You are in: Antarctica
Change location
Starting out as a teacher? One of the most powerful tools in your toolkit is assessment — and it’s not just about marking work. Good assessment helps you understand how your pupils are doing, and just as importantly, helps them understand it too.
Knowing where your pupils are at means you can support their progress, adapt your teaching, and help them grow. These resources are a great starting point for getting to grips with how assessment works in the classroom — and how it can make a real difference to learning.
This chapter from Promoting Good Progress in Primary Schools introduces you to the concept of progress in primary education and how it relates to assessments.
Effective formative assessment enables teachers to identify children’s current stages of development so that they can identify their next steps in learning. Formative assessment is usually informal, used during or between lessons and support teachers to:
Formative assessment supports children to:
In contrast, a summative assessment is a summary of a child’s achievement over time. It is usually formal and takes the form of tests and examinations. However, judgements of pupils’ learning can be based on teacher assessments of pupils’ performance over time – for example, by considering their performance across a series of tasks. Unlike formative assessment, summative assessment is primarily used to help schools to evaluate their effectiveness.
*This is an edited extract from The ITT Core Content Framework: What trainee primary school teachers need to know by Glazzard & Stones.
While examinations and standardised tests are generally regarded as a fair and efficient way of assessing a student’s knowledge and understanding, a number of criticisms have been levelled against high-stakes assessments that are used for accountability purposes. These relate to both primary and post-primary levels and include the following:
In the literature on assessment, concerns about the negative effects of examinations and standardised tests abound. Literature supporting these assessments is available but can be harder to locate. Use the internet to access at least two articles, such as those in the additional resources section at the end of this chapter, to make a case for summative assessment. Document four or five points that support the use of summative assessment to improve students’ learning. The further reading section at the end of chapter 3 of Understanding and Applying Assessment in Education is a useful starting point.
*The above is an edited extract from Understanding and Applying Assessment in Education by Murchan & Shiel.