Title: Once you know what they
1Once you know what theyve learned, what do you
do next?
- Designing curriculum and
- assessment for growth
Dylan Wiliam Institute of Education, University
of London www.dylanwiliam.net Presentation to
MDSE/MARCES conference University of Maryland,
College Park, MD October 2006
2Outline
- Education reform in England and Wales
- Designing an assessment system to support
learning - Age-independent levels of achievement
- Distribution of achievement over time
- Applications to curriculum specification
3A familiar story
- Education Reform Act (1988)
- An early attempt to use markets to reform
education - Choice
- Diversity
- Standardization
- Information
4Key features of ERA
- Basic curriculum
- Religious education (!)
- Core subjects (English, Math, Science)
- Non-core subjects (7 in all)
- Four key stages (5-7, 7-11, 11-14, 14-16)
- Core subjects assessed at end of each key stage
- Other subjects assessed at some key stages
5Task Group on Assessment and Testing (TGAT)
To advise the Secretary of State on the practical
considerations which should govern all assessment
including testing of attainment at age
(approximately) 7, 11, 14 and 16, within a
national curriculum including the marking scale
or scales and kinds of assessment including
testing to be used,the need to differentiate so
that assessment can promote learning across a
range of abilities,the relative roles of
informative and of diagnostic assessment,the
uses to which the results of assessment should be
put,the moderation requirements needed to secure
credibility for assessments, andthe publication
and other services needed to support the system
with a view to securing assessment and testing
arrangements which are simple to administer,
understandable by all in and outside the
education service, cost-effective, and supportive
of learning in schools.
6Task Group on Assessment and Testing (TGAT)
- Basic choice
- Age-dependent
- benchmark assessments at each age-point
- Age-independent
- linked system of achievement levels across ages
- Crucial factors
- Technical feasibility
- Impact on students
7Age-dependent levels
- Simple to understand
- Familiar
- Significant negative impact on student motivation
- Encourages a notion of ability as fixed rather
than incremental
8Age-independent levels
- In psychology
- Piaget (Shayer et al., 1976 Shayer Wylam,
1978) - Pascual-Leone
- Case
- SOLO (Biggs Collis, 1982)
- Van Hiele
- CSMS (Hart, 1981)
- In Education (or math education at least!)
- The Dalton Plan (Parkhurst, 1922)
- Kent Mathematics Project (Banks, 1991)
- Secondary Mathematics Individualised Learning
Experiment - Graded Assessment in Mathematics (Brown, 1992)
9Preliminary evidence
- 6099 1 ? (Foxman et al., 1980)
- Correctly answered by some 7-year-olds
- Incorrectly answered by some 14-year-olds
- The seven year gap (Cockcroft, 1981)
- Progression in measuring (Simon et al., 1995)
- Spread of achievement in an age cohort apparently
much greater than generally assumed
10CSMS (Hart, 1981)
11Sequential tests of educational progress (ETS,
1957)
12Sensitivity to instruction
1 year
Distribution of attainment on an item highly
sensitive to instruction
13Sensitivity to instruction (2)
1 year
Distribution of attainment on an item moderately
sensitive to instruction
14Sensitivity to instruction (3)
1 year
Distribution of attainment on an item relatively
insensitive to instruction
15Sensitivity to instruction (4)
Test Sensitivity index
IQ-type test (insensitive) 0
NAEP 6
TIMSS 8
ETS STEP tests (1957) 8
Completely sensitive test 100
16Insensitivity to instruction
- Artifact or reality?
- Influenced by test construction procedures
- Influenced by approaches to curriculum
- Dimensions of progression
- Reasoning power
- Curriculum exposure
- Maturity
17Nature of hierarchies
- Hierarchies are partly arbitrary
- Division can precede multiplication
- Integration can precede differentiation
- Hierarchies are partly psychological
- Some learning sequences appear inevitable
- Writing
- Number skills
18Graded Assessment in Mathematics
- Intended for all school students, aged 11 to 16
- Design requirement all students should be able
to increase by one level per year - Upper levels designed to be equivalent to
existing national examinations
Proportion of age cohort
Years of secondary schooling
19ITBS language usage test
Percentile
Grade equivalent
20A very simple model
- Achievement age is normally distributed about
chronological age, with a standard deviation
proportional to the chronological age - Constant of proportionality varies from around
one-sixth to one-half, depending on the kind of
curriculum and assessment
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24Standardized tests
25The TGAT model
Stage Ages Levels
1 5-7 1-3
2 7-11 2-6
3 11-14 3-8
4 14-16 4-10
26Curriculum development
- Curriculum developers forced to focus on What
develops? - Models of curriculum
- Grade-based models (France, Germany)
- Social promotion (England, Japan, Sweden)
- Hybrid models (USA)
- Models of differentiation
- Same goals, same curriculum, different speeds
- Same goals, different curriculum
- Different goals
- Models of progression
- Good in math, design technology
- OK in language arts, science
- Poor in history
- Dimensions of progression
- Mathematics reasoning power
- Science curriculum exposure
- English maturity
27Hierarchies in science
- Know that light comes from different sources
- Know that light passes through some materials and
not others, and that when it does not, shadows
may be formed - Know that light can be made to change direction,
and that shiny surfaces can form images - Know that light travels in straight lines, and
this can be used to explain the formation of
shadows - Understand how light is reflected
- Understand how prisms and lenses refract and
disperse light - Be able to describe how simple optical devices
work - Understand refraction as an effect of differences
of velocities in different media -
- Understand the processes of dispersion,
interference, diffraction and polarisation of
light
28Strengths
- Forces a focus on progression in big ideas
rather than coverage - Supports incremental, rather than entity view of
ability - Supports strong value-added inferences
29Weaknesses
- Some subjects fit the model better than others
- Some (accepted) models of curriculum become
non-viable - Requires careful articulation between curriculum,
standards, and assessment - May focus on aspects relatively insensitive to
instruction