Evaluating Student Work in a Standards-based Framework.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Planning for Learning and Teaching, Assessment and Moderation
Advertisements

School Based Assessment and Reporting Unit Curriculum Directorate
© Myra Young Assessment All rights reserved. Provided for the use of participants in AM circles in North Lanarkshire Council.
K-6 Science and Technology Consistent teaching – Assessing K-6 Science and Technology © 2006 Curriculum K-12 Directorate, NSW Department of Education and.
Consistency of Teacher Judgement
[Insert faculty Banner] Consistency of Assessment
Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority
You can use this presentation to: Gain an overall understanding of the purpose of the revised tool Learn about the changes that have been made Find advice.
Moderation as part of learning, teaching and assessment Transforming lives through learning George M Sinclair.
Learning Outcomes, Authentic Assessments and Rubrics Erin Hagar
[Insert faculty Banner] Consistency of Assessment
Designing Scoring Rubrics. What is a Rubric? Guidelines by which a product is judged Guidelines by which a product is judged Explain the standards for.
Assessment The purpose of this workshop / discussion is to extend further teachers’ understanding of the Department's Assessment Advice. This workshop.
Assessment in the MYP CENTURY MIDDLE SCHOOL. What is Assessment? Assessment is integral to all teaching and learning. MYP assessment requires teachers.
Developing Rubrics Presented by Frank H. Osborne, Ph. D. © 2015 EMSE 3123 Math and Science in Education 1.
Assessment Professional Learning Module 2: Assessment OF Learning.
ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education Rubrics “You need to learn what rubrics are and how they can help you do a better job.
Aim to provide key guidance on assessment practice and translate this into writing assignments.
Consistency of Teacher Judgement Human Society and Its Environment 7-10 © 2007 Curriculum K-12 Directorate, NSW Department of Education and Training.
How well did the assessment task do what we wanted it to do? Janina Drazek Manager — Assessment & Comparability, QCAR Queensland Studies Authority.
Assessment in the Middle Years Programme. How are students assessed? The MYP offers a criterion-related model of assessment. This means that students'
Consistency of Assessment
Dr. Robert Mayes University of Wyoming Science and Mathematics Teaching Center
Implementing Mathematics K-6 Using the syllabus for consistency of teacher judgement © 2006 Curriculum K-12 Directorate, NSW Department of Education and.
Ensuring Quality and Effective Staff Professional Development to Increase Learning for ALL Students.
Consistency of assessment Technology subjects (7-12)
Credit to Thomas R. Guskey. Systemic Change  Change is a highly complex process  Professional development is essential.
ASSESSMENT& EVALUATION Assessment is an integral part of teaching. Observation is your key assessment tool in the primary and junior grades.
Enhancing assessment capacity For teachers of Authority and Authority-registered subjects.
Richards Middle School Columbus, Georgia
Performance Descriptors Consultation October 2014 Summary.
Overall Teacher Judgements
PDHPE K-6 Using the syllabus for consistency of assessment © 2006 Curriculum K-12 Directorate, NSW Department of Education and Training.
Enabling learning and assessment Unit 3 – Week 1.
Classroom Assessments Checklists, Rating Scales, and Rubrics
Classroom Assessment A Practical Guide for Educators by Craig A
Using Rubrics as a Means of Performance Assessment Sarah Miller FDN 5560, Spring 2005 Click HERE to return to the DocumentationHERE.
Berry Spring Primary School Year 5/6 AITSL Standard 5: Assess, provide feedback and report on student learning Stacey Price s June 2014.
Workshop 3 Early career teacher induction: Literacy middle years Workshop 3 Literacy teaching and NSW syllabus 1.
Measuring Complex Achievement
Alternative Assessment
Workshops to support the implementation of the new languages syllabuses in Years 7-10.
Performance-Based Assessment HPHE 3150 Dr. Ayers.
PORTFOLIO ASSESSMENT OVERVIEW Introduction  Alternative and performance-based assessment  Characteristics of performance-based assessment  Portfolio.
Developing competition briefs CPD2d How to use this resource: To develop and enhance skills in the design and assessment of skills competition briefs for.
Assessment and Testing
Session 4 Performance-Based Assessment
Assessment Information from multiple sources that describes a student’s level of achievement Used to make educational decisions about students Gives feedback.
Implementing Effective Assessment Adapted from a lecture given by Damian Cooper (in Dufferin-Peel 2011)
National Standards in Reading & Writing Sources : NZ Ministry of Education websites. G Thomas, J Turner.
The Achievement Chart Mathematics Grades Note to Presenter:
1 Assessment. 2  Formative assessment – assessment for learning  Summative assessment – assessment of learning.
Moderation and Validation of Teacher Judgements in School.
Assessing Student Learning Workshop 2: Making on-balance judgements and building consistency.
OCTOBER 2014 CONSULTATION ON PERFORMANCE DESCRIPTORS INTRODUCATION Curriculum and Assessment.
Assessment without levels. Why remove levels?  levels were used as thresholds and teaching became focused on getting pupils across the next threshold.
ASSESSMENT and EVALUATION (seeing through the jargon and figuring out how to use the tools)
Dr Jane Tonge Senior Examiner
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION AND TRAINING DET Staff Site.
Designing Quality Assessment and Rubrics
Alignment between Pedagogy and Assessment Dr. Christine Tom Griffith University.
Designing Scoring Rubrics
Classroom Assessments Checklists, Rating Scales, and Rubrics
C H A P T E R 3 Rubrics Chapter 3 Rubrics.
School – Based Assessment – Framework
Classroom Assessment A Practical Guide for Educators by Craig A
CEA Case Study Marianne Farrugia.
Classroom Assessments Checklists, Rating Scales, and Rubrics
Consistency of Teacher Judgement
Developing Instructional rubrics
Presentation transcript:

Evaluating Student Work in a Standards-based Framework

In a good assessment task there is an effective interplay of three simple elements  What is taught/learnt (curriculum intent)  What is assessed (knowledge/skills/etc in the domain being sampled)  What is rewarded (performance on the criteria set down in the marking scheme) IMPLICATIONS FOR TEACHERS: unit plans are designed simultaneously with summative assessment tasks and their accompanying marking criteria

Types of assessment structures Rubrics or matrices: used to measure student performance against a pre-determined set of criteria Grading masters: similar to a rubric but contain the necessary features to make an holistic judgement from ‘rich’ or ‘authentic’ tasks. GTMJ or “guide to making judgments: a combination of the above two that is deigned to ensure greater alignment with curriculum

Essential elements of any assessment structure Criteria (‘what counts’): clear and explicit for the types of evidence students will produce (note: syllabus outcomes are not assessment criteria) Levels of performance/achievement Standards descriptors: sufficient and clear enough to provide advice to students (and other assessors) for making judgements

What to avoid in a grading tool Beware atomism and complicated matrices that result in  fine grained outcomes statements  marking schema with lots of cells containing too many superfluous words …as that tend to reduce the multidimensionality of complex tasks. Increasing the number of criteria and levels of achievement (LoA) increases error because judgements become finer.

Basic Rubric/Matrix BESTWORST CRITERIA LoA STANDARDS DESCIPTORS

Positive aspects of rubrics Rubrics help ensure that assessment is criteria-based and that standards are transparent and explicit and, the format is familiar for most intended audiences. However, the simplicity of the matrix format can disguise real complexities in its design and use

Problems with rubrics 1.The traditional matrix format requires the number of significant and discernible differences used in judging quality be the same for all criteria  ‘manufacturing’ distinctions in quality where they may not exist  obfuscating standards, biasing grades and making discussion of standards more difficult 2.formats require the ‘quantum’ of achievement between adjacent standards descriptors is also the same (or close to it), i.e. the gap between each LoA is the same  results are biased if standards descriptors do not have this quantum property

Problems with rubrics (cont’d) 3. A matrix requires teachers to commit to a single description for each cell. This can be seen as counterproductive in that it tends to reduce the multidimensionality of complex tasks designed to measure a range of knowledges, skills and dispositions. Removing the matrix frees up the psychology of the assessment process and teacher’s interest shifts from the grade per se.

An Alternative Model THE GRADING MASTER

Standards descriptors are positioned along a continuum (‘pole’) – this allows the number of standards and their placements to vary for each criterion Teachers can plot a student’s performance on each of the criteria before making an on balance judgement to arrive at the overall grade (it is also possible give feedback to students and report on performances on each pole separately).

THE GRADING MASTER Is a preferred tool for making holistic judgements of students work. This is due to its fundamental structure: Each pole captures a desired quality of performance (criteria). Each pole represents a continuum of standards (and then assessors’ judgements) Positioning standards descriptors along a continuum allows the number of standards to vary from criterion to criterion, as can their relative placements.

USING THE GRADING MASTER Teacher-assessors plot a student’s performance on each of the criteria on the corresponding pole before making an on-balance judgement to arrive at the overall grade.

USING THE GRADING MASTER When making an ‘on-balance’ judgement teachers consider each pole but also look across the poles to ascertain the region or vicinity where the student work is best placed. They are not looking for a precise location, instead they are using the regions to reach a holistic judgement. The final consideration is then given to what grade to award the student work.

MAKING AN HOLISTIC JUDGEMENT  This is reached when teachers make judgements across several criteria, trading off inconsistencies.  They are looking for evidence of quality of performance, as they are manifested in the tasks, and then award a grade.  Teachers use their professional knowledge in decision making. They must be well informed of curriculum intent and the desirable intellectual strategies used in the completion of the task (pedagogy).

The next evolution THE GUIDE TO MAKING JUDGMENTS

SOCIAL MODERATION Apart from improving consistency in evaluating student work, social moderation enhances quality assurance of teacher built assessment tasks. Social moderation of student work increases teachers’ understanding of standards and provides a professional learning forum for designing and evaluating quality assessment tasks..