"Teachers make judgments about students every day, based on such formal and informal appraisals of their work as classroom observation, homework assignments, and teacher-made quizzes. Soon, they'll have the first set of professional standards to help guide them in making such decisions."
?Education Week
A Practical Guide to Designing and Assessing Student Evaluation
Student evaluation and assessment are central to every school and classroom. Evaluation and assessment are how we find out what students are learning, how they are progressing, and how we can make improvements for their future development. With requirements for testing and standards-based instruction at an all-time high, effective student evaluation is more essential today than ever before. But where in the instructional process should assessments occur? What kinds of questions should be asked? How is the information used to direct student learning? Who has the right to access and use this information?
The Joint Committee presents 28 certified standards for assessing evaluation practices in elementary and secondary classrooms. These standards are broken down into four essential attributes of sound evaluation, each providing definitions, guidelines, common errors, supportive documentation, and illustrative case studies:
- Propriety Standards, which protect individual rights
- Utility Standards, which ensure that evaluations are timely, informative, and influential
- Feasibility Standards, which recognize "real world" dynamics and environmental influences
- Accuracy Standards, which determine whether an evaluation has produced sound information
These standards provide teachers and administrators with the tools they need to master every "nuance" of student evaluation, including validity, political viability, teacher biases, conflicts of interest, a student?s right to privacy, and much more. But most important, they will help ensure that student evaluation practices are on track, so we can properly serve and improve student learning.
These standards have been approved by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI), and were developed with assistance from members of
16 professional societies:
American Association of School Administrators
American Counseling Association
American Educational Research Association
American Evaluation Association
American Psychological Association
Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development
Canadian Evaluation Society
Canadian Society for the Study of Education
Consortium for Research on Educational Accountability and Teacher Evaluation
Council of Chief State School Officers
National Association of Elementary School Principals
National Association of Secondary School Principals
National Council on Measurement in Education
National Education Association
National Legislative Program Evaluation Society
National School Boards Association
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