Wow,
this chapter was full of imperative information for assessing our students.
There were many subtopics of assessment included in this chapter such as
setting correct objectives for the purpose of accurate assessment, evaluation,
portfolios, formative, and summative assessments.
Setting
clear and accurate objectives is something that I do in my classroom to ensure
that I am confident about what is to be taught to my students. I also make sure
that my students know what the objective of each lesson is. I am able to
integrate my objectives for lessons with essential questions and I can statement
for my students. A teacher can make great objectives all day everyday but
assessing those objectives is when the magic happens.
Through
assessment a teacher is able to see where a child needs more help and where a
child can move on. Teachers create small groups and remediation for students by
using formative assessment data. I agree with Jonathan Lindsey’s discussion
post this week, “With formative
assessments, teachers can check for student understanding at any point in the
lesson.” Unlike formative assessment, summative assessment is
used to determine a student’s final knowledge of the content and skills. Summative
assessments can be done through county and state standardized testing or can be
done through classroom or school-wide common assessments. I agree with the
author about summative assessment results and how they provide a great way for
a teacher to reflect on what he or she can do better for the upcoming year
(Slavin, 2012, p.410). Last year was my first year teaching an actual grade
level as opposed to my previous year doing pre-k. Although my second graders
did not have to take the Georgia Milestone test, they did have county wide
assessments and the data that I received from those assessments have really
helped me in planning for this upcoming year.
When
reading this chapter one thing that I learned about more are portfolios. Although
I had a portfolio while in undergraduate classes, I never thought to use it
with my second graders. A portfolio allows teachers, students, and parents to
see what has been learned by the child over the year and it can help the
parents determine what help their child can use during the summer break. Slavin
(2012) stated, “You may collect student compositions, projects and other
evidence of higher-order functioning and use this evidence to evaluate student
progress over time” (p.430). I do believe that I will start using portfolios as
a great tool to set goals with my students and as a great way to communicate
the child’s advances during parent-teacher conferences.
The
last major subtopic that I would like to discuss is the opportunity for
feedback from assessment results. Whether the data be constructed from
formative or summative assessments, feedback is imperative to the future
success of the student, teacher, and classroom. Slavin (2012) stated, “It is
important to have a clear and objective set of criteria that student work is
compared with so students can see exactly why they scored as they did” (p.412).
Providing rubrics and explaining the rubric prior to the assignment being given,
is a great way for the children to know the expectations and goals that they
should set in completing the assignment.
It is evident through the readings, discussions, and my personal experiences teaching, that assessment is important for teachers, students, schools, parents, and districts, because it allows us to reflect on how we can better teach and allows the students an opportunity to see what they need to work towards as a learner. One question that I do have is, if through the district and school level teachers are verified as meeting and exceeding the expectations of teaching and learning through assessment and observation measures, then is it so imperative to subject our students to state assessments as well? Are we doing harm in the long –run by requiring that students take these state tests?
It is evident through the readings, discussions, and my personal experiences teaching, that assessment is important for teachers, students, schools, parents, and districts, because it allows us to reflect on how we can better teach and allows the students an opportunity to see what they need to work towards as a learner. One question that I do have is, if through the district and school level teachers are verified as meeting and exceeding the expectations of teaching and learning through assessment and observation measures, then is it so imperative to subject our students to state assessments as well? Are we doing harm in the long –run by requiring that students take these state tests?
Reference
Slavin, R.E. (2012). Educational psychology: Theory and practice (10th ed.). Boston:Pearson.
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