As student, assessment shall be a part of my being one to determine what, why and how I know what the teacher teach/guide me to know. In most cases, I align my approach of study on how and what means of assessment it might be if ever it was revealed to me or not before hand.
During my elementary days in not so distant past, the aims of a particular lesson were not adequately discussed or even mentioned before it was taught. In which case, I did not know what to do with the materials presented on us. Of course we knew that at the end of the unit, a quiz or long test is at hand. If the time of remembering was revealed, it was the only time that I began to review/ re-read what was taken up in class. More often than not, I was satisfied with the result of my assessment. However, I felt disappointed when the teacher got his/her gotcha moment when most of us did not get most of the correct answers during surprised quizzes. The bad thing was, the lesson was never repeated or further discussed even if no one understood them fully as determined by the test.
Because of the above experience during my primary education, I became fully wary of my teachers’ assessment approach when I entered high school. I began to be more attentive during class discussion and lectures. I saw to it that I reviewed the materials and did all my assignments regularly. It was this attitude that I maintained my position in class until I graduated. In essence, I aligned my approach to study not because it was my choice but because it was expected of me. In fact, the assessment directed my learning in some ways.
Some researchers maintained that the traditional objective type testing such as multiple choice and true-false, produce surface learning because it prepares student to be rote learners. Students often get only the tip of the iceberg when they engage their learning with this type of assessment. Opponents of traditional testing argues that understanding or recalling some facts and concepts is shallow learning because this kind of learning is only the base or at the bottom of Bloom’s taxonomy.
Well, I am not that shallow. Although it may seem that what multiple choice and true-false exams determine is how students remember or recall facts and concepts but in reality, these kinds of tests also involve in-depth learning because choosing the correct answer involve not only recalling but also understanding and analysis especially if the question is full of ambiguous words and trickery. It is worth noting that the present licensure examinations in the Philippines and elsewhere involve multiple choice tests. If it is not an effective and reliable indicator of learning in most professions, why does the Philippine Regulation Commission (PRC) continue utilizing this kind of assessment?
Assessment directs students learning and plays an important role in their approaches to study. During my senior year in high school, the most dreaded test of all was the National College Entrance Examination or NCEE. The NCEE determines whether or not a high school graduate can enter a four or five-year program in the college or university. The NCEE is the gate way to students’ dream of becoming a professional. Although passing it is the most important test that students undertake, teachers in our high school did not bother to teach to the test. Whether it was a policy or not, senior students were left to study by themselves and teachers did not teach us on what in the test. The teachers only advised us to buy a copy of a reviewer to be familiar with the mechanics of the test. I can remember that the teachers did not do any formal review for this assessment although the life of students depended on passing it.
It is really very uncomfortable to know that while undertaking a course or study, the teacher is there to measure how much you learn or retain from the materials he/she discussed or provided. Either test, product or performance, assessment limits the means by which students approach their learning. You sometimes feel that you are surrounded by materials that you may not use in real life or you should only need to know a portion of it. Tests usually create anxiety to some students as if the whole world will judge them based on number or letter grades. The results often rank or classify a person and distinguish others from the rest - there is a summa cum laude, magna cum laude, cum laude and the other graduates. With this, learning becomes competitive as if only few deserve to be high achievers.
I felt some pressure while studying at the University of the Philippines because of its reputation as the premier center of learning of learning in the entire country. Thinking that all Iskolar ng Bayan are bright students that get high grades, I often felt disappointed when mine were average. I felt that I might not be maintaining UP standards. Lately of course that I realized that my misconceptions about UP were often wrong. However, it is expected that UP graduates are different from any other students, no matter what it is on your Transcript of Record. It is a reputation that is maintained by many corporations and leaders. Well, I say amen to this one.
The results of assessment also brought joy to my being especially when I deserved what I labored. I felt elated when I passed a very difficult examination or get the highest grade in one project. The praise and congratulatory remarks from parents, relatives, and friends when you finally received your diploma or certificate of recognition erased all the hardships, anxieties, stress and other bad effects of assessments on your learning and being. At the end of the day, I realized that it is really “No gain, No pain!” I am not that shallow, then.
Reference
Morgan, C, Dunn, L, Parry, S & O'Reilly, M 2004, The student assessment handbook : new directions in traditional and online assessment , Routledge Falmer, London. ISBN: 0749438835
Images from
1) http://oncampus.macleans.ca/education/wp-content/uploads/writing-exam.jpg
2) http://www.funnyfly.com/images/exam.jpg
3) http://ircamera.as.arizona.edu/NatSci102/NatSci102/images/exams.jpg
4) http://www.lawphil.net/images/logo/prclogo.gif
5) http://larrycuban.files.wordpress.com/2011/09/test_cartoon.jpg
6) http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/35/Sablay.jpg
Showing posts with label assessment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label assessment. Show all posts
Friday, October 11, 2013
Sunday, September 22, 2013
How I Viewed Educational Assessment
Although educational assessment has been dreaded by many students from preschool to higher level, it is a very significant part of the teaching-learning process. Assessment as defined in the University of Lincoln’s website pertains to the process of gathering of information to measure student’s “knowledge, skills, attitudes and beliefs.” Simply, it refers to what teacher does to monitor the progress of his/her students, aid them in their learning and re-design his/her instructional methods and /or assessment strategies to attain his/her predetermined learning goals.
As an elementary student, I was not afraid of the test, be it short or long, surprised or not, because I listened to my teachers in class, did my homework and I was confident that I could answer most of the questions. What I hate was when the test given was so simple compared to what our teachers hinted us to study. For example, our Social Studies teacher would normally gave us 5 chapters to review and then gave a 20 item- multiple choice questions. It drove me mad because I felt I was short-changed probably because Social Studies was one of my favorite subjects and found studying the different regions of the Philippines interesting.
It was the reverse in high school. I found Social Studies class less interesting because I was poor in politics. I prayed not to be called to recite during class. It was because we were no longer remembering products and capitals. We were analyzing the socio-cultural and political systems of our country and I was poor in analysis. One short answer was not enough. You have to defend your argument. Surprisingly, I still got good grade.
Although I got good grades in Mathematics, Geometry was one branch that I was struggling. You’ve got it right! Because it involved analysis. I usually could not prove a theorem. No matter how hard I tried to study, I still could not get it. I managed to get an 85, though.
What I liked most in high school was Filipino. Oh, no! Not Dr. Jose Rizal’s Noli Me Tangere and El Filibusterismo but writing essays and short stories. My love of writing in the national language was developed in high school. I was chosen as associate editor of our school organ in Filipino. I also won an award in the Regional Secondary Schools Press Conference. Our school paper won the Best in News Writing in the national contest. I got Best in Journalism – Filipino during my graduation.
Getting good grades in elementary and high school was very important to me. Not only for my own satisfaction but also to the pride and happiness that they gave to my parents. High grades are testimonies that you studied hard. All your sacrifices and hard work had been rewarded. Getting high grades in high school was my primary goal because it was a way to free college education. Belonging to a poor family, my parents could not send me to college without scholarship. Because of the dedications that I committed to my studies, I was chosen as one of the recipients of the UP Experimental Democratization Students Scholarship (UPXDS) in 1977. Getting high grades in the University was very important to maintain my scholarship. I studied Bachelor of Science in Business Administration and graduated in 1982. And whether we like it or not, grades are one of the indicators of employability in the labor market.
During the course of my studies, I never had a failing grade but I got an "Incomplete" in Computer Studies. Again, you got it right. Because this subject involved analysis and I was so poor in that. As a result, I re-enrolled it one summer and got a 3. Whew!!! My only “tres”. I also got an ebb and flow grade in Algebra. My lowest marks happened when the subject matter involved word problem. Yes, you have got it right once more – analysis.
I shall be frustrated and less motivated if I got a failing grade in any subject especially when you did your utmost share in the learning process. You could blame the professor especially when he/she thought that all “iskolar ng bayan” were outright smart and left you on your own (which was always the case then, I could say).]
It seemed that I was really poor in analysis. I could solve mathematical problems when the equations were all set up but I usually did poorly when I have to set them up by myself. Well, I could say now that it was because my mind then was only at level 3 of Bloom’s taxonomy of learning as revised by Lorin Anderson(2000) as cited by Don Clark. My learning was only in the remembering, understanding and application stage.
Ultimately, at this stage of my learning process, grades are not that significant to me compared to my previous formal education. Although they will always give you some sort of pride and achievement, high grades are now measurements of how the teacher perceived you to have attained his/her learning goals rather than indicators of how much you learned.
Images from
1) https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjF0hwlZ5uvv3v1mo6qJ56NoN_iMXEbA8p9nTN2tI1M4CBPo06_-Zuhs1uzhB2HDlMS8e-K6aByfBDpJN2HF8ijekaR9IOn9VjKy_lEt_X1P8ZYoPThubDGE5w1Yoz8fpWqPNE2vCIbo1re/s400/nclb-test-cartoon.png
2) http://math.pppst.com/banner_math_geometry_formulas.gif
3) http://blogs.themailbox.com/themailbox/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/report-card-clip.gif
4) http://xa.yimg.com/kq/groups/10246900/homepage/name/161183?type=sn
5) http://www.nwlink.com/~donclark/hrd/learning/id/bloom_taxonomy.jpg
6) https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh4znyXFQCYcdyGbuvBNAXza6Ub858KosIFjj2O6VRPXUz-usySzyhpSDdPttFFYOs3rcovDuNeP2B0pGdIiCOEncv8CbPcCanp2zbST0bNgKM3UGsdvXvB5P2-RFX7HQwgmpcBP7DQbs4/s400/Cartoon+Teacher.gif
Anderson, L. W., Krathwohl, D. R., Airasian, P. W., Cruikshank, K. A., Mayer, R. E., Pintrich, P. R., Raths, J., Wittrock, M. C. (2000). A Taxonomy for Learning, Teaching, and Assessing: A revision of Bloom's Taxonomy of Educational Objectives. New York: Pearson, Allyn & Bacon.
The University of Lincoln. Educational assessment. In academic room. Retrieved on 21 September 2013 at http://www.academicroom.com/topics/what-is-educational-assessment
As an elementary student, I was not afraid of the test, be it short or long, surprised or not, because I listened to my teachers in class, did my homework and I was confident that I could answer most of the questions. What I hate was when the test given was so simple compared to what our teachers hinted us to study. For example, our Social Studies teacher would normally gave us 5 chapters to review and then gave a 20 item- multiple choice questions. It drove me mad because I felt I was short-changed probably because Social Studies was one of my favorite subjects and found studying the different regions of the Philippines interesting.
It was the reverse in high school. I found Social Studies class less interesting because I was poor in politics. I prayed not to be called to recite during class. It was because we were no longer remembering products and capitals. We were analyzing the socio-cultural and political systems of our country and I was poor in analysis. One short answer was not enough. You have to defend your argument. Surprisingly, I still got good grade.
Although I got good grades in Mathematics, Geometry was one branch that I was struggling. You’ve got it right! Because it involved analysis. I usually could not prove a theorem. No matter how hard I tried to study, I still could not get it. I managed to get an 85, though.
What I liked most in high school was Filipino. Oh, no! Not Dr. Jose Rizal’s Noli Me Tangere and El Filibusterismo but writing essays and short stories. My love of writing in the national language was developed in high school. I was chosen as associate editor of our school organ in Filipino. I also won an award in the Regional Secondary Schools Press Conference. Our school paper won the Best in News Writing in the national contest. I got Best in Journalism – Filipino during my graduation.
Getting good grades in elementary and high school was very important to me. Not only for my own satisfaction but also to the pride and happiness that they gave to my parents. High grades are testimonies that you studied hard. All your sacrifices and hard work had been rewarded. Getting high grades in high school was my primary goal because it was a way to free college education. Belonging to a poor family, my parents could not send me to college without scholarship. Because of the dedications that I committed to my studies, I was chosen as one of the recipients of the UP Experimental Democratization Students Scholarship (UPXDS) in 1977. Getting high grades in the University was very important to maintain my scholarship. I studied Bachelor of Science in Business Administration and graduated in 1982. And whether we like it or not, grades are one of the indicators of employability in the labor market.
During the course of my studies, I never had a failing grade but I got an "Incomplete" in Computer Studies. Again, you got it right. Because this subject involved analysis and I was so poor in that. As a result, I re-enrolled it one summer and got a 3. Whew!!! My only “tres”. I also got an ebb and flow grade in Algebra. My lowest marks happened when the subject matter involved word problem. Yes, you have got it right once more – analysis.
I shall be frustrated and less motivated if I got a failing grade in any subject especially when you did your utmost share in the learning process. You could blame the professor especially when he/she thought that all “iskolar ng bayan” were outright smart and left you on your own (which was always the case then, I could say).]
It seemed that I was really poor in analysis. I could solve mathematical problems when the equations were all set up but I usually did poorly when I have to set them up by myself. Well, I could say now that it was because my mind then was only at level 3 of Bloom’s taxonomy of learning as revised by Lorin Anderson(2000) as cited by Don Clark. My learning was only in the remembering, understanding and application stage.
Ultimately, at this stage of my learning process, grades are not that significant to me compared to my previous formal education. Although they will always give you some sort of pride and achievement, high grades are now measurements of how the teacher perceived you to have attained his/her learning goals rather than indicators of how much you learned.
Images from
1) https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjF0hwlZ5uvv3v1mo6qJ56NoN_iMXEbA8p9nTN2tI1M4CBPo06_-Zuhs1uzhB2HDlMS8e-K6aByfBDpJN2HF8ijekaR9IOn9VjKy_lEt_X1P8ZYoPThubDGE5w1Yoz8fpWqPNE2vCIbo1re/s400/nclb-test-cartoon.png
2) http://math.pppst.com/banner_math_geometry_formulas.gif
3) http://blogs.themailbox.com/themailbox/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/report-card-clip.gif
4) http://xa.yimg.com/kq/groups/10246900/homepage/name/161183?type=sn
5) http://www.nwlink.com/~donclark/hrd/learning/id/bloom_taxonomy.jpg
6) https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh4znyXFQCYcdyGbuvBNAXza6Ub858KosIFjj2O6VRPXUz-usySzyhpSDdPttFFYOs3rcovDuNeP2B0pGdIiCOEncv8CbPcCanp2zbST0bNgKM3UGsdvXvB5P2-RFX7HQwgmpcBP7DQbs4/s400/Cartoon+Teacher.gif
References
Anderson, L. W., Krathwohl, D. R., Airasian, P. W., Cruikshank, K. A., Mayer, R. E., Pintrich, P. R., Raths, J., Wittrock, M. C. (2000). A Taxonomy for Learning, Teaching, and Assessing: A revision of Bloom's Taxonomy of Educational Objectives. New York: Pearson, Allyn & Bacon.
The University of Lincoln. Educational assessment. In academic room. Retrieved on 21 September 2013 at http://www.academicroom.com/topics/what-is-educational-assessment
Friday, September 20, 2013
Some Basic Concepts and Terminologies on Assessment
As part of our research and understanding regarding basic concepts and terminologies on assessment, I caught the definitions of my classmate Regina Josephine Benito because she differentiates the various terms in a simple and yet comprehensible way.
Regina describes assessment as the gathering of information, analyzing and interpreting the understanding of the student. She stresses that assessment is used to:
• discover what the student needs regarding his learning (diagnostic);
• position the student in a learning environment to maximize his potentials (placement);
• evaluate the effectiveness of the program, and to
• give an opinion on student’s study.
Regina further describes formative assessment as student’s learning monitoring during the course while summative assessment is done at the end of the course. According to her, criterion-referenced assessment rests on specific or particular tasks or concepts where students are evaluated against a set of criteria or standards while norm-referenced assessment is derived on general skills or concepts.
For further reading, please visit Regina’s original entry at http://myportal.upou.edu.ph/mod/forum/post.php?reply=248794#mform1
Image from http://www.bisd303.org/cms/lib3/WA01001636/Centricity/Domain/765/report%20card.gif
Regina describes assessment as the gathering of information, analyzing and interpreting the understanding of the student. She stresses that assessment is used to:
• discover what the student needs regarding his learning (diagnostic);
• position the student in a learning environment to maximize his potentials (placement);
• evaluate the effectiveness of the program, and to
• give an opinion on student’s study.
Regina further describes formative assessment as student’s learning monitoring during the course while summative assessment is done at the end of the course. According to her, criterion-referenced assessment rests on specific or particular tasks or concepts where students are evaluated against a set of criteria or standards while norm-referenced assessment is derived on general skills or concepts.
For further reading, please visit Regina’s original entry at http://myportal.upou.edu.ph/mod/forum/post.php?reply=248794#mform1
Image from http://www.bisd303.org/cms/lib3/WA01001636/Centricity/Domain/765/report%20card.gif
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