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This volume explores the recent national trend toward adoption of
performance assessments. Embraced at all levels of educational
decision-making--state, district, school, and teacher--the shapes
these assessments take and the affects they have at the classroom
level can differ significantly from one setting to another. Based
on case studies of 16 schools, this study describes what
performance assessments actually look like--the types of tasks they
pose to children, the scoring methods used, the purposes to which
they are put, and how they fit in with other components of
assessment systems. It also shows how they differ when they are
introduced by state departments of education, districts, and
schools themselves. Factors that affect policymakers' and
educators' abilities to successfully design and introduce
performance assessments are also explored. These include the
purposeful coordination of performance assessment with related
education reforms, such as the adoption of content and student
performance standards, and the professional development for
teachers necessary to the successful implementation of performance
assessments. Barriers to adoption, most notably the challenges of
developing a technically sound performance assessment, are
discussed as well. Crucial to teachers' ability to appropriate
performance assessments for use in their own classrooms is their
invovlement in designing and implementing them. Although it would
be impossible for a state or school district to involve all
teachers in the design of a performance assessment, they can take
steps to foster teachers' understanding of the purposes and methods
of the assessment, thereby supporting their ability to use similar
methods in their daily teaching. Toward that end, this book
describes the experiences of teachers and students with a range of
assessments that all fall under the umbrella of performance
assessment. In addition, it provides: *rich illustrations of those
experiences across a diverse group of schools; *descriptions of the
trade-offs inherent in developing a student assessment system;
*demonstrations of why no single assessment can be "all things to
all people;" and *valuable insights for teachers, administrators,
policymakers, and researchers who want to improve their
understanding of how performance assessments work in practice and
how they may best serve to improve teaching and learning.
This volume explores the recent national trend toward adoption of
performance assessments. Embraced at all levels of educational
decision-making--state, district, school, and teacher--the shapes
these assessments take and the affects they have at the classroom
level can differ significantly from one setting to another.
Based on case studies of 16 schools, this study describes what
performance assessments actually look like--the types of tasks they
pose to children, the scoring methods used, the purposes to which
they are put, and how they fit in with other components of
assessment systems. It also shows how they differ when they are
introduced by state departments of education, districts, and
schools themselves. Factors that affect policymakers' and
educators' abilities to successfully design and introduce
performance assessments are also explored. These include the
purposeful coordination of performance assessment with related
education reforms, such as the adoption of content and student
performance standards, and the professional development for
teachers necessary to the successful implementation of performance
assessments. Barriers to adoption, most notably the challenges of
developing a technically sound performance assessment, are
discussed as well.
Crucial to teachers' ability to appropriate performance
assessments for use in their own classrooms is their invovlement in
designing and implementing them. Although it would be impossible
for a state or school district to involve all teachers in the
design of a performance assessment, they can take steps to foster
teachers' understanding of the purposes and methods of the
assessment, thereby supporting their ability to use similar methods
in their daily teaching. Toward that end, this book describes the
experiences of teachers and students with a range of assessments
that all fall under the umbrella of performance assessment. In
addition, it provides:
*rich illustrations of those experiences across a diverse group of
schools;
*descriptions of the trade-offs inherent in developing a student
assessment system;
*demonstrations of why no single assessment can be all things to
all people; and
*valuable insights for teachers, administrators, policymakers, and
researchers who want to improve their understanding of how
performance assessments work in practice and how they may best
serve to improve teaching and learning.
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