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CLASSROOM ASSESSMENT AND STUDENT LEARNING

Classroom Assessment and Student Learning

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Classroom Assessment and Student Learning. Prepared by M.A. Sana Yousif Ahmed College of Languages English Department Evening Classes. What do we mean by the word Assessment ?. Classroom assessment is among an instructor’s most essential educational tools. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Classroom  Assessment and Student Learning

CLASSROOM ASSESSMENT

ANDSTUDENT LEARNING

Page 2: Classroom  Assessment and Student Learning

Prepared by

M.A. Sana Yousif AhmedCollege of LanguagesEnglish Department

Evening Classes

Page 3: Classroom  Assessment and Student Learning

What do we mean by the word Assessment?

Page 4: Classroom  Assessment and Student Learning

Classroom assessment is among an instructor’s most essential educational tools.

When properly developed and interpreted, assessments can help teachers better understand what their students are learning.

Page 5: Classroom  Assessment and Student Learning

We typically assess student learning in terms of their grades on quizzes, tests, and papers. But this kind of assessment comes too late—it gives us no chance to adjust our teaching in order to improve students’ content mastery or skills.

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Therefore we need to follow the following

principles:

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Principle 1: Assessment should be linked to our learning objectives.

To properly assess student learning, you need to know what you want your class to accomplish: The content you wish to convey and the skills you want to nurture.

Page 8: Classroom  Assessment and Student Learning

Principle 2: Assessment requires an instructor to be highly specific about what outcomes to assess.

You need to spell out objectives that are clear and precise, and not vague or allusive.

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Principle 3: The objectives need to be student-focused rather than instructor-focused.

Focus on the learning resulting from an activity rather than on the activity that you assign.

Page 10: Classroom  Assessment and Student Learning

What are Assessment Strategies?

Page 11: Classroom  Assessment and Student Learning

Designing informative assessments requires strategic planning and a clear understanding of one’s assessment goals. What needs to be assessed and why?

Page 12: Classroom  Assessment and Student Learning

When planning instructional strategies, teachers need to:

• Keep learning goals in mind• Consider assessment

strategies• Determine what would

constitute evidence that students have reached the learning goals

Page 13: Classroom  Assessment and Student Learning

“Real-Time” Assessment

If we are serious about enhancing student learning, we want to know what content and skills students have mastered and which they are struggling with.

Here are some ways you can assess student learning in “real time” so that you can adjust your teaching to student needs:

Page 14: Classroom  Assessment and Student Learning

1. Observation

You can learn a lot just by watching students at work. Break them into small groups and give them a problem and see how they grapple with it.

Page 15: Classroom  Assessment and Student Learning

2. Think Aloud

Give students a problem and have them articulate what they are thinking as they attempt to solve it.

Page 16: Classroom  Assessment and Student Learning

3. Diagnostics A “one minute” paper

or a problem or a quiz can offer an efficient way to diagnose student strengths and deficiencies.

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4. A Survey A survey allows

students to speak for themselves and assess their own areas of competence and deficiency.

Page 18: Classroom  Assessment and Student Learning

To get the most out of assessments, you need to know how to choose the right one for each situation, and how to make that test as effective as possible. A poorly chosen or poorly developed assessment will fail to provide useful evidence about student learning. It could even provide misleading information. Only with good, properly chosen assessments will teachers gather evidence of what their students have learned.

Page 19: Classroom  Assessment and Student Learning

You can begin to create a process for developing and using classroom assessments by asking the following basic but essential questions:

• What am I trying to find out about my students’ learning? What learning goals or outcomes do I want to measure?

• What kind of evidence do I need to show that my students have achieved the goals that I’m trying to measure?

• What kind of assessment will give me that evidence?

Page 20: Classroom  Assessment and Student Learning

TIPS FOR PLANNING GOOD ASSESSMENTS

1. Have the purpose of the test clearly in mind.

2. Determine what type of assessment would be most appropriate for the situation based on the nature of what you are teaching, the purpose of the instruction, and what you want to measure.

Page 21: Classroom  Assessment and Student Learning

3. If the purpose of the assessment is to determine how well students have mastered a particular unit of study, make sure the test parallels the work covered in class.

4. Subtests should yield separate scores.

5. If the major purpose of the test is to rank a selected group of students in order of their achievement, the questions should cover critical points of learning. The questions should challenge students to do more than memorize and recall facts.

Page 22: Classroom  Assessment and Student Learning

6. Focus on assessing the most important and meaningful information rather than small, irrelevant facts. For example, after students read a passage about nutrition,

rather than asking a comprehension question such as,“How many vitamins are essential for humans? A. 7; B. 13; C. 15; D. 23,” consider asking,“Name at least seven vitamins that are essential for humans and explain why they are essential.”

7. Never use questions on inconsequential details just to trick students.

Page 23: Classroom  Assessment and Student Learning

What are Assessment

benefits?

Page 24: Classroom  Assessment and Student Learning

By providing the means to gather evidence about what students know and can do, classroom assessment can help teachers to

Page 25: Classroom  Assessment and Student Learning

• Identify students’ strengths and weaknesses

• Monitor student learning and progress

• Plan and conduct instruction

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• Is the bond that holds teaching and learning together

• Allows educators to monitor teaching effectiveness and student learning

• Can motivate and shape learning and instruction

• Can help students improve their own performances