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CAREERTECHNICAL EDUCATION AND ASSESSMENT

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Title: CAREERTECHNICAL EDUCATION AND ASSESSMENT


1
CAREER-TECHNICAL EDUCATION AND ASSESSMENT
  • PAST, PRESENT, POSSIBLE

2
  • James T. Austin
  • Assessment and Evaluation Services
  • Center on Education Training for Employment
  • College of Education
  • The Ohio State University Big 10 Champions

3
AGENDA
  • Assessment
  • Defined
  • Two Worlds Large-Scale Classroom
  • Perspectives
  • Past Getting To The Way We Were
  • Present High Stakes Testing
  • Possible Expansions In Multiple Directions
  • Example Applications Using Graphic Designer

4
TWO CULTURES
  • Large Scale Assessment (district level up)
  • What states/districts/nations do
  • Prototype of assessment to public
  • Few players (NCS, Harcourt, CTB/McGraw-Hill)
  • Norm- and/or criterion-referenced assessments
  • Quality control known and used (reliability,
    validity)
  • Classroom Assessment
  • What teachers do
  • Phyes handbook covers this domain thoroughly
  • Standards of assessment competence are available

5
ASSESSMENT TRIANGLE
  • Cognition a feature of thinking or performing
  • Knowledge representation, skill development
  • EX mental models of software project, artistic
    competence
  • How do mental models change as novices become
    proficient?
  • Observation a situation and stimulus
  • Task situations that require observable responses
  • EX entry-level tasks as a part of graphic
    design projects
  • Design creation of brochures for an ad campaign
  • Interpretation inference linking
    cognition-observation
  • Methods for scoring thinking/performing from
    observations
  • EX statistical model for performance assessments

6
PURPOSES SERVED
  • Assessment conducted to
  • Assist learning
  • Measure individual achievement
  • Evaluate programs

7
SAMPLES OF ASSESSMENT
  • Think of CTE students
  • 1. in class in the graphic design lab
  • What is the error in this brochure layout? Can
    you fix it?
  • 2. in teams at SkillsUSA/VICA competition
  • Design a logo for Organization X under
    constraints.
  • 3. answering high stakes writing prompt
  • Persuade school board to adopt a stand on X.
  • 4. taking a graphics certification exam on-line
  • Modify given artwork according to change ticket.

8
ASSESSMENT PASTHOW DID WE GET HERE ?
  • Tests used throughout history
  • Biblical Chinese examples
  • Binet, Army alpha/beta tests marked start
  • Expansion of testing as technology 1920-2000
  • Military testing for recruit selection
    placement
  • Educational testing to assess achievement
    (Resnick)
  • Business testing for personnel selection
  • Certification testing for a range of professions
  • Testing is a social institution (Hanson, 1993)

9
CTE TESTING PAST
  • Trade tests developed during WW I
  • differentiated novices, apprentices, experts
  • Permitted evaluation of claims of recruits
  • Prosser and Quigley well aware of testing
  • Vocational Education in Democracy (1949)
  • Intelligence, trade, and entry tests defined
  • Testing varies for entry vs experienced

10
O.T.A. 1994 REPORT
  • Comprehensive report in parts
  • Classified state policies for skills assessment
  • 18 states mandated local written testing
  • 15 states mandated testing without guidance
  • 10 states encouraged testing guidance
  • 8 states had no specific policy
  • Assessment targets
  • Academic occupational (vocational, generic
    workplace, broad technical skills)

11
O.T.A. CONCLUSIONS
  • (1) Assessment in secondary CTE differed best
    practices like alternative forms of assessment
    just being explored for rest of education but
    quality varies greatly.
  • (2) In CTE, testing integral to learning
  • (3) Critical issues in performance assessment
  • Comparability of judgments
  • Judgment-standard correspondence
  • (4) Critical issues in written testing
  • Relevance of items to capabilities for
    performance
  • Effects of testing on teaching learning

12
ASSESSMENT PRESENT
  • Testing now major part of accountability
  • Systems concepts key to appropriate high stakes
    testing
  • Linn (2001) models design and evaluation of such
    systems reliable, valid, fair
  • Standards for Educational Accountability criteria
  • National Board for Educational Testing Public
    Policy as an independent auditor

13
ASSESSMENT PRESENT
  • Testing increasing for some time into future
  • No Child Left Behind Act
  • Annual testing Grades 3-8, interventions/consequen
    ces
  • HST increasing for students and teachers
  • Making Standards Matter (AFT, 2001) documents
    prevalence
  • Miller et al. (2001) review teacher testing for
    NRC
  • Threat or opportunity? Tradeoffs?
  • Opposition, but Cizek Phelps believe HST is an
    opportunity

14
PRESENT
  • Alternative models seek full status in both
    worlds
  • Stecher et al. (1996) reviewed for CTE field
  • Custer (2000) also surveyed for CTE field
  • Vermont, Maryland, Kentucky
  • Koretz et al. (1991) reviewed Vermont large-scale
    experience with portfolios
  • Herman (1997) reviewed large scale alternative
    assessment

15
PRESENT
  • Technology always present, increasing
  • Testing in general
  • Bennett (1999)
  • Distance assessment
  • Kingsbury Houser (1999) discuss one system
  • Major testing firms rolling out (Sylvan
    Prometric)
  • Much more
  • Scoring reporting facilities
  • Roll-up for Perkins III Consolidated Annual Report

16
LARGE-SCALE CTE PRACTICES
  • HSTW ASSESSMENT
  • Used to monitor progress of this reform since
    1987
  • Operated by ETS for SREB (given in even years)
  • Modeled on standards in Math, Language, Science
  • NOCTI
  • Long-time player (since 1973)
  • Combines written performance formats
  • Student and teacher competency assessments
  • Now evaluating on-line assessment systems

17
TYPICAL CTE PRACTICES
  • DISTANCE DELIVERY
  • Mostly first generation, meaning NOT adaptive
    testing
  • Several systems use QuestionMark software
  • OKLAHOMA
  • www.okcareertech.org/testing/online.htm
  • OHIO
  • Tech-Prep modular assessment under development
  • ITWorks standards represent collaboration between
    government business (www.itworks-ohio.org)
  • Modular organization, 30 items per module
  • Core modules cut across 4 pathways or strands
  • IM, ISS, NS, PSD are the occupational areas
  • Other module content is specific or cuts across a
    subset (1-3)

18
THEMES PAST PRESENT
  • Dissent since 1920s (Madaus, 1995, 1997)
  • Tyranny of testing in 1962
  • Protests increasing (Sacks, Kohn, Popham)
  • Reforms
  • Competency testing 1970s (Haney, 1978)
  • Standards to fore 1990s (Resnick Wirt, 1996)
  • High Stakes Testing (Heubert Hauser, 1999)

19
THEMES
  • Standards for educational psychological testing
    (1999)
  • Just revised by 3 professional groups
  • Ch 13 addresses educational applications
  • 19 standards (validation for each purpose)
  • Validation as consequences intended/unintended
  • High stakes tests retention
  • Industry certification tests student engagement

20
ASSESSMENT POSSIBLE
  • What might 21st century bring to CTE?
  • Possible futures applied to graphic design
  • rethinking redesigning CTE assessment
  • alternative assessments
  • computerized distance assessment

21
Scenario 1 RETHINK
  • Represents most change in way things are done
  • Has the most scientifically-based support, also
    costs the most
  • National Research Council review panel
  • Pellegrino et al. (2001) Knowing what students
    know
  • Merges cognition, measurement, technology
  • Cognition, observation, interpretation form
    assessment triangle
  • Called for 3 types of alignment
  • vertical (levels of educational system)
  • horizontal (across curriculum, instruction,
    assessment)
  • temporal (across students educational career)
  • Tennessee VAAS is a model, with some flaws

22
APPLICATION
  • Need assessment triangle C-O-I
  • COGNITION
  • Schemas, mental models, expert-novice
  • OBSERVATION
  • Create situations responses to tap
  • INTERPRETATION
  • Select models to link C O

23
APPLICATION TO CTE
  • Details require an occupation
  • I chose graphic design
  • Fortuitously, Techniques March issue arrived
  • Consciously looking for a sample occupation
  • Emerging, entrepreneurial
  • Traditional (advertising) and IT (website design)
  • Blend of artistic technology inputs
  • Next slides provide background

24
GRAPHIC DESIGNERS
  • Design/create graphics to meet specific
    commercial or promotional needs, such as displays
    or logos use a variety of mediums to achieve
    artistic or decorative effect (ONet-SOC Code
    27.1024.00)
  • Work domains prepress, press, binding

25
GRAPHIC DESIGN
  • National Council for Skill Standards
    (www.ncss.org)
  • Used common framework of National Skill
    Standards Board
  • Standards certifications available
  • Electronic Imaging (pre-press)
  • Sheetfed and Web Offset Press (press)
  • Flexographic Press (press)
  • Finishing and Distribution (binding)

26
SOME PROGRAMS
  • Secondary Metro Tech, OK Thomas Edison, MD
  • Post-secondary Tunxis CC, CT
  • Extended Cuyahoga Valley Career Center, OH
  • Digital Design Program (Exemplary program, 2000)
  • Interactive Media pathway of Tech-Prep IT program
  • 2 years (48 students), screened by
    guidance/recruiting team
  • Art plus computers powerful combination
  • Look at the waiting lists!!
  • 100 retention rate, 76 placement rate

27
POSSIBLE
  • Microworlds" built for the graphic designer
  • (i.e., a simulated work environment with
    individual team elements that an entire class
    would enter for a semester or so)
  • Portfolios of student work
  • Across the (usually) 2 years of a program
  • Performance assessments
  • start with smaller tasks of entry-level
    professional synthesize to integrated project
    level

28
POSSIBLE
  • Some drawbacks
  • Many models are fairly domain-specific
  • Will require extensive occupational analyses
  • Transitions in Work and Learning (NRC, 1997)
  • Construct/validate mental models, contextual
    situations
  • Development of the C-O-I assessment triangle
    elements
  • Creation of standards curriculum

29
Scenario 2 ALTERNATIVE ASSESSMENT
  • Wiggins has been a consistent advocate
  • Authentic (1989 book) educative (1998 book)
  • Some alternative assessments in CTE
  • (1) Career-Technical Assessment Program
  • (2) Kentucky Instructional Results Information
    System
  • (3) Laborers-AGC Environmental Training
    Certification
  • (4) National Board for Professional Teaching
    Standards
  • (5) Oklahoma Competency-Based Testing Program
  • (6) VICA National Competition
  • (7) NOCTI TOCT SOCAT

30
WIGGINS AUTHENTICITY
  • Authenticity derives from match of assessments
    to
  • (1) "worthy problems or questions of importance"
  • (2) faithful representation of contexts facing
    workers in a field
  • (3) non-routine, multi-stage tasks
  • (4) tasks that require generating a quality
    product, performance
  • (5) transparent or demystified criteria
  • (6) interactions between assessor and assessee
  • (7) effect of process product/performance
    determines quality
  • (8) trained assessor judgment
  • (9) the search for patterns of response in
    diverse settings
  • Tradeoffs associated with achieving authenticity

31
AUTHENTIC
  • Applied Psychological Measurement
  • Performance assessment special issue (Hambleton,
    2000)
  • Miller Linn on validation
  • Hambleton, Jaeger, Plake on standards
  • Clauser on developing scoring

32
POSSIBLE
  • Graphic Design uses portfolios
  • Would portfolios change?
  • Additional assessments?
  • Performance assessments
  • Projects
  • Presentations (to advisory committee??)

33
Scenario 3COMPUTER-DISTANCE ASSESSMENT
  • Computers used to deliver assessments since
    1960s, especially influential in adaptive testing
    and format expansions (multimedia)
  • Emergence of networks brings distance delivery to
    the forefront
  • RAND Issue Paper (Klein Hamilton, 1999)
  • NGA position paper on distance assessment (2002)

34
COMPUTERIZED
  • Curriculum instruction
  • Evolution from correspondence and TV/video
    courses to distance education
  • Assessment
  • Evolution from individual group paper-pencil to
    authentic, computer networked
  • Computer performance assessment of
    problem-solving
  • ONeil (1999) special issue of Computers in Human
    Behavior
  • Combines authentic computer/distance
    assessments
  • Consider graphic design scenario

35
POSSIBLE
  • Graphics Design profession
  • SkillsUSA evaluates 5 areas
  • layout and design
  • film image assembly
  • plate making
  • offset duplication
  • written test of common graphic comm issues
  • Contestants compose final art using a desktop
    computer and software system

36
POSSIBLE
  • Graphic Design application
  • Extracted from British distance course, web-site
    design (http//www.it.bton.ac.uk/staff/lp22/CP303)
  • Deliverable 1 an initial requirements
    description
  • Deliverable 2 brief analysis of comparable sites
  • Deliverable 3 user class analysis, in the form
    of personas
  • Deliverable 4 task scenarios
  • Deliverable 5 user object model
  • Deliverable 6 content structure diagram
  • Deliverable 7 site structure diagram
  • Deliverable 8 initial evaluation results
  • Deliverable 9 storyboards
  • Deliverable 10 lo-fi prototype
  • Deliverable 11 evaluation report
  • Deliverable 12 maintenance document
  • Deliverable 13 design document

37
HOW IS ASSESSMENT DONE?
  • WestEd distinction from CTAP
  • Cumulative developed over time
  • On-demand real-time, in the spotlight
  • Portfolios are cumulative
  • Useful internally (student evaluation)
  • Useful externally (job searches)
  • Other formats can be on-demand
  • Sudden presentation to client

38
HOW COULD WE ASSESS ?
  • Three Possible Futures
  • Rethinking redesigning
  • Alternative assessments
  • Computerized distance assessment
  • Apply to Both Worlds of Assessment

39
CONCLUSIONS
  • Assessment for CTE viewed from several
    perspectives
  • Two worlds of classroom and large-scale
    assessment
  • History past, present, potential
  • Exemplary programs of assessment
  • What are some important goals to be debated?
  • Can/should the two worlds be blended?
  • What constitutes scientifically-based research
    support?
  • How can tradeoffs be considered?
  • Balance claimed gains from new assessments
    against costs
  • What are actions needed to reach consensual
    goals?
  • Assessment literacy for CTE teachers and
    administrators

40
ASSESSMENT LITERACY
  • Concept articulated by Richard Stiggins
  • Lacking for many educators (1991), but an immense
    potential upside (2000) for both worlds
  • Large scale buy-in and preparation for students
  • Classroom assessment improvements
  • Teachers what capabilities are required?
  • Leading edge
  • Administrators what capabilities are required
  • Support and guidance
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