1 / 15

Assessment

Assessment. Why Assess. to find out what students have learned to determine what further teaching is needed Teachers should plan a balanced assessment program plan a range of assessment strategies (informal & formal) allocate time during activities for observing students

chimalsi
Télécharger la présentation

Assessment

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. Assessment

  2. Why Assess • to find out what students have learned • to determine what further teaching is needed • Teachers should • plan a balanced assessment program • plan a range of assessment strategies (informal & formal) • allocate time during activities for observing students • assess regularly and keeprecords

  3. Assessment should • reflect the fact that students have different and preferred learning styles • Recognise • stages of development • individual achievement • skills gradually developed • Be recorded over time (revisit and revise)

  4. How do we assess ICT • Depends on the school you are in and its adherence to the CSF! • We should assess: • What the students can do(skills and techniques) • What students know (ideas and knowledge) • Student’s attitudes (to KLA, safety, new techniques, values & feelings) Curriculum @ Work website Assessment in Technology

  5. Assessment techniques • Observation of students • Informal observation • Checklists and notes • Watching work in progress • Systematic observation • Presentation to the class or other classes at assembly • Student demonstration of skills • Talking with students • Informal conversations • Conferences (keep a log of the conference) • Interview • Questioning • individuals • class • small group • open-ended • questionnaires (verbal, written) • Use Ongoing records • Anecdotal records • Annotated class lists • Checklists • Running record sheets • Teacher diaries and logs

  6. Assessment techniques • Student self-assessment • Prepare fill in sheets • Self-assessment formats • Group discussion • Concept mapping • Folios of work • Captions on photos • Tests • Practical • Written • Use Ongoing records • Anecdotal records • Annotated class lists • Checklists • Running record sheets • Teacher diaries and logs

  7. Keep records of • Technology process • Checklist of the four phases of the process appropriate for the level • Skills list • Knowledge list • Progress towards learning outcomes • Proforma of learning outcomes • Checklist of stages in achieving learning outcomes • Technology concepts • Checklist of technology concepts • Record of stages in the progress towards understanding concepts • Diaries • Telling stories • Listening to students’ explanations • Use Ongoing records • Anecdotal records • Annotated class lists • Checklists • Running record sheets • Teacher diaries and logs

  8. Records of practical work • Keep • Work samples • Design projects • Class projects • Photographs of work • Students’ records • Student folios • Student journals • Work in progress folders • Learning log–record in during each lesson, assess at the end of the unit • Diaries • Videotaping students at work, plays, presentation, practical work • Audiotaping of student discussions, presentations, testing students’ aural abilities

  9. Types of assessment – time-saving strategies • Stick-on notes can be useful for making immediate observations about students without the need for folders and forms. • Proformas can be made to suit activities that go on through the year. • A checklist of skills and attitudes that students gain from activities can be created and reused. • Teachers should use computers and programs that enable records to be kept efficiently

  10. Pictures of student performance • To create a balanced picture of students’ ability in Technology. • build up portfolios of student work, • keeping records of • assignment work, • systematic observation • range of other assessment strategies.

  11. Authentic assessment • A form of assessment in which students are asked to perform real-world tasks that demonstrate meaningful application of essential knowledge and skills – JonMueller • An authentic assessment usually includes a task for students to perform and a rubric by which their performance on the task will be evaluated. Authentic Assessment Toolbox

  12. Traditional assessment • forced-choice measures • multiple-choice tests • fill-in-the-blanks • true-false • matching etc • Students typically select an answer or recall information to complete the assessment. • These tests may be standardized or teacher-created.  • They may be administered locally or statewide, or internationally Authentic Assessment Toolbox

  13. Authentic assessment • assessment drives the curriculum.  • teachers • first determine the tasks that students will perform to demonstrate their mastery, • then a curriculum is developed that will enable students to perform those tasks well, • This would include the acquisition of essential knowledge and skills.  • This has been referred to as planning backwards Authentic Assessment Toolbox

  14. Authentic assessment Traditional • Selecting a Response • Contrived • Recall/Recognition • Teacher-structured • Indirect Evidence Authentic • Performing a Task • Real-life • Construction/Application • Student-structured • Direct Evidence Authentic Assessment Toolbox

  15. Web resources • MidLink Magazine Teacher ToolsRubrics and evaluation resources • The global classroom

More Related