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Chapter 13: Assessment and Grading in the Differentiated Classroom Assessment as we used to know and loathe it In the 10th grade, Bill faced a major test in American History. The teacher had stressed how important the test was and how it was modeled on the kind of tests that the students would encounter in university. Bill spent hours studying in preparation for the test as it represented a very significant portion of his grade in the course. As he entered the classroom on the day of the test he felt fairly self-confident. He had thoroughly reviewed the chapters in the text book and his class notes. He felt he was well-prepared for the test. However, as he began to read through the question paper, he realized that the test focused on content that he hadn’t studied at all. It was as though the test had come out of a different course altogether. Panic and self-doubt swept through him. Bill scored poorly on the test and the teacher wrote on his script: You must learn to study harder. This test does not represent what you are capable of. Thirty years later, Bill reflects that the test taught him several lessons about life in schools that had nothing to do with American History. First, despite all the platitudes espoused by parents and teachers to the contrary, there wasn’t necessarily Making the Difference 277 any relationship between effort and achievement. Hard work didn’t necessarily pay dividends. In some classrooms, it still doesn’t. Bill is confident that he could have achieved the same dismal score without the hours of studying. There is only a correlation between hard work and accomplishment when the assessment is reasonably predictable. When teachers, however unwittingly, cause students to disassociate effort and achievement, they do the learner a major disservice. Madeline Hunter’s classic work with Attribution Theory in schools (Hunter & Barker,1985) suggests that there are aspects of causality that are perceived to be controllable (e.g. effort) and aspects that are not controllable (e.g. ability, task difficulty and luck). When the controllable aspects of causality are perceived to be connected to achievement, individual potency and efficacy are enhanced and the likelihood of future success is increased. The opposite is also, unfortunately, the case. The second lesson Bill learned from the experience was that some teachers couldn’t be trusted. The test did not represent a fair assessment of the major ideas and concepts of the Great Depression and Roosevelt’s response to it. Instead, it was an idiosyncratic collection of questions – some of which were tangential, some of which were merely trivial. The test was clearly a “gotcha assessment” in which the teacher attempted, with considerable success, to uncover what the students didn’t know -- as opposed to what they had actually learned. Bill learned from this experience that school success was not so much about learning or achievement as it was about being able to out-guess the teacher as to what was going to be included on the test. He learned to play the “guess what I’m thinking game”. This is not only bad assessment practice; it is malpractice. Making the Difference 278 Fortunately, standards-based curricula and common assessments have made these practices rarer today. In this chapter, we will attempt to do three things. First, we will look at some principles that international schools are using in the assessment of student learning. Secondly, we will examine a relatively new paradigm in assessment (Assessment for Learning) that appears to complement differentiation remarkably well. Finally, we will look at the knotty issues surrounding grading student work. Grading and assessment often become confused in teachers’ minds. We perceive them as separate and different functions. Assessment has to do with the analysis of student work and the formulation of useful feedback; whereas grading has to do with communicating student achievement and progress to valued stakeholders (parents, university admissions officers, etc.). We will examine why so many teachers feel conflicted about grading and suggest some principles that can be used for grading student achievement in the differentiated classroom. Assessment of Learning The world of educational assessment is undergoing tectonic shifts that are literally moving the ground beneath the feet of the educational establishment. We are not just looking at assessment practices and classroom strategies, but we are reflecting on and re-examining the very purposes of assessment. Consider that the traditional purpose of assessment in schools was to sort and th rank students. Given the class hierarchies and the stratified job market of the 20 century, it was imperative to have a means of funneling young people into productive Making the Difference 279 employment. When Bill grew up in Britain in the 1950’s, the Eleven Plus Examination was still in effect. Taken at the age of eleven, the results of this exam determined whether a child would enter further academic study or be shunted into vocational training. The old British “O” Level Examinations further sorted and ranked students at age 16. The top 10% of candidates, irrespective of their actual performance on the examination, received “A”s and the next 20% “B”s and so on. These so-called norm referenced tests compared student performance against other students sitting the same examination. The SAT fulfills a similar sorting function in terms of university admission in the United States. The ranking and sorting of students continues to be a primary purpose of educational assessment in highly competitive educational systems (e.g. India, South Korea, etc.) around the world. Teachers who grew up in norm-referenced systems often find it very difficult to think about assessment without comparing students against each other even within a relatively small classroom. This comparison inevitably works to the detriment of all students. Students at the bottom of the teacher’s achievement hierarchy experience lower expectations and achieve less. Even those students “fortunate” enough to be sorted and ranked at the top of the heap are not compared against their own potential and are often under-challenged. They become the victims of benign neglect since “they will learn it anyway”. Another traditional purpose of educational assessment was to dole out punishments and rewards. Students who did well received accolades, were placed on the Honor Roll and received awards and prizes. Students who didn’t do well were also recognized, sometimes publicly, with scorn and ridicule. We can see the Skinnerian hand of operant conditioning at work. In the traditional perception of Making the Difference 280
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