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Chapter 6: High-Leverage Practice 1: Formative Evaluation.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 6: High-Leverage Practice 1: Formative Evaluation."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 6: High-Leverage Practice 1: Formative Evaluation

2 Formative Evaluation: What is it? Ongoing collection and use of information to evaluate effectiveness of instructional implementations, and to determine whether instructional adaptations are necessary https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=--EXLnXORIU

3 Formative Evaluation: What is it? Can be contrasted with summative evaluation: Summative - Information is gathered to judge student outcomes Formative – information is gathered to evaluate and modify instruction http://youtu.be/jrSWhH5fCj8

4 Formative Evaluation: For Whom is it Intended? Students of all ages and in a wide range of content areas and curricula Useful in evaluating effectiveness of curricular innovations https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zRamb5j37bQ

5 Formative Evaluation: How Does it Work? 1.Specific subskill mastery measurement (mastery measurement) Task-analytic approach in which a competency is broken down into subskills that are arranged in a hierarchical order 2.General Outcome measurement 1.Focuses on global outcomes or desired terminal behaviors 2.Progress assessed by repeatedly sampling performance on probes that represent global outcome or desired terminal behavior

6 Formative Evaluation: How Does it Work? Four prominent, specific approaches: 1.Curriculum-based assessment (CBA) 2.Curriculum-based measurement (CBM) 3.Portfolio assessment 4.Performance assessment

7 Formative Evaluation: How Does it Work? CBA Observation and recording of student performance in a local curriculum to gather information to make instructional decisions Clearest example is a mastery measurement approach to assessment Teacher designs test material on the basis of a task analysis Students are pretested before instruction to determine which skills have not yet been mastered These subskills form the core of the curriculum As instruction occurs, students repeatedly measured on selected subskills using alternative test forms

8 Formative Evaluation: How Does it Work? CBM A progress monitoring system in which student performance is measured repeatedly (e.g. once or twice per week) with test materials that represent an entire curricular domain rather than sub-components of the domain Clearest example is a general outcome measurement approach Progress is assessed in a continuous way throughout an instructional program or academic year using measures that are valid and reliable indicators of student performance Teachers examine rate of student improvement to determine instructional effectiveness

9 Formative Evaluation: How Does it Work? Portfolio and Performance assessment Portfolio assessment –collection of student work demonstrating what a student has done and, by inference, what a student can do Performance evaluated on basis of an ongoing collection of student works judged by the teacher to be important indicators of outcomes of learning activities Performance assessment – emphasizes use of a direct measure of student performance in real or simulated situations Frequency of portfolio collection and how they are collected is determined by the teacher

10 Formative Evaluation: Adequacy of the Research Knowledge Base Two components contribute to its effectiveness in promoting student achievement 1.Creating Rules for Data use 1.Result in greater gains 2.Graphing 1.Leads to greater student achievement gains

11 Formative Evaluation: How Practical is it? Requirements extra time and effort on the part of the teacher ongoing data collection some development of measurement materials and procedures All but CBM require considerable amount of on-site resource development Portfolio and performance require identification of desired long-range goals and tasks that reflect performance on those goals

12 Formative Evaluation: How Practical is it? CBA requires development of a hierarchy of skills and measures to assess those skills CBM requires: Teacher development of alternative assessment probes representative of the desired general outcome Teachers must graph student progress and use it to make instructional decisions


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