Title:
1Â Curriculum Assessment
- Prof. Dr. Buket Akkoyunlu
- Hacettepe University, Faculty of Education
2Â Curriculum Assessment
- What types of evidence or data indicate that the
curriculum is effective? What types of measures
can be used in assessment? - How can educators best assess objectives of the
delivered curricula have been obtained? - Who should be in charge of assessing if and how
learning has taken place?
3Â Curriculum Assessment
- Who should be responsible for evaluating the
effectiveness of curricula and for collecting and
documenting assessment data? - How should assessment and evaluation data be used
to improve future curricula?
4Â Assessment
- Assessment is a process by which information is
obtained relative to some known objective.
Assessment is a broad term that includes testing.
- A test is a special form of assessment. Tests are
assessments made under contrived circumstances
especially so that they may be administered. In
other words, all tests are assessments, but not
all assessments are tests.
5Â Curriculum Assessment
- We test at the end of a lesson or unit. We assess
progress at the end of a school year through
testing, and we assess verbal and quantitative
skills through such instruments as the SAT and
GRE. Whether implicit or explicit, assessment is
most usefully connected to some goal or objective
for which the assessment is designed.
6Â Curriculum Assessment
- We can assess a persons knowledge in a variety
of ways, but there is always a leap, an inference
that we make about what a person does in relation
to what it signifies about what he knows. In the
section on this site on behavioral verbs, to
assess means to stipulate the conditions by which
the behavior specified in an objective may be
ascertained.
7Â Evaluation
- When we evaluate, what we are doing is engaging
in some process that is designed to provide
information that will help us make a judgment
about a given situation. - Generally, any evaluation process requires
information about the situation in question. A
situation is an umbrella term that takes into
account such ideas as objectives, standards,
procedures, and so on. - When we evaluate, we are saying that the process
will yield information regarding the worthiness,
appropriateness, goodness, validity, legality,
etc., of something for which a reliable
measurement or assessment has been made.
8Â Evaluation
- To sum up, we assess learning, and we evaluate
results in terms of some set of criteria. These
two terms are certainly connected, but it is
useful to think of them with connected ideas and
processes.
9Â Evaluation / Assessment
- Evaluation/assesment permits the critical
question to be asked and answered have the
objectives of new curriculum have been met? -
- It assesses individual achievement to satisfy
external requirements, and provides information
that can be used to improve curriculum, and to
document accomplishments or failures. - Evaluation / assesment can provide feedback and
motivation for continued improvement for
learners, faculty, and innovative curriculum
developers. - To ensure that important questions are answered
and relevant needs met, it is necessary to be
methodical in designing a process of evaluation.
10Â Evaluation / Assessment
- The purposes of evaluation/assessment include to
- facilitate learning
- describe / measure learning
- diagnose learning gaps
- provide a structure for learning
- provide opportunities for students and teachers
to talk about learning - provide information for the evaluation of
teaching
11Â Evaluation / Assessment
- There are several ways to assess learning of
disciplinary content, skills and processes. They
include essays, tests, seminars, portfolios,
journals, projects, reports, performances,
theses, professional experiences, and
observations. - Those who assess could be the educator, student
and peers. - Assessment can be informal, such as giving verbal
feedback during class, or formal tasks intended
to fulfill the requirements of the subject. - Assessment can serve both formative and summative
purposes
12Â Evaluation / Assessment
- The formative evaluation provides feedback to
learner identifying areas and provides
suggestions for improvement, on the other hand, - summative evaluation measures whether specific
performance objectives were accomplished,
certifying competency or its lack in performance
in a particular area, and measures the success of
a curriculum in achieving learner and process
objectives.
13Â Evaluation / Assessment
- Any effective instructional program must begin
with the skills related to objectives, "a
description of a performance you want learners to
be able to exhibit before you consider them
competent" (Mager, 1984, p. 3). Each objective
will specify the performance, the conditions, and
the criterion of acceptable performance (Mager,
1984, p. 3).
14Â Evaluation / Assessment
- There are possible measurement technics for
formative and summative evaluations. - Some examples
- Annotated bibliography with search strategy
discussion included - Collaborative learning exercise in class
- Critique of a classmate's completed
search/bibliography - Essay examination
- Multiple choice examination Practicum
examination - Research journal Research portfolio
- Research paper proposal
- Research worksheet
- Rubrics
- Short answer examination
15Â Evaluation / Assessment
- The rubric is formative type of assessment
because it becomes an ongoing part of the whole
teaching and learning process. Students
themselves are involved in the assessment process
through both peer and self-assessment. - Multiple choice examination is summative type of
assessment because measures the success of a
curriculum in achieving learner and process
objectives.
16Â Evaluation / Assessment
- The rubric is authentic assessment tool used to
measure students' work. It is a scoring guide
that seeks to evaluate a student's performance
based on the sum of a full range of criteria
rather than a single numerical score. - A rubric is a working guide for students and
teachers, usually handed out before the
assignment begins in order to get students to
think about the criteria on which their work will
be judged.
17Â Evaluation / Assessment
- Rubrics offer several advantages
- Rubrics help students become better judges of the
quality of their own work. - Rubrics allow assessment to be more objective and
consistent. - Rubrics force the teacher to clarify his/her
criteria in specific terms. - Rubrics reduce the amount of time teachers spend
evaluating student work.
18Â Evaluation / Assessment
- Rubrics offer several advantages
- Rubrics promote student awareness about the
criteria to use in assessing peer performance. - Rubrics provide useful feedback to the teacher
regarding the effectiveness of the instruction. - Rubrics provide students with more informative
feedback about their strengths and areas in need
of improvement. - Rubrics accommodate heterogeneous classes by
offering a range of quality levels. - Rubrics are easy to use and easy to explain.Â
19Â Evaluation / Assessment
- Students themselves are involved in the
assessment process through both peer and
self-assessment. - As students become familiar with rubrics, they
can assist in the rubric design process. This
involvement empowers the students and as a
result, their learning becomes more focused and
self-directed. Authentic assessment, therefore,
blurs the lines between teaching, learning, and
assessment (Andrade. 2001).
20Â Evaluation / Assessment
- When students receive rubrics beforehand, they
understand how they will be evaluated and can
prepare accordingly. - Developing a grid and making it available as a
tool for students' use will provide the
scaffolding necessary to improve the quality of
their work and increase their knowledge.
21Â Evaluation / Assessment
- Assessment is the most powerful tool available to
educators to direct and facilitate student
learning. - It is therefore essential that information
literacy learning outcomes are embedded in the
assessment tasks for courses of study.
22Â Evaluation / Assessment
- Examples
- Objective An individual who operates at the
basic level of information literacy - Outcome Student will be able to describe the
wide array of information sources available and
discuss their appropriateness for a given
information problem. - Possible Measurement Techniques
- Essay examination
- Oral report
- Practicum in the library
- Written evaluation assignment
23Â Evaluation / Assessment
- Examples
- Objective Recognizes the need for information to
solve a specific problem and knows what kind of
information to seek. - Outcome Given a topic of interest, student will
be able to refine it and formulate a research
question. - Possible Measurement Techniques
- Collaborative learning exercise in class
- Essay examination
- Practical problem to solve
24Reference
- Andrade, H. G. (2001). Understanding Rubrics.
Online 18 August 2008 lthttp//www.middleweb.com
/rubricsHG.htmlgt. - Mager, R.F. (1984). Preparing instructional
objectives. (2nd ed.). Belmont, CA David S. Lake.
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