.

Assessment of this kind is often verbal when the teacher is viewing students as they are on task. It must be relevant and authentic to really make an impact on a learner’s self-esteem, and it must be based on the task, and the progress the student is making towards the target, and not directed at the student (Clarke et al.).

Page 14: Reflection 5 Assessment for Learning

References

Clarke, S., Timperley, H., and Hattie, J., (2006), Unlocking Formative Assessment, Hodder Education, Auckland, New Zealand

McGee, C., and Fraser, D., (2008), The Professional Practice of Teaching, Cengage, Melbourne, Australia

http://assessment.tki.org.nz/Assessment-in-the-classroom/Assessment-for-learning-in-principle/Principles-of-assessment-for-learning