1 / 20

Using a Standards-Based Portfolio as a Formative and Summative Assessment Tool

Using a Standards-Based Portfolio as a Formative and Summative Assessment Tool. Presented by Dr. Deborah Schussler Education and Human Services. Purposes. Introduction to standards-based portfolios. Use of portfolios as means of formative assessment.

sonnagh
Télécharger la présentation

Using a Standards-Based Portfolio as a Formative and Summative Assessment Tool

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. Using a Standards-Based Portfolio as a Formative and Summative Assessment Tool Presented by Dr. Deborah Schussler Education and Human Services

  2. Purposes • Introduction to standards-based portfolios. • Use of portfolios as means of formative assessment. • Use of portfolios as means of summative assessment.

  3. Portfolio Defined • According to Dr. Helen C. Barrett “an educational portfolio contains work that a learner has selected and collected to show growth and change over time; a critical component of an educational portfolio is the learners reflection on the individual pieces of work as well as an overall reflection on the story that the portfolio should tell”.

  4. Standards Based Portfolios • All teacher education candidates develop an electronic portfolio which demonstrates their achievement and growth in each of the 10 core INTASC principles for beginning teachers.

  5. Content Learning Diversity Instruction Learning Environment Communication Planning Assessment Reflection Community INTASC Standards in brief For a complete description, go to:http://www.ccsso.org/projects/Interstate_New_Teacher_Assessment_and_Support_Consortium/Projects/Standards_Development/

  6. How this works programmatically • Introduction/ acclimation to the standards early in the program • Case study of teachers • Dissection of standards • Reference standards throughout program (assignments, etc.) • Capstone activity based on standards

  7. One of our goals • Beginning teachers as Reflective Practitioners Systematically and thoughtfully consider achievement and growth across the standards.

  8. “We all acknowledge, in words at least, that ability to think is highly important; … it emancipates us from merely impulsive and merely routine activity. Put in positive terms, thinking enables us to direct our activities with foresight and to plan according to ends-in-view, or purposes of which we are aware. It enables us to act in deliberate and intentional fashion to attain future objects or to come into command of what is now distant and lacking…. It enables us to know what we are about when we act. It converts action that is merely appetitive, blind, and impulsive into intelligent action.” Dewey, J. (1964). Why reflective thinking must be an educational aim. In R. D. Archambault (Ed.), John Dewey on education: Selected writings (pp. 212-228). New York: The Modern Library

  9. Why is Reflection Important?

  10. Some Terms • Artifact – any kind of evidence that demonstrates achievement or growth of a standard. • Reflection – a thoughtful rationale for the artifact and why it is included. • Philosophy Statement – a concise yet thorough statement of beliefs and values concerning teaching and learning.

  11. Resource (Working) Portfolio A collection of unabridged documents, like entire reflective journals or unit plans, that you will gather as you progress through your teacher education program

  12. Presentation Portfolio A coherent, easy-to-navigate expression of your professional competence

  13. Formative Assessment • Assessment used to determine what students have learned in order to plan future instruction; diagnostic; in progress. • Developmental and sequential • Checkpoints • Directed Response Portfolio (DRF) - TaskStream

  14. Summative Assessment • Assessment used to evaluate and document what students have learned; evaluative; final. • Presentation Portfolio

  15. Presentation Portfolio Requirements • Teaching philosophy • Artifacts and Reflections for 10 INTASC principles • Social justice • Resume • Alignment

  16. Artifacts • Types of documents Word documents, video clips (of your teaching), sound bytes, pdf files, spreadsheets, databases, JPEG/GIF images • Kinds of evidence Assignments from coursework, examples of lesson plans/ observations used in field experiences, clip of teaching, examples of student work, things that demonstrate other talents (coaching, theatre, music, etc.)

  17. Resources • TaskStream software • FrontPage • www.homepage.villanova.edu/deborah.schussler/portfolio_links.htm

  18. Examples of Student Portfolios • Go to my homepage www.homepage.villanova.edu/deborah.schussler/portfolio_links.htm • The first four are my students. Jill and Lindsay used TaskStream. Erica and Liz used FrontPage.

  19. Rubric to Assess • http://www10.homepage.villanova.edu/deborah.schussler/EDU%204292/Portfolio_Scoring_Rubric.htm

  20. Questions??

More Related