Title: The Assessment Toolbox
1The Assessment Toolbox
- Linda Suskie
- Middle States Commission on Higher Education
- AB Tech
- February 2005
2Today...
- What is assessment?
- The assessment toolbox
- Rubrics (scoring guides)
- Prompts (assignments)
- Multiple-choice tests
- Reflective writing
- Using assessment results to improve teaching
3What is Assessment?
- Deciding what we want our students to learn
- Making sure they learn it!
- --Jane Wolfson, Director, Environmental Science
Studies Program, Towson University
4The Teaching-Learning-Assessment Cycle
Learning Goals
Using Results
Learning Opportunities
Assessment
51. Learning Goals
- What is a good learning goal?
- Outcomes what students should be able to do
AFTER they pass the course - Observable action words
- Clear no fuzzy terms
- Skills thinking, performance
- Important - meet student/employer needs
62. Aligning Assignments with Goals
73. The Assessment Toolbox
8Rubrics
- A list of things youre looking for when youre
grading tests, papers, or projects - Often with guidelines or standards for evaluating
them
9Rating Scale Rubrics
- A scale showing the degree to which the things
youre looking for are present.
10Descriptive Rubrics
- More detailed descriptions of each possible
rating.
11Holistic Scoring Guides
- A single score that reflects an overall
impression of performance - Scores are defined by
- descriptions or
- model answers
12Write a Rubric!
13Prompts Creating Effective Assignments
14Creating Effective Multiple Choice Tests
- Start with a test blueprint.
15Definitions
- Objective test
- Stem
- Alternatives/ responses/ options
16Multiple Choice
- Advantages
- Efficient
- Fast and easy to score
- Options can diagnose difficulties
- Disadvantages
- Hard to write
- Often requires reading skills
- Guessing
- Cant measure some thinking skills
17Use Multiple Choice Items for...
- Conceptual understanding
- Application
- Identify correct application or example
- Analysis
- Identify correct cause, effect, or element
- Identify why something occurs or is best
18Interpretive Exercise
- context-dependent item
- enhanced multiple choice item
- One new stimulus (paragraph, chart)
- that students must read or examine
- to be able to answer all
- the objective items that follow
19Examples of Interpretive Material
- Reading passage they havent seen
- Description of lab experiment
- Material from historical period (letter, document)
- Description of patients symptoms
- Chart, diagram, drawing
- Any scenario (You are...)
20Use Interpretive Exercises to...
- Apply knowledge and understanding to new material
or novel situations. - Identify correct generalization, inference, or
conclusion. - Use problem-solving and analysis skills.
- Prepare for standardized tests.
21Writing Good Multiple Choice Items
22More Ways to Make Multiple Choice Tests Effective
- Open-book, open-note
- Throw out items that half your students get
wrong. - Review only items that many students got wrong.
- Ask them WHY they got them wrong.
23Reflective Writing
244. Using Assessment Results to Improve Teaching
- Goals
- Curriculum
- Pedagogy
- Assessments
25Look at your learning goals.
- Do you have too many goals?
- Do your goals need to be clarified?
- Are your goals inappropriate or overly ambitious?
26Look at your curriculum.
- Including placement and developmental education.
- Does the curriculum adequately address each
learning goal?
27Look at your teaching methods.
- How do students learn best?
28Look at your assessments.
- Are they poorly written and misinterpreted?
- Do they match your key learning goals?
- Are they too difficult for most responsible
students?
29Isnt Poor Performance the Students Fault?
- Sometimes, but usually a minority
- Suskies 50 rule
30Time to Reflect!