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Assessment & Evaluation. Kate Bain English Language Fellow ktbain53@gmail.com www.elfellowkbain.wordpress.com. Sources. Brown, H.D. (2004). Language assessment: Principles and classroom practices. White Plains, NY: Pearson Education, Inc.
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Assessment & Evaluation Kate Bain English Language Fellow ktbain53@gmail.com www.elfellowkbain.wordpress.com
Sources • Brown, H.D. (2004). Language assessment: Principles and classroom practices. WhitePlains, NY: Pearson Education, Inc. • Gottleib, M. H. (2006). Assessing English Language Learners: Bridges from language proficiency to academic achievement. Thousand Oaks, California: Corwin Press.
Objectives: • Analyze theoretical and practical principles of authentic, fair, and appropriate methods of formative and summative assessment. • Appreciate the crucial role that assessment plays in improving instruction and improving educational programs. • Consider how to design and implement assessment tools and analyze results to make recommendations for improved instruction based on results.
Make a list of all the different types of tests you have taken or given as a student or a teacher.
What is a “Test?” • Webster: “a critical examination, observation, or evaluation” http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/test • Longman: “a set of questions, exercises, or practical activities to measure someone's skill, ability, or knowledge” http://www.ldoceonline.com/dictionary/test_1 • H. Douglas Brown: “a method of measuring a person’s ability, knowledge, or performance in a given domain.” (Brown, 2004, p. 3)
A Closer Look • “a method of measuring a person’s ability, knowledge, or performance in a given domain.” (Brown, 2004, p. 3)
Method • a test by nature must have structure and have explicitly correct answers scored in a certain way • multiple choice with a correct answer or answers • a writing prompt with a set and known rubric (Brown, 2004)
Measure • In order for a test to truly be a test, it must have a measureable outcome • The test-taker and the test-giver must know what success or failure on the test entail, and the results must be communicated. (Brown, 2004)
Performance • The test itself truly assesses a person’s performance of a task on a given day. The results of the test or a series of tests implies the person’s knowledge or competence in a given subject. (Brown, 2004)
What is Assessment? Assessment is “an ongoing process that encompasses a much wider domain [than a test]. Whenever a student responds to a question, offers a comment, or tries out a new word or structure, the teacher subconsciously makes an assessment of the student’s performance.” (Brown, 2004, p. 5)
How is “assessment” different from “testing”? • Tests are a type of assessment, but they should never be the entire basis for how you determine a student’s level or progress. • Assessments are ongoing, daily, subconscious or conscious observations and records that you make about student progress. These observations should be constant and should drive what you do as a teacher. (Brown, 2004)
Informal and Formal Assessment Informal Assessment Formal Assessment • Unplanned observations and general feedback • Good job! • Did you say “can” or “can’t”? • • Planned classroom activities in which students perform tasks but do not receive final grades on performance • Think-Pair-Share • Dialogues • Essay or Journal Writing • Note-taking • Group or Partner Work • Activities in class that you give to students for which they receive graded feedback • Tests • Rubric-Scored Assignments • Writing portfolio • Presentations • Journal Entries • Notes • Performances • Projects • Posters (Brown, 2004)
Formative and Summative Assessment Formative Assessment Summative Assessment • Daily classroom assessment used to plan for, modify, and improve instruction • Feedback that helps the teacher and the student make plans to improve language competence in the future • Informal Assessment should always be formative, aimed at improving a student’s competence and performance • Measures or summarizes what a student has learned over a given period of time • Unit Tests • Midterm Exams • Final exams • Entrance Exams • Professional Language Tests (Brown, 2004)
How can you help your students to view summative assessments in formative ways?
Norm-Referenced and Criterion-Referenced Tests Norm-Referenced Tests Criterion-Referenced Tests • Mean • Median • Standard Deviation • Percentile Rank • SAT/TOEFL • Graded Feedback • Meeting of language or course objectives • Classroom Tests connected to a curriculum (Brown, 2004)
Current issues in classroom testing: Traditional and Authentic assessment Traditional Assessment Authentic Assessment • One-shot, Standardized Exams • Timed, multiple-choice format • decontextualized test items • Scores are feedback • Norm-referenced scores • One correct answer • Summative • Oriented to product • Non-interactive • Extrinsic motivation • Continuous long-term assessment • Untimes, free-response • Contextualized communicative tasks • Individualized feedback • Criterion-referenced scores • Formative • Oriented to process • Interactive performance • Intrinsic motivation (Brown, 2004, p. 13)
Group Work Exercises! • Do you agree with this depiction? Why or why not? • Where do these fit? • choral drill • pair pronunciation • reading aloud • singing songs • writing a description of the weekend assessment testing teaching (Brown, 2004)
Sort Activities into a category • placement tests • diagnostic tests • periodic achievement tests • short pop quizzes • final exams • portfolios • journals • speeches • oral presentations • impromptu student responses • student-written response • drafting and revising • final essays • whole class discussion • observing as students work in groups or pairs (Brown, 2004)
Gardner’s Eight Intelligences • Choose one or two • Brainstorm teaching activities for each • Brainstorm assessment activities for each • Share with the group (Brown, 2004)
Brainstorm advantages and disadvantages of each and share with the class Traditional Assessment Authentic Assessment • One-shot, Standardized Exams • Timed, multiple-choice format • decontextualized test items • Scores are feedback • Norm-referenced scores • One correct answer • Summative • Oriented to product • Non-interactive • Extrinsic motivation • Continuous long-term assessment • Untimed, free-response • Contextualized communicative tasks • Individualized feedback • Criterion-referenced scores • Formative • Oriented to process • Interactive performance • Intrinsic motivation (Brown, 2004, p. 13)
Sources • Brown, H.D. (2004). Language assessment: Principles and classroom practices. WhitePlains, NY: Pearson Education, Inc. • Gottleib, M. H. (2006). Assessing English Language Learners: Bridges from language proficiency to academic achievement. Thousand Oaks, California: Corwin Press.