Enhancing Instruction with Student Assessment Insights
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Learn the principles, stages, and forms of student assessment to improve instruction outcomes and foster student learning. Discover the importance of varied assessment methods and data utilization.
Enhancing Instruction with Student Assessment Insights
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Presentation Transcript
Using Student Assessment to Improve Instruction Dr. Tim Fry
Objective: • The teacher candidate should become more familiar with the assessment process noting the importance of assessment and how assessment can result in better instruction.
Specifically become more familiar with: • some underlying principles of assessment • things we assess • three categories or stages of assessment • various forms of assessments including alternatives to pencil and paper tests • reasons we assess--including using the data we collect to improve our instruction
Assessments • What? • How? • Why?
How does the teacher know if students are learning? Through Assessments!
Some Underlying Principles of Assessment Include: • Aligned to criteria-objectives and scoring rubrics • More Process than Product • Evidence and Data should come from a variety of sources • Reflection and self assessment are important
What do we assess? • Content and Process Skills • What a student says, does, and writes • Affective and Psychomotor domains
3 Stages or Categories of Assessments • Diagnostic • Formative • Summative
Forms of Assessment (how)include: Tests Discussion Questions Application Exercises Quizzes Performance Assessments Journal Writing Projects Group work Portfolios Oral Exams
Some Reasons We Assess (Why) • Assign grades • Offer feedback to students and parents • Provide new learning experiences • Identify students’ strengths and weaknesses • Get feedback that will guide future instruction
How do you prefer to be assessed? • What is your least preferred way to be assessed? • Any type of assessment more common in your subject area? Possible reasons?
Is assessment important? • How often should we assess? • Should we assess in more than one way? • Will you use assessment to improve your teaching?
“Teaching without learning is just talking” Angelo & Cross (1993) Classroom Assessment Techniques