Title: Assessing for Learning
1Assessing for Learning
- Presented by Peggy L. Maki June 7, 2004
- Seattle Pacific University
- PeggyMaki_at_aol.com
Material from Maki, P. (2004). Assessing for
Learning Building a Sustainable Commitment
Across the Institution. Stylus Publishing and
AAHE.
2How Do You Learn?
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3Topics
- Research on Learning That Informs the
Relationship among Teaching, Learning, and
Assessment - Curricular and Co-curricular Coherence (Maps and
Inventories)
4- Development of Learning Outcome Statements
- Alignment of Assessment Methods
- with Learning Outcome Statements and
Collective Educational Practices
5Terms
- Learning Outcome Statementssentences that
describe what we expect our students to
demonstrate, represent or produce as a result of
how and what they learn. - Coherencedegree to which the curriculum and
co-curriculum intentionally offer multiple and
varied opportunities for students to learn what
the institution and its programs and services
assert they teach
6- Maps and Inventoriesstrategies that enable us to
ascertain how well we intentionally develop what
we assert we expect students to learn - Alignmentdegree to which learning outcome
statements match how and what we teach degree to
which assessment methods methods match our
collective educational practices
7Research on Learning That Informs the
Relationship among Teaching, Learning, and
Assessment
- Learning is a complex process of
interpretation--not a linear process - Learners create meaning as opposed to receive
meaning - 1.
8- Knowledge is socially constructed (importance of
peer-to-peer interaction) - People learn differentlyprefer certain ways of
learning (learning inventories, such as Kolb or
Vark)
9- Deep learning occurs over timetransference
- Meta-cognitive processes are a significant means
of reinforcing learning (thinking about ones
thinking)
10- Learning involves creating relationships between
short-term and long-term memory - Transfer of new knowledge into different
contexts is important to deepen understanding
11- Practice in various contexts creates expertise
- Surface Learning
- Deep Learning
12Curricular and Co-Curricular Coherence
- What do you do in your classes or in your
programs or services to promote the kinds of
learning or development that the institution
seeks? - What do you expect your students to know and be
able to do by the end of their education at your
institution?
13- What do the curricula and other educational
experiences add up to? - Which students benefit from specific teaching
strategies or educational experiences? - What educational processes are responsible for
the intended student outcomes the institution
seeks?
14- How can you help students make connections
between classroom learning and experiences
outside of the classroom? - What pedagogies/educational experiences develop
knowledge, abilities, habits of mind, ways of
knowing/problem solving?
15- How are curricula, pedagogy, and educational
experiences designed to develop knowledge,
abilities, habits of mind, ways of knowing? - How do you intentionally build upon what each of
you teaches or fosters to achieve programmatic
and institutional objectives?
16- What methods of assessment capture desired
student learning--methods that align with
pedagogy, content, and curricular design?
17When a Student Becomes a Biologist, Psychologist,
Engineer..
18Maps and Inventories
- Help us determine coherence among our educational
practices that enable us to design appropriate
assessment methods - Provide a visual representation of students
journey
19- Help students make meaning of the journey
- Help students develop their own learning map
20Developing Learning Outcome Statements
21What Is an Outcome Statement?
- A sentence that describes what students should
demonstrate, represent, or produce based on how
and what they learn. - Emerges from what we value and how we teach or
students learn that is, it emerges from our
educational practices and is developed through
consensus. -
22- Relies on active verbs, such as create, compose,
calculate, develop, build, evaluate, translate,
etc., that target what we expect students to be
able to demonstrate - Is written for a course, program, or institution
23- Is aligned with curriculum and co-curriculum
- --varied and multiple ways to
- learn that desired outcome
- Is based on intentionality (established through
dialogue) -
24- Helps students understand expectations and holds
them accountable for their learning - Can be assessed quantitatively or qualitatively
25Example from ACRL
-
- ONE OUTCOME Student examines and compares
information from various sources in order to
evaluate reliability, validity,accuracy,
timeliness, and point of view or bias. -
26Write one outcome statement that captures what a
graduate from your institution or a program
should be able to demonstrate, represent, or
produce
27How well does your outcome statement meet
characteristics of a good statement?
- Describes learning desired within a context
- Relies on active verbs
-
-
28- Emerges from your collective intentions
-
- Can be mapped to curricular and co-curricular
practices (multiple and varied opportunities to
learn over time) - Can be assessed quantitatively or qualitatively
during students undergraduate and graduate
careers
29-
- The tasks to which students are asked to
respond on an assessment are not arbitrary. They
must be carefully designed to provide evidence
that is linked to the cognitive model of learning
and to support the kinds of inferences and
decisions that will be based on the assessment
results. - National Research Council. Knowing what
students know The science and design of
educational assessment . Washington, D.C.
National Academy Press, 2001, p. 47.
30Assumptions Underlying Teaching
Actual Practices
Assumptions Underlying Assessment Tasks
Actual Tasks
31Development of Assessment Methods
- Align methods with learning outcome statements
and students educational experiences (verified
through maps or inventories)
32When Will You Seek Evidence?
- Formativealong the way?
- For example, to ascertain
- progress or development
- Summativeat the end?
- For example, to ascertain
- mastery level of achievement
33What Tasks Elicit Learning You Desire?
- Tasks that require students to select among
possible answers (multiple choice test)? - Tasks that require students to construct answers
(students problem-solving and thinking
abilities)?
34Some Methods That Provide Direct Evidence
- Student work samples
- Collections of student work (e.g. Portfolios)
- Capstone projects
35- Course-embedded assessment (derive examples
develop agreed upon prompt and ask students to
respond to it in class or at a designated time) - Observations of student behavior
- Internal juried review of student projects
36- External juried review of student projects
- Externally reviewed internship
- Performance on a case study/problem
- Performance on case study accompanied with
students analysis
37- Performance on national licensure examinations
- Locally developed tests
- Standardized tests
- Pre-and post-tests
38- Response to critical incident
- Essay tests blind scored across units
- Mapping
- Learning Logs or Journals
- Writing, Speaking, Visual Representation
39Methods That Do Not Provide Direct Evidence but
May Be Combined with Other Methods-Indirect
Methods
- Faculty publications (unless students are
involved) - Courses selected or elected by students
- Faculty/Student ratios
40- Percentage of students who study abroad
- Enrollment trends
- Percentage of students who graduate within
five-six years - Diversity of student body
41- Focus group (representative of the population)
- Interviews (representative of the population)
- Surveys
42- Other sources of information that contribute to
your inference making NSSE results, grades,
participation rates or persistence in support
services, course-taking patterns, majors
43What and how students learn depends to a major
extent on how they think they will be assessed.
John Biggs, Teaching for Quality Learning at
University What The Student Does. Society for
Research into Higher Education Open University
Press, 1999, p. 141.
44Works Cited
- Biggs, J. (1999). Teaching for Quality
Learning at University What The Student Does.
Society for Research into Higher Education Open
University Press, 1999, p. 141. - Maki, P. (forthcoming, 2004., May). Assessing
for Learning Building a Sustainable Commitment
Across the Institution. Sterling, VA Stylus
Publishing, LLC, and the American Association for
Higher Education. - National Research Council. 2001. Knowing What
Students Know The Science and Design of
Educational Assessment. Washington, D.C.
National Academy Press -