Building a Scholarship of Assessment
by Trudy W. BantaJossey-BassIn this book, leading experts in the field examine the current state of assessment practice and scholarship, explore what the future holds for assessment, and offer guidance to help educators meet these new challenges. The contributors root assessment squarely in several related disciplines to provide an overview of assessment practice and scholarship that will prove useful to both the seasoned educator and those new to assessment practice. Ultimately, "Building a Scholarship of Assessment" will help convince skeptics who still believe outcomes assessment is a fad and will soon fade away that this is an interdisciplinary area with deep roots and an exciting future.
Improving Formative Assessment Practice to Empower Student Learning
by E. (Elizabeth) Caroline WylieCorwin PressSupercharge your formative assessment skills and watch student learning soar with this book’s proven method. Includes case studies, examples, and a companion website with tools and templates.
Successful Student Writing Through Formative Assessment
by Harry Grover TuttleEye on EducationUse formative assessment to dramatically improve your students' writing. In Successful Student Writing Through Formative Assessment, educator and international speaker Harry G. Tuttle shows you how to guide middle and high school students through the prewriting, writing, and revision processes using formative assessment techniques that work.
This brand new set of strategies includes real writing samples plus easy-to-use applications that will allow you to monitor, diagnose, and provide continual feedback to your students. You'll help them perfect their written communication skills and ready them for further growth. Tuttle offers tips on breaking large writing assignments into several smaller tasks, identifying red flags, varying your feedback methods, and more.
Enhance your instruction by assessing students at specific points throughout the writing process, and help them to become better writers as a result!
Title Index for the Directory of Unpublished Experimental Mental Measures
by Martin JamisonAmer Library AssnTesting, Teaching, and Learning: A Guide for States and School Districts
by Committee on Title I Testing and AssessmentNational Academies PressState education departments and school districts face an important challenge in implementing a new law that requires disadvantaged students to be held to the same standards as other students. The new requirements come from provisions of the 1994 reauthorization of Title I, the largest federal effort in precollegiate education, which provides aid to 'level the field' for disadvantaged students. "Testing, Teaching, and Learning" is written to help states and school districts comply with the new law, offering guidance for designing and implementing assessment and accountability systems.This book examines standards-based education reform and reviews the research on student assessment, focusing on the needs of disadvantaged students covered by Title I. With examples of states and districts that have track records in new systems, the committee develops a practical 'decision framework' for education officials. The book explores how best to design assessment and accountability systems that support high levels of student learning and to work toward continuous improvement. "Testing, Teaching, and Learning" will be an important tool for all involved in educating disadvantaged students - state and local administrators and classroom teachers.
Innovative Assessment for the 21st Century: Supporting Educational Needs
SpringerIn today’s rapidly changing and information-rich world, students are not acquiring adequate knowledge and skills to prepare them for careers in mathematics, science, and technology with the traditional approach to assessment and instruction. New competencies (e.g., information communication and technology skills) are needed to deal successfully with the deluge of data. In order to accomplish this, new "educationally valuable" skills must be acknowledged and assessed. Toward this end, the skills we value and support for a society producing knowledge workers, not simply service workers, must be identified, together with methods for their measurement. Innovative Assessment for the 21st Century explores the faces of future assessment—and ask hard questions, such as: What would an assessment that captures all of the above attributes look like? Should it be standardized? What is the role of the professional teacher?
Scoring Rubrics in the Classroom: Using Performance Criteria for Assessing and Improving Student Performance (Experts In Assessment Series)
by Judith A. ArterCorwin PressThis book offers a practical approach to assessing challenging but necessary performance tasks like creative writing, "real-world" research projects, and cooperative group activities.
Designing a New Taxonomy of Educational Objectives (Experts In Assessment Series)
by Robert J. MarzanoCorwin PressMarzano brings Bloom’s Taxonomy into the 21st century with a new model that incorporates the latest in cognitive science and research on how we learn.
Encyclopedia of Language and Education: Volume 7: Language Testing and Assessment (v. 7)
SpringerEach of the 29 reviews in this book provides a state-of-the-art report of research into a different aspect of assessment of first and/or second language ability. There are sections on the testing of individual skills, methods of assessment, quantitative and qualitative approaches to test validation, and the ethics and effects of testing and assessment. The volume is specifically aimed at researchers who are looking for a brief synopsis of past and present research in a specific field, but will also be useful as a general introduction to research in language assessment for applied linguists and language teachers.
Understanding Assessment: Purposes, Perceptions, Practice (Teaching About Learning)
by David LambertRoutledgeThis is the first title in this new series, which is aimed principally at secondary PGCE and BAEd students and school- and HEI-based tutors.
Each book provides a digest of the central issues around a particular topic or issues, grounded in or supported by examples of good practice, with suggestions for further reading, study and investigation. The books are not intended as 'how to' books, but rather as books which will help students and teachers to explore and understand critical theoretical issues in ways that are challenging, that invite critical reappraisals of taken-for-granted practices and perceptions, and that provide appropriate links between theory and practice. Issues related to equal opportunities and special needs are included in each separate volume . There are boxes of questions, 'think abouts' , further reading, and bulleted summary lists for the reader.
This book is written specifically for teachers-in-training which will clarify the 'big picture' of monitoring and assessment and makes the crucial distinctions in this large (and still taken-for-granted) field.
The authors have written widely on assessment matters and have also worked in various capacities for the QCA (and its former manifestations). They are also engagerd in initial teacher education and so know the level and market extremely well.


