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"Children are the living messages we send to a time we will not see." ~Neil Postman

Friday, April 12, 2013

Assessments




I think that a child’s progress should be assessed or measured using formative assessment. According to Pearson Education Inc. (2008), “Formative assessment is used to monitor a child’s progress during a series of learning activities.” I think that alternative assessments should be used instead of standardized assessments. Some examples of alternative assessments include: open-ended questions, written compositions, oral presentations, projects, experiments, and portfolios of student work (The George Lucas Educational Foundation, 2013). I think children are more comfortable with alternative assessments than standardized assessments. I say this from experience.   
In Guatemala:
According to Avivara (2008-2012):
There is no generally utilized standardized methods for evaluating student learning in Guatemala. In our observations we have seen that evaluation of student performance is done on a teacher-by-teacher basis with only some connection to the national curriculum standards or academic benchmarks. Grading is more often based on comportment, attendance, and work completion rather than demonstrated understanding of academic concepts.”
I think that there should be some sort of assessment on student progress (academically) added to their grading system.

 
Additionally: (I found this interesting article and thought you, my colleagues, would be interested in it as well) ENJOY!
A Developmental Approach to Assessment of Young Children
Lilian G. Katz
EDO-PS-97-18
April 1997

The Purposes of Assessment
Clarifying the main purpose for which young children are assessed can help determine what kinds of assessments would be most appropriate. Assessment of individual children might serve one of the following purposes:
  • to determine progress on significant developmental achievements;
  • to make placement or promotion decisions;
  • to diagnose learning and teaching problems;
  • to help in instruction and curriculum decisions;
  • to serve as a basis for reporting to parents; and
  • to assist a child with assessing his or her own progress.
Decisions regarding the purposes of assessment should begin with discussions among all the stakeholders—parents, educators, and other members of the community—as appropriate. The group may want to keep in mind that (1) plans, strategies, and assessment instruments are differentially suited for each of the potential purposes of assessment; (2) an overall assessment should include the four categories of educational goals: knowledge, skills, dispositions, and feelings (Katz, 1995); and (3) assessments made during children's informal work and play are most likely to minimize the many potential errors of various assessment strategies.
The Risks of Assessing Young Children
Young children are notoriously poor test-takers: perhaps because they are sometimes confused by being asked questions that they think the tester must already know the answers to! There is reason to suggest that the younger the child being evaluated, assessed, or tested, the more errors are made (Shepard, 1994; Ratcliff, 1995). If this principle is sound, then the younger the children, the greater the risk of assigning false labels to them. Another principle may also be appropriate: the longer children live with a label (a true or false one), the more difficult it may become to discard it.
All methods of assessment make errors: the errors made by formal tests are different from those made by informal or anecdotal records and documentation notes; the errors made by specific checklists of behavioral items are different from those made by holistic impressionistic assessments. Awareness of the potential errors of each evaluation or assessment strategy can help minimize errors in interpretation. It is a good idea to strive for a balance between global or holistic evaluation and detailed specific assessments of young children.
The Assessment of Young Children
As they plan assessments of young children's learning, parents and educators may want to:
Recognize the Limitations of Report Cards and Grades. For several reasons, report cards with letter grades or achievement scores are not appropriate for children at and below the third grade. First, before third grade, the differences in developmental timetables and other factors that contribute to performance are still too unstable, malleable, and varied to achieve reliability. By third grade, however, children's abilities and aptitudes are likely to have stabilized and can be assessed with at least minimal reliability. Second, there is little evidence that grades or scores listed on the report cards of young children contribute positively to those most in need of improvement. Third, while teachers need to know how well a young child is progressing on significant skills and knowledge, and to evaluate such progress, little is known about how parents use such information.
Assess Aspects of Children's Functioning That Have Real Meaning. The items and behaviors assessed should have demonstrable relationships to significant human functioning. For example, the child's knowledge of the names of shapes or of the calendar at age 4 or 5 has little or no practical significance or meaning beyond test performance itself. In addition to assessing young children's social competence, adults should include the assessment of individual children's progress in acquiring desirable dispositions, feelings, skills, and knowledge. Documentation is a strategy for recording and presenting such assessments (see Katz & Chard, 1996).
Encourage Children to Assess Their Own Work. Preschoolers and children in the primary grades can be encouraged to assess their own work according to specific criteria such as the clarity, inclusiveness, interest level, comprehensiveness, or aesthetic qualities of the work. They can also be encouraged to consider the standards to be met on these criteria.
Encourage Children to Assess Their Own Progress. From kindergarten on, most children can be encouraged to assess the general progress of their own learning. During teacher-child or teacher-parent-child conferences, children can be encouraged to indicate what mastery and learning they want to focus on during a given period. From time to time, children can then be asked to judge their own progress, using three or four categories. For example, each child can be asked to discuss work she thinks she is making good progress on, what he thinks he needs to concentrate more on, what she wants help with, and other categories nominated by the child. Most children will be quite realistic and sensible when engaging in such self-evaluation. The teacher can help by expressing her own realistic evaluation in a serious and supportive way. In principle, unless children are consulted about their own views of their own progress, they cannot learn to assume some responsibility for it (Katz, 1995).
Involve Children in Evaluating the Class Community. Depending on their ages, children as a group can be encouraged to develop some criteria concerning what they want their classroom life to be like. These criteria are not simply lists of classroom rules. Rather they should be a thoughtful examination of what kind of community the class should be-for example, the extent to which it is a caring, cooperative group, respectful of individual differences; the extent to which it is a helpful community of scholars; and the extent to which it meets any other dimensions of classroom life the children and their teacher think are important.
Periodically, the teacher or a child can lead the group in a discussion concerning how well they are doing on these criteria as a class, and what additions or modifications of the criteria might be tried. Such discussions should be directed toward the development of positive and constructive suggestions.
Conclusion
Whenever a measurement is applied to a group of people of any age, especially a group that is diverse in background, experience, aptitude, development, culture, language, and interests, some will rank higher and some lower than others on any item assessed. All measures yield such differences, and it is thus statistically impossible for all those subjected to the same assessment to be above average! However, failure to evaluate and assess children's progress might mean that some children will be deprived of needed intervention with special services at a time when these services can do the most good. While educators cannot be accountable for all children being above average or for all children being first, they are accountable for applying all teaching strategies and efforts known to be effective and appropriate for the learning situation at hand. Assessment procedures should therefore indicate which of the strategies and resources available and judged appropriate have been employed to help each individual child.
For More Information
Fogarty, Robin. (Ed.). (1996). Student portfolios: A collection of articles. Palatine, IL: IRI/Skylight Training and Publishing. ED 392 542.
Gaustad, Joan. (1996). Assessment and evaluation in the multiage classroom [Special issue]. OSSC Bulletin, 39(3-4). ED 392 149.
Genishi, Celia. (Ed.). (1992). Ways of assessing children and curriculum: Stories of early childhood practice. New York: Teachers College Press. ED 365 474.
Hills, Tynette W. (1993). Assessment in context--Teachers and children at work. Young Children 48(5), 20-28. EJ 465 919.
Katz, Lilian G. (1995). Talks with teachers of young children: A collection. Norwood, NJ: Ablex. ED 380 232.
Katz, Lilian G., & Chard, Sylvia. (1989). Engaging children's minds: The project approach. Norwood, NJ: Ablex.
Katz, Lilian G., & Chard, Sylvia C. (1996). The contribution of documentation to the quality of early childhood education. ERIC Digest. Urbana, IL: ERIC Clearinghouse on Elementary and Early Childhood Education. ED 393 608.
Martin, Sue. (1996, April). Developmentally appropriate evaluation: Convincing students and teachers of the importance of observation as appropriate evaluation of children. Paper presented at the Association of Childhood Education International Conference, Minneapolis, MN. ED 391 601.
Privett, Nawanna B. (1996). Without fear of failure: The attributes of an ungraded primary school. School Administrator, 53(1), 6-11. EJ 517 823.
Ratcliff, Nancy. (1995). The need for alternative techniques for assessing young children's emerging literacy skills. Contemporary Education, 66(3),169-171. EJ 512 829.
Schattgen, Sharon Ford. (1993, April). Validation of a developmentally appropriate assessment system for early childhood education. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the National Council on Measurement in Education, Atlanta, GA. ED 359 248.
Shepard, Lorrie A. (1994). The challenges of assessing young children appropriately. Phi Delta Kappan, 76(3), 206- 212. EJ 492 843.
SouthEastern Regional Vision for Education. (1995, April). Assessment in early childhood education: Status of the issue. Tallahassee, FL: Author.




References
Avivara (2008-2012). Education in Guatemala. Retrieved from  http://www.avivara.org/aboutguatemala/educationinguatemala.html
The George Lucas Educational Foundation (2013). Retrieved from http://www.edutopia.org/assessment-guide-description
Wortham. Pearson Education, Inc. (2008). Assessment in Early Childhood Education. 5th Edition

2 comments:

  1. Hi Ashley,
    Good post! You have presented current information. Today, with all the new research on assessments I too believe that standardized tests should be replaced by more alternative forms of assessments. In my country standardized tests is currently the common assessment used to test students performance. However,I am hopeful that this will change in the future because many children are not benefiting from this form of assessment.

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  2. Thank you for all of this information. I agree that formative assessments are useful in allowing the teacher to see how she can improve upon her methods and increase student knowledge. You have some really good ideas.

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