1 / 30

TESTING AND EVALUATION IN EDUCATION GA 3113 lecture 1

TESTING AND EVALUATION IN EDUCATION GA 3113 lecture 1. Zolkepeli Haron UKM 10. What you should plan before teaching?. Set up the objective Doing assessment Teaching according to syllabus. Three interacting components of the educational process. Educational Objectives.

Télécharger la présentation

TESTING AND EVALUATION IN EDUCATION GA 3113 lecture 1

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. TESTING AND EVALUATIONIN EDUCATIONGA 3113lecture 1 Zolkepeli Haron UKM 10

  2. What you should plan before teaching? • Set up the objective • Doing assessment • Teaching according to syllabus

  3. Three interacting components of the educational process Educational Objectives Learning Experiences Evaluation Procedures

  4. What Are Objectives? • They define the behavior, standards and conditions that the trainee will perform upon completion of the training.

  5. Types Of Objectives • Performance Objectives • Competency Objectives • Knowledge Objectives • Skill Objectives • Attitude Objectives

  6. ASSESSMENT A SURVEY OF STUDENT FUNCTIONING WITHIN THE CONTEXT OF RESPONDING TO INSTRUCTION UNIT AS WELL AS TO SPECIFIC LEARNING TASKS • A process for obtaining information that is used for making decisions about students, curricular and programs, and educational policy.

  7. Types Of Criterion Assessments • Performance/Skill Assessments (e.g., process checklist, product review) • Knowledge Assessments (e.g., paper/pencil tests) • Attitude Assessments (e.g., questionnaires, surveys)

  8. What Is An Evaluation? • A judgment about the quality or worth of an educational program, worker performance/proficiency, or student attainments. • Includes both quantitative and/or qualitative description • A value judgment • Measurement gives us quantitative information on which to base judgments

  9. Roles Of Evaluation • Formative Evaluations • Used to monitor the instructional process • Conducted during the instructional process • Provides feedback concerning student progress and areas needing improvement

  10. Roles Of Evaluation (continued) • Summative Evaluations • Used to establish level and quality of learning • Conducted at the completion of the instructional process • Provides feedback concerning levels of student performance compared with other students.

  11. What Is Measurement? • The process of assigning numbers to individuals or their characteristics. • To measure achievement and ranking the students.

  12. SCALE OF MEASUREMENT • NOMINAL • ORDINAL • INTERVAL • RATIO

  13. Types Of Measurement • Inventories (Has No Correct Answer) • Attitude Inventories (e.g., post-training reaction questionnaires) • Interest Inventories (e.g., strong-Campbell interest inventory) • Preference Inventories (e.g., Myers-Briggs Type Indicator

  14. Types Of Measurement (continued) • Tests (Has A Correct Answer) • Achievement Tests (e.g., mid-term exam) • Intelligence Tests (e.g., Stanford-Binet) • Aptitude Tests (e.g., ASVAB)

  15. What Is An Achievement Assessment? • A broad category that includes all of the various methods for determining the extent to which students are achieving the intended learning outcomes of instruction.

  16. Assessment In The Instructional Process • Beginning of Instruction (Placement Assessment) • Purpose: • To determine if students have the prerequisite skills • To determine if students have already achieved intended outcomes

  17. Assessment In The Instructional Process (continued) • During Instruction (Formative and Diagnostic Assessment) • Purpose: • To determine which learning tasks the students are progressing satisfactorily (Formative Assessment) • To determine which students need remedial work in particular material (Diagnostic Assessment)

  18. Assessment In The Instructional Process (continued) • End of Instruction • Summative Assessment • Purpose: • To determine which students have mastered material and should move on to next course • To determine what grade should be assigned to each student

  19. Other Ways Assessment Can Aid Learning • To increase student motivation • To increase retention and transfer of learning • Provides student self-assessment • Provides feedback concerning needed changes to curriculum

  20. Types of Assessment Methods • Selected-Response (e.g., multiple choice, true-false, matching) • Supply Response (e.g., essay, fill-in-the-blank, etc.) • Restricted Performance Assessment (e.g., locating information on a computer) • Extended Performance Assessment (e.g., using a computer to solve a math problem)

  21. Guidelines For Effective Student Assessment • Effective Assessment Requires: 1. A clear conception of intended learning outcomes 2. A variety of assessment procedures 3. Relevant instructional procedures 4. Adequate sample of student performance

  22. Guidelines For Effective Student Assessment (continued) • Effective Assessment Requires: 5. Fair procedures for everyone 6. Specifying the criteria for judging successful performance 7. Feedback that emphasizes strengths and weaknesses of performance 8. A comprehensive grading and reporting system

  23. Providing Feedback • Feedback Should: • be given immediately following assessment • be detailed and understandable to students • focus on both successes and errors • provide remedial suggestions for correcting errors • be positive and provide a guide for improving performance and self-assessment

  24. Validity And Reliability In Assessment Planning • Validity • refers to the appropriateness and meaningfulness of the inferences we make from assessment results • Reliability • refers to whether the assessment will yield consistent results

  25. TO BE VALID, AN ASSESSMENT MUST BE RELIABLE. • HOWEVER, AN ASSESSMENT CAN BE RELIABLE WITHOUT BEING VALID

  26. Norm-Referenced vs. Criterion-Referenced • Norm-Referenced • Provides a relative ranking of students • Criterion-Referenced • Provides a description of the learning tasks a student can and can’t perform

  27. Preparing An Achievement Test • Steps: 1. Identify and define the learning outcomes to be measured 2. Prepare test specifications 3. Construct relevant test items 4. Review and edit the items 5. Arrange the items in the test 6. Prepare directions

  28. What Are Standardized Achievement Tests? • Tests that compare local student performance with the performance of students in a norm group • Tests that measure a standard set of educational outcomes • Tests that use standard directions and scoring procedures

  29. What is a Norm Group? • A population of students whose demographic characteristics approximate the characteristics of the local students

  30. The End………. Thank You

More Related