| In the 1990's, educational reformers are seeking answers to two fundamental questions:
(1) How well are students learning? and (2) How effectively are teachers teaching?
Classroom Research and Classroom Assessment respond directly to concerns about better
learning and more effective teaching. Classroom Research was developed to encourage
college teachers to become more systematic and sensitive observers of learning as it
takes place every day in their classrooms. Faculty have an exceptional opportunity to
use their classrooms as laboratories for the study of learning and through such study to
develop a better understanding of the learning process and the impact of their teaching
upon it. Classroom Assessment, a major component of Classroom Research, involves
student and teachers in the continuous monitoring of students' learning. It provides
faculty with feedback about their effectiveness as teachers, and it gives students a
measure of their progress as learners. Most important, because Classroom Assessments
are created, administered, and analyzed by teachers themselves on questions of teaching
and learning that are important to them, the likelihood that instructors will apply the
results of the assessment to their own teaching is greatly enhances.
Through close observation of students in the process of learning, the collection of
frequent feedback on students' learning, and the design of modest classroom experiments,
teachers can learn much about how students learn and, more specifically, how students
respond to particular teaching approaches. Classroom Assessment helps individual
college teachers obtain useful feedback on what, how much, and how well their students
are learning. Faculty can then use this information to refocus their teaching to help
students make their learning more efficient and more effective.
College instructors who have assumed that their students were learning what they were
trying to teach them are regularly faced with disappointing evidence to the contrary
when they grade tests and term papers. Too often, students have not learned as much or
as well as was expected. There are gaps, sometimes considerable ones, between what was
taught and what has been learned. By the time faculty notice these gaps in knowledge
or understanding, it is frequently too late to remedy the problems.
To avoid such unhappy surprises, faculty and students need better ways to monitor
learning throughout the semester. Specifically, teachers need a continuous flow of
accurate information on student learning. For example, if a teacher's goal is to help
students learn points "A" through "Z" during the course, then that teacher needs first
to know whether all students are really starting at point "A" and, as the course
proceeds, whether they have reached intermediate points "B," "G," "L," "R," "W," and so
on. To ensure high-quality learning, it is not enough to test students when the
syllabus has arrived at points "M" and "Z." Classroom Assessment is particularly
useful for checking how well students are learning at those initial and intermediate
points, and for providing information for improvement when learning is less than
satisfactory.
Through practice in Classroom Assessment, faculty become better able to understand and
promote learning, and increase their ability to help the students themselves become
more effective, self-assessing, self-directed learners. Simply put, the central
purpose of Classroom Assessment is to empower both teachers and their students to
improve the quality of learning in the classroom.
Classroom Assessment is an approach designed to help teachers find out what students
are learning in the classroom and how well they are learning it. This approach has
the following characteristics:
- Learner-Centered
Classroom Assessment focuses the primary attention of teachers and students on
observing and improving learning, rather than on observing and improving teaching.
Classroom Assessment can provide information to guide teachers and students in making
adjustments to improve learning.
- Teacher-Directed
Classroom Assessment respects the autonomy, academic freedom, and professional
judgement of college faculty. The individual teacher decides what to assess, how to
assess, and how to respond to the information gained through the assessment. Also,
the teacher is not obliged to share the result of Classroom Assessment with anyone
outside the classroom.
- Mutually Beneficial
Because it is focused on learning, Classroom Assessment requires the active
participation of students. By cooperating in assessment, students reinforce their
grasp of the course content and strengthen their own skills at self-assessment. Their
motivation is increased when they realize that faculty are interested and invested in
their success as learners. Faculty also sharpen their teaching focus by continually
asking themselves three questions: "What are the essential skills and knowledge I am
trying to Teach?" "How can I find out whether students are learning them?" "How can I
help students learn better?" As teachers work closely with students to answer these
questions, they improve their teaching skills and gain new insights.
- Formative
Classroom Assessment's purpose is to improve the quality of student learning, not to
provide evidence for evaluating or grading students. The assessment is almost never
graded and are almost always anonymous.
- Context-Specific
Classroom Assessments have to respond to the particular needs and characteristics of
the teachers, students, and disciplines to which they are applied. What works well in
one class will not necessary work in another.
- Ongoing
Classroom Assessment is an ongoing process, best thought of as the creating and
maintenance of a classroom "feedback loop." By using a number of simple Classroom
Assessment Techniques that are quick and easy to use, teachers get feedback from
students on their learning. Faculty then complete the loop by providing students with
feedback on the results of the assessment and suggestions for improving learning. To
check on the usefulness of their suggestions, faculty use Classroom Assessment again,
continuing the "feedback loop." As the approach becomes integrated into everyday
classroom activities, the communications loop connecting faculty and students -- and
teaching and learning -- becomes more efficient and more effective.
- Rooted in Good Teaching Practice
Classroom Assessment is an attempt to build on existing good practice by making
feedback on students' learning more systematic, more flexible, and more effective.
Teachers already ask questions, react to students' questions, monitor body language
and facial expressions, read homework and tests, and so on. Classroom Assessment
provides a way to integrate assessment systematically and seamlessly into the
traditional classroom teaching and learning process
As they are teaching, faculty monitor and react to student questions, comments, body
language, and facial expressions in an almost automatic fashion. This "automatic"
information gathering and impression formation is a subconscious and implicit process.
Teachers depend heavily on their impressions of student learning and make important
judgments based on them, but they rarely make those informal assessments explicit or
check them against the students' own impressions or ability to perform. In the course
of teaching, college faculty assume a great deal about their students' learning, but
most of their assumptions remain untested.
Even when college teachers routinely gather potentially useful information on student
learning through questions, quizzes, homework, and exams, it is often collected too
late -- at least from the students' perspective - to affect their learning. In
practice, it is very difficult to "de-program" students who are used to thinking of
anything they have been tested and graded on as being "over and done with."
Consequently, the most effective times to assess and provide feedback are before the
chapter tests or the midterm an final examinations. Classroom Assessment aims at
providing that early feedback.
Classroom Assessment is based on seven assumptions:
- The quality of student learning is directly, although not exclusively,
related to the quality of teaching. Therefore, one of the most promising ways
to improve learning is to improve teaching.
- To improve their effectiveness, teachers need first to make their goals and
objectives explicit and then to get specific, comprehensible feedback on the
extent to which they are achieving those goals and objectives.
- To improve their learning, students need to receive appropriate and focused
feedback early and often; they also need to learn how to assess their own learning.
- The type of assessment most likely to improve teaching and learning is that
conducted by faculty to answer questions they themselves have formulated in
response to issues or problems in their own teaching.
- Systematic inquiry and intellectual challenge are powerful sources of
motivation, growth, and renewal for college teachers, and Classroom Assessment
can provide such challenge.
- Classroom Assessment does not require specialized training; it can be
carried out by dedicated teachers from all disciplines.
- By collaborating with colleagues and actively involving students in
Classroom Assessment efforts, faculty (and students) enhance learning and
personal satisfaction.
To begin Classroom Assessment it is recommended that only one or two of the simplest
Classroom Assessment Techniques are tried in only one class. In this way very little
planning or preparation time and energy of the teacher and students is risked. In most
cases, trying out a simple Classroom Assessment Technique will require only five to ten
minutes of class time and less than an hour of time out of class. After trying one or
two quick assessments, the decision as to whether this approach is worth further
investments of time and energy can be made. This process of starting small involves
three steps:
- Step 1: Planning
- Select one, and only one, of your classes in which to try out the
Classroom Assessment. Decide on the class meeting and select a Classroom
Assessment Technique. Choose a simple and quick one.
- Step 2: Implementing
- Make sure the students know what you are doing and that they clearly
understand the procedure. Collect the responses and analyze them as soon as
possible.
- Step 3: Responding
- To capitalize on time spent assessing, and to motivate students to become
actively involved, "close the feedback loop" by letting them know what you
learned from the assessments and what difference that information will make.
Five suggestions for a successful start:
- If a Classroom Assessment Techniques does not appeal to your intuition and
professional judgement as a teacher, don't use it.
- Don't make Classroom Assessment into a self-inflicted chore or burden.
- Don't ask your students to use any Classroom Assessment Technique you
haven't previously tried on yourself.
- Allow for more time than you think you will need to carry out and respond
to the assessment.
- Make sure to "close the loop." Let students know what you learn from their
feedback and how you and they can use that information to improve learning.
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