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The Assessment Standards
can be used to judge the quality of assessment for different
purposes. |
This section describes how
the standards just presented can be used to critique and improve
assessment of the learning of mathematics. The examples and
vignettes in this document portray some shifts in assessment
practice and in the ways in which teachers and others can use the
standards to judge the efficacy of mathematics assessments, improve
their quality, and generate ideas for alternative ways of assessing
mathematics learning. Except for those identified as adapted from
research, the vignettes are fictional illustrations and, although
drawn from experience, are not factual accounts.
The section organizes the
diverse purposes for which mathematics assessments are made into
four broad categories. Although there are many ways to categorize
these purposes, the four selected represent primary areas for the
reform of assessment practice. What distinguish each purpose are the
objectives to be achieved and the results to be obtained from the
assessment. Figure 2 depicts the four purposes (in the ellipse) and
the actions (in the rectangles) that result from the use of
assessment data in conjunction with each purpose.
Fig. 2.
Four purposes of assessment and their results |
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What progress is
each student making?
What are the
appropriate instructional decisions? |
One important purpose of
assessment is monitoring students’ progress toward learning
goals. After setting high expectations, evidence should be collected
to provide each student and the teacher with feedback about progress
toward those goals. The feedback is used in an ongoing effort to
promote each student’s growth in mathematical power. Monitoring is
seen as a continuous process. Sometimes the collection of evidence
is informal and spontaneous, and sometimes it is formal. Hence, the
results are provisional, yet they provide the rich diagnostic
feedback important to each student. The basic question to be
answered about students’ progress is, How is each student
progressing in relation to the goals we have set and agreed on?
A second and related
purpose of mathematics assessment is that of making instructional
decisions. Teachers use evidence of students’ mathematical
understanding, along with other evidence from the instructional
process, to modify instruction so that it will better facilitate
learning. The teacher is the primary assessor of the mathematics
that students know and can do. The basic question teachers consider
when using assessments undertaken for this purpose is, How can I
use evidence about my students’ progress to make instructional
decisions? |
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Have students
reached their goals?
Is the program
working? |
A third purpose of mathematics
assessment is that of evaluating students’ achievement at a
particular time. At regular intervals, evidence from multiple
sources is formally summarized for each student and reported to
interested parties. The sources of selected evidence are deliberate,
and the reporting is done in a formal manner to acknowledge student
achievement publicly and to certify that certain milestones have
been reached. The basic question to be answered is, How does each
student’s understanding at this time compare with the goals he or
she was expected to have achieved?
Evaluating programs
is a fourth purpose of mathematics assessment. Evidence of students’
performance, as well as other data, is used to make decisions about
instructional programs so that all students are encouraged to meet
high expectations in mathematics. The question being addressed is,
How well is the mathematics program working in relation to goals
and expectations for the students?
Regardless of the purpose
for which they are conducted, all school mathematics assessments
envisioned in this document share common features. The six standards
apply to each type of assessment. However, the way in which a
particular standard is applied in assessments carried out for
different purposes may vary.
Several changes in
assessment practices are imperative if the practices are to be
consistent with curricular and instructional reform efforts. Many
current practices furnish incomplete and sometimes biased
information about students’ mathematical understanding. In each
section that follows, three or more shifts in assessment practices
are highlighted and illustrated with examples and vignettes. The
shifts should be seen as components of needed changes in the total
assessment system and not viewed just with respect to the purpose
with which they are presented.
Assessment is the shared
responsibility of all who are concerned with students’ learning of
mathematics. The specific educational purposes for which assessments
are made have been deliberately chosen to blur the distinction
between assessments that are internal to the classroom and
assessments that are external. Assessments for monitoring students’
progress, making instructional decisions, and evaluating student
achievement have typically been the responsibility of classroom
teachers, whereas assessments for evaluating programs have been
carried out by agencies outside the classroom. The illustrations
that follow suggest that assessments for all purposes need to become
more open and collegial; that is, teachers need to be involved in
the assessment process for all purposes. The primary responsibility
for assessment may lie with specific people, depending on the
purpose, but it must be a collaborative endeavor if it is to meet
the six standards defined in this document.
Information gathered from
any source about a student’s mathematical understanding is only a
sample of the possible information about such understanding. Thus,
questions about the sample’s representativeness, reliability, and
validity must be of concern. Furthermore, for two of the four
categories of purposes–monitoring students’ progress and
evaluating students’ achievement–the sample is of each
student’s performance, and the information is aggregated to make
decisions about that student. For the other two purposes–making
instructional decisions and evaluating programs–the
sample represents performance, and the information, although derived
from students’ performance, is aggregated across students to make
other decisions.
All mathematics
assessments involve the same four phases–plan the assessment,
gather evidence, interpret the evidence, and use
the results–although the aspects of each process that are most
crucial may vary with the purpose (see fig. 3). The illustrations in
the following sections indicate how the phases of the assessment
process relate to assessment purposes and fulfill the intent of the
six standards.

Fig. 3.
Relationship between phases of assessment and assessment
purposes
The discussion and
illustrations of the assessment undertaken for each purpose
demonstrate both the shifts in practice and the methods for applying
the standards to accomplish those shifts. The discussion shows how
the questions for reflection that follow each standard can be used
to determine how well specific assessment activities and practices
meet the standards under review. The illustrations suggest how those
responsible for students’ learning of mathematics might begin
collectively to apply the standards to specific assessments, thereby
making mathematics assessment a more public, open, and collaborative
enterprise. |