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Assessing Students in the Margins - Challenges, Strategies and Techniques (Hardcover, New)
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Assessing Students in the Margins - Challenges, Strategies and Techniques (Hardcover, New)
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The importance of student assessment, particularly for summative
purposes, has increased greatly over the past thirty years. At the
same time, emphasis on including all students in assessment
programs has also increased. Assessment programs, whether they are
large-scale, district-based, or teacher developed, have
traditionally attempted to assess students using a single
instrument administered to students under the same conditions.
Educators and test developers, however, are increasingly
acknowledging that this practice does not result in valid
information, inferences, and decisions for all students. This
problem is particularly true for students in the margins, whose
characteristics and needs differ from what the public thinks of as
the general population of students. Increasingly, educators,
educational leaders, and test developers are seeking strategies,
techniques, policies, and guidelines for assessing students for
whom standard assessment instruments do not function well. Whether
used for high-stakes decisions or classroom-based formative
decisions, the most critical element of any educational assessment
is validity. Developing and administering assessment instruments
that provide valid measures and allow for valid inferences and
decisions for all groups of students presents a major challenge for
today's assessment programs. Over the past few decades, several
national policies have sparked research and development efforts
that aim to increase test validity for students in the margins.
This book explores recent developments and efforts in three
important areas. The first section focuses on strategies for
improving test validity through the provision of test
accommodations. The second section focuses on alternate and
modified assessments. Federal policies now allow testing programs
to develop and administer alternate assessments for students who
have not been exposed to grade-level content, and thus are not
expected to demonstrate proficiency on grade-level assessments. A
separate policy allows testing programs to develop modified
assessments that will provided more useful information about
achievement for a small percentage of students who are exposed to
grade-level content but for whom the standard form of the
grade-level test does not provide a valid measure of achievement.
These policies are complex and can be confusing for educators who
are not familiar with their details. The chapters in the second
section unpack these policies and explore the implications these
policies have for test design. The third and final section of the
book examines how principles of Universal Design can be applied to
improve test validity for all students. Collectively, this volume
presents a comprehensive examination of the several issues that
present challenges for assessing the achievement of all students.
While our understanding of how to overcome these challenges
continues to evolve, the lessons, strategies, and avenues for
future research explored in this book empower educators, test
developers, and testing programs with a deeper understanding of how
we can improve assessments for students in the margins.
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