Title: The Missing Link: Assessment to Instruction
1The Missing Link Assessment to Instruction
- Alan D. Wanamaker Jr. and
- Jeffrey C. Owen
2What do Exam Scores Mean?
3Possible Interpretations
- The majority of students new the material very
well - The teaching led directly to the desired level of
understanding - The exam was easy or tested only superficial
material - The review session covered exam questions
- A copy of the exam was circulated
4What about this one?
5Possible Interpretations
- The teaching didnt lead to the desired level of
understanding - The exam was too hard
- The exam didnt match the instruction
- Students didnt study the right material or the
right way
6Or this one
7Meaning?
- The majority of students new the basics
- The exam allowed the students who really new it
or who really didnt to be recognized - Many of the questions tested concepts the way
that the students expected
8But what if someone had given a pre-test to the
students?
9Does the meaning of the exam scores change?
10Or, to be extreme..
11Questions one is left asking
- Quality of the Test
- Did the test focus on what the students perceived
to be most important? - Did the questions actually test what they were
supposed to test? - Quality and Appropriateness of Instruction
- What gain in student understanding occurred
during the class? - Were the biggest gains in areas that were most
important?
12Our Objectives
- To establish the links between quality
assessments and quality instruction - To illustrate a process for establishing a formal
assessment program
13A Common Instructional Sequence
Instruct
Design Assessments
Assess
14Instructional Planning Model
Design Assessments
Articulate Goals
Instruct
Evaluate Process
Assess
15What is meant by assessment?Continuum of
Assessment Methods
Observation and Conversations with students
Quizzes , Exams and Lab Investigations
Academic prompts, thought questions
Individual or Group Projects
Informal
Formal
16Where does assessment fit? Once course and
daily goals are clearly articulated to students
- the course assessments must accurately measure
those stated goals
17How do quality assessments measure stated
learning goals?
- By using questions and activities that have been
shown to elicit student understanding - from a variety of learning styles (validity)
- about specific learning goals consistently
(reliability) - to the desired depth of knowledge (validity)
18An example of different levels of knowing
Blooms Taxonomy
Upper Level Extended
Increasing Sophistication
Lower Level - Foundation
19When are assessments used to measure learning
goals?
- after instruction to establish a students grade
- before and after instruction to measure the gain
in student understanding - before and after instruction to monitor
appropriateness and quality of the instruction
20Assessment to Instruction
- Now that your quality assessments have been
designed, whats next? - Determining the most appropriate instruction that
will yield the desired level of learning
21Pre- Post Instruction Assessments - Interested?
- Keep it simplemaybe try it for just one
essential topic initially - Keep it manageablecreate it such that you can
conduct it and review the data - Al and Jeff are available as resources if you
want help
22Acknowledgements
- The Center for Science and Mathematics Education
Research - Professor Steve Norton, Department of Geological
Sciences