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This is an up-to-date revision of the classic text first
published in 1983. It includes a historical perspective on the
growth of evaluation theory and practice and two comparative
analyses of the various alternative perspectives on evaluation. It
also includes articles representing the major schools of thought
about evaluation written by the leaders who have developed these
schools and models. The final section describes and discusses the
Standards for Program Evaluation and the reformation of program
evaluation.
Every school district needs a system of sound superintendent
performance evaluation. School district superintendents are and
must be accountable to their school boards, communities, faculties,
and students for delivering effective educational leadership. To
assure that they are evaluated fairly, competently, and
functionally, superintendents need to help their school boards plan
and implement evaluation systems that adhere to the evaluation
standards. Superintendent Performance Evaluation outlines some of
the problems and deficiencies in current evaluation practice and
offers professionally-based leads for strengthening or replacing
superintendent performance evaluation systems. This book focuses on
the on-the-job performance of school district superintendents as
they implement school board policy. The decision to focus on
performance evaluation reflects the importance of this kind of
evaluation in the move to raise educational standards and improve
educational accountability. Boards and superintendents are advised
to make superintendent performance evaluation an integral part of
the district's larger system for evaluating district needs, plans,
processes, and accomplishments.
Teacher Evaluation: Guide to Professional Practice is organized
around four dominant, interrelated core issues: professional
standards, a guide to applying the Joint Committee's Standards, ten
alternative models for the evaluation of teacher performance, and
an analysis of these selected models. The book draws heavily on
research and development conducted by the Federally funded national
Center for Research on Educational Accountability and Teacher
Evaluation (CREATE). The reader will come to grasp the essence of
sound teacher evaluation and will be able to apply its principles,
facts, ideas, processes, and procedures. Finally, the book invites
and assists school professionals and other readers to examine the
latest developments in teacher evaluation.
I personally learned to know Ralph Tyler rather late in his career
when, in the 1960s, I spent a year as a Fellow at the Center for
Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford. His term of
office as Director of the Center was then approaching its end. This
would seem to disqualify me thoroughly from preparing a Foreword to
this "Classic Works. " Many of his colleagues and, not least, of
his students at his dear Alma Mater, the University of Chicago, are
certainly better prepared than I to put his role in American
education in proper perspective. The reason for inviting me is, I
assume, to bring out the influence that Tyler has had on the
international educational scene. I am writing this Foreword on a
personal note. Ralph Tyler's accomplishments in his roles as a
scholar, policy maker, educational leader, and statesman have been
amply put on record in this book, not least in the editors'
Preface. My reflections are those of an observer from abroad but
who, over the last 25 years, has been close enough to overcome the
aloofness of the foreigner. Tyler has over many years been
criss-crossing the North American con tinent generously giving
advice to agencies at the federal, state, and local levels,
lecturing, and serving on many committees and task forces that have
been instrumental in shaping American education."
Thomas Kellaghan Educational Research Centre, St. Patrick's
College, Dublin, Ireland Daniel L. Stufflebeam The Evaluation
Center, Western Michigan University, Ml, USA Lori A. Wingate The
Evaluation Center, Western Michigan University, Ml, USA Educational
evaluation encompasses a wide array of activities, including
student assessment, measurement, testing, program evaluation,
school personnel evalua tion, school accreditation, and curriculum
evaluation. It occurs at all levels of education systems, from the
individual student evaluations carried out by class room teachers,
to evaluations of schools and districts, to district-wide program
evaluations, to national assessments, to cross-national comparisons
of student achievement. As in any area of scholarship and practice,
the field is constantly evolving, as a result of advances in
theory, methodology, and technology; increasing globalization;
emerging needs and pressures; and cross-fertilization from other
disciplines. The beginning of a new century would seem an
appropriate time to provide a portrait of the current state of the
theory and practice of educational evaluation across the globe. It
is the purpose of this handbook to attempt to do this, to sketch
the international landscape of educational evaluation - its
conceptual izations, practice, methodology, and background, and the
functions it serves. The book's 43 chapters, grouped in 10
sections, provide detailed accounts of major components of the
educational evaluation enterprise. Together, they provide a
panoramic view of an evolving field.
Evaluation Models is an up-to-date revision of the classic text
first published in 1983. Organized in three sections, the first
includes a historical perspective on the growth of evaluation
theory and practice and two comparative analyses of the various
alternative perspectives on evaluation. The second section includes
articles representing the major schools of thought about evaluation
written by the leaders who have developed these schools and models.
The final section describes and discusses the Standards for Program
Evaluation and the reformation of program evaluation.
What goals should be addressed by educational programs? What
priorities should be assigned to the different goals? What funds
should be allocated to each goal? How can quality services be
maintained with declining school enrollments and shrinking
revenues? What programs could be cut if necessary? The ebb and flow
of the student population, the changing needs of our society and
the fluctuation of resources constantly impinge on the education
system. Educators must deal with students, communities, and social
institutions that are dynamic, resulting in changing needs. It is
in the context of attempting to be responsive to these changes, and
to the many wishes and needs that schools are asked to address,
that needs assessment can be useful. Needs assessment is a process
that helps one to identify and examine both values and information.
It provides direction for making decisions about programs and
resources. It can include such relatively objective procedures as
the statistical description and analysis of standardized test data
and such subjective procedures as public testimony and values
clarification activities. Needs assessment can be a part of
community relations, facilities planning and consolidation, program
development and evaluation, and resource allocation. Needs
assessment thus addresses a xiii XIV PREFACE broad array of
purposes and requires that many different kinds of procedures be
available for gathering and analyzing information. This book was
written with this wide variation of practices in mind.
Every school district needs a system of sound superintendent
performance evaluation. School district superintendents are and
must be accountable to their school boards, communities, faculties,
and students for delivering effective educational leadership. To
assure that they are evaluated fairly, competently, and
functionally, superintendents need to help their school boards plan
and implement evaluation systems that adhere to the evaluation
standards. Superintendent Performance Evaluation outlines some of
the problems and deficiencies in current evaluation practice and
offers professionally-based leads for strengthening or replacing
superintendent performance evaluation systems. This book focuses on
the on-the-job performance of school district superintendents as
they implement school board policy. The decision to focus on
performance evaluation reflects the importance of this kind of
evaluation in the move to raise educational standards and improve
educational accountability. Boards and superintendents are advised
to make superintendent performance evaluation an integral part of
the district's larger system for evaluating district needs, plans,
processes, and accomplishments.
I personally learned to know Ralph Tyler rather late in his career
when, in the 1960s, I spent a year as a Fellow at the Center for
Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford. His term of
office as Director of the Center was then approaching its end. This
would seem to disqualify me thoroughly from preparing a Foreword to
this "Classic Works. " Many of his colleagues and, not least, of
his students at his dear Alma Mater, the University of Chicago, are
certainly better prepared than I to put his role in American
education in proper perspective. The reason for inviting me is, I
assume, to bring out the influence that Tyler has had on the
international educational scene. I am writing this Foreword on a
personal note. Ralph Tyler's accomplishments in his roles as a
scholar, policy maker, educational leader, and statesman have been
amply put on record in this book, not least in the editors'
Preface. My reflections are those of an observer from abroad but
who, over the last 25 years, has been close enough to overcome the
aloofness of the foreigner. Tyler has over many years been
criss-crossing the North American con tinent generously giving
advice to agencies at the federal, state, and local levels,
lecturing, and serving on many committees and task forces that have
been instrumental in shaping American education."
Attempting fonnally to evaluate something involves the evaluator
coming to grips with a number of abstract concepts such as value,
merit, worth, growth, criteria, standards, objectives, needs,
nonns, client, audience, validity, reliability, objectivity,
practical significance, accountability, improvement, process, pro
duct, fonnative, summative, costs, impact, infonnation,
credibility, and - of course - with the tenn evaluation itself. To
communicate with colleagues and clients, evaluators need to clarify
what they mean when they use such tenns to denote important
concepts central to their work. Moreover, evaluators need to
integrate these concepts and their meanings into a coherent
framework that guides all aspects of their work. If evaluation is
to lay claim to the mantle of a profession, then these
conceptualizations of evaluation must lead to the conduct of
defensible evaluations. The conceptualization of evaluation can
never be a one-time activity nor can any conceptualization be
static. Conceptualizations that guide evaluation work must keep
pace with the growth of theory and practice in the field. Further,
the design and conduct of any particular study involves a good deal
of localized conceptualization."
Attempting fonnally to evaluate something involves the evaluator
coming to grips with a number of abstract concepts such as value,
merit, worth, growth, criteria, standards, objectives, needs,
nonns, client, audience, validity, reliability, objectivity,
practical significance, accountability, improvement, process, pro
duct, fonnative, summative, costs, impact, infonnation,
credibility, and - of course - with the tenn evaluation itself. To
communicate with colleagues and clients, evaluators need to clarify
what they mean when they use such tenns to denote important
concepts central to their work. Moreover, evaluators need to
integrate these concepts and their meanings into a coherent
framework that guides all aspects of their work. If evaluation is
to lay claim to the mantle of a profession, then these
conceptualizations of evaluation must lead to the conduct of
defensible evaluations. The conceptualization of evaluation can
never be a one-time activity nor can any conceptualization be
static. Conceptualizations that guide evaluation work must keep
pace with the growth of theory and practice in the field. Further,
the design and conduct of any particular study involves a good deal
of localized conceptualization."
Teacher Evaluation: Guide to Professional Practice is organized
around four dominant, interrelated core issues: professional
standards, a guide to applying the Joint Committee's Standards, ten
alternative models for the evaluation of teacher performance, and
an analysis of these selected models. The book draws heavily on
research and development conducted by the Federally funded national
Center for Research on Educational Accountability and Teacher
Evaluation (CREATE). The reader will come to grasp the essence of
sound teacher evaluation and will be able to apply its principles,
facts, ideas, processes, and procedures. Finally, the book invites
and assists school professionals and other readers to examine the
latest developments in teacher evaluation.
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