2013 SRI International - Company Confidential and Proprietary
Information Center for Technology in Learning SRI International NSF
Showcase 2014 SIGCSE Conference Atlanta, GA Eric Snow & Marie
Bienkowski Principal Investigators
Slide 2
2013 SRI International - Company Confidential and Proprietary
Information How can we improve CS teaching, learning, and adoption
through evidence- centered assessment?
Slide 3
2013 SRI International - Company Confidential and Proprietary
Information PACT Project Goals I Develop valid and reliable
assessments of computational thinking practices Aid in the adoption
of high school computer science courses through assessments that
stakeholders recognize as useful boundary objects
Slide 4
2013 SRI International - Company Confidential and Proprietary
Information PACT Project Goals II Create design patterns for
computational thinking practices that can be used to develop new
assessments as curriculum evolves Create and field test assessments
for Exploring Computer Science (ECS)
Slide 5
2013 SRI International - Company Confidential and Proprietary
Information
Slide 6
Slide 7
Evidence-Centered Assessment Design (ECD) What complex of
knowledge, skills, or other attributes should be assessed? What
behaviors or performances should reveal those constructs? What
tasks or situations should elicit those behaviors?
Slide 8
2013 SRI International - Company Confidential and Proprietary
Information From Mislevy & Riconscente, 2006 Assessment
Delivery Students interact with tasks, performances evaluated,
feedback created. Four- process delivery architecture. Assessment
Implementation Conceptual Assessment Framework Domain Modeling
Domain Analysis What is important about this domain? What work and
situations are central in this domain? What KRs are central to this
domain? What is important about this domain? What work and
situations are central in this domain? What KRs are central to this
domain? How do we represent key aspects of the domain in terms of
assessment argument. Conceptualization. Design structures: Student,
evidence, and task models. Generativity. Manufacturing nuts &
bolts: authoring tasks, automated scoring details, statistical
models. Reusability.
Slide 9
2013 SRI International - Company Confidential and Proprietary
Information Computational Thinking Practices Non- Cognitive Skills
Inquiry Skills CS Concepts
Slide 10
2013 SRI International - Company Confidential and Proprietary
Information Computational Thinking Practices Example CS Concepts
Example Inquiry Skills Example Non-Cognitive Skills
AlgorithmsEvaluate Communication ProgrammingExplore
Teamwork/collaboration RecursionAnalyze Leadership
AbstractionExplain Self-efficacy Debugging / TestingElaborate
Persistence VariablesModel Organization Integration
Slide 11
2013 SRI International - Company Confidential and Proprietary
Information PACT Project Accomplishments I Aligned Exploring
Computer Science lesson objectives to CSTA, NETS, Common Core, and
state science and CTE standards Defined computational thinking
practices (CTP) and focal knowledge, skills, and abilities (FKSAs)
that constitute them
Slide 12
2013 SRI International - Company Confidential and Proprietary
Information PACT Project Accomplishments II Developed and applied
CTP design patterns to guide the development of assessments for ECS
Field testing assessments for ECS Units 1-4, and a summative
assessment Conducting think aloud interviews with ECS students
Slide 13
2013 SRI International - Company Confidential and Proprietary
Information Menlo Park Headquarters SRI International 333
Ravenswood Avenue Menlo Park, CA 94025-3493 650.859.2000
Washington, D.C. SRI International 1100 Wilson Blvd., Suite 2800
Arlington, VA 22209-3915 703.524.2053 Additional U.S. and
international locations www.sri.com Thank You! 2012 Principled
Assessment of Computational Thinking (PACT). Produced by the Center
for Technology in Learning at SRI International with support from
the National Science Foundation under contract numbers, CNS-1132232
and CNS-1240625 and CNS-0943507 to the University of Oregon. Any
opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed are
those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of
the National Science Foundation.