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WGU- Educational Assessment latest
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General Responsibilities of Ethical Practices - CORRECT ANSWER ✔✔✔ 1. Protect the health and safety of all participants
and a school district, and in society, generally, about the purposes and outcomes of the educational enterprise. Teachers play a vital role when participating in decision making at each of these levels and must be able to use assessment results effectively.
Learning Outcomes: - CORRECT ANSWER ✔✔✔ Terms included in instructional objectives that describe the expected results of instruction. Summative Assessment - CORRECT ANSWER ✔✔✔ (measures end-of-course achievement) To assess achievement at the end of instruction Example: End-of-year State test Accommodations - CORRECT ANSWER ✔✔✔ Do not change the expectations for learning Do not reduce the requirements of the task Modifications - CORRECT ANSWER ✔✔✔ Do change the expectations for learning Do reduce the requirements of the task (e.g., reduce number of items, alternate assignments, lower-level reading assignments) For students who require more support or adjustments than accommodations provide. Accommodations Commonly Used for Students with Disabilities. - CORRECT ANSWER ✔✔✔ Presentation accommodations allow a student with a disability to access information in ways other than standard visual or auditory means (e.g., by reading or listening). Response accommodations allow students with disabilities to complete instructional assignments or assessments through ways other than typical verbal or written responses. Setting accommodations allow for a change in the environment or in how the environment is structured. Timing and scheduling accommodations allow students extra time to complete an activity or a test Rubrics - CORRECT ANSWER ✔✔✔ an objective set of guidelines that defines the criteria used to score or grade an assignment. Portfolios - CORRECT ANSWER ✔✔✔ collection of artifacts, or individual work samples, that represent a student's performance over a period of time. Conferencing with students and parents: PURPOSE: The collected samples of work make clear to students and parents alike what students are learning and how well they are learning it.
You can present a summary of the students' achievements and then support it by showing actual samples of the students' work. This provides as comprehensive and complete a report of student achievement as is possible. The conference also provides for two-way communication that permits the student or parent to ask for clarification and to discuss ways to improve performance. No better way of reporting student achievement Self-Assessment - CORRECT ANSWER ✔✔✔ process of students using specific criteria to evaluate and reflect on their own work. Assigning Grades - CORRECT ANSWER ✔✔✔ Achievement:(i.e., how the student is performing in relation to expected grade-level goals) Growth: (i.e., the amount of individual improvement over time) Habits: (e.g., participation, behavior, effort, attendance) Evaluating Performance - CORRECT ANSWER ✔✔✔ Rubrics: an objective set of guidelines that defines the criteria used to score or grade an assignment. Portfolios: collection of artifacts, or individual work samples, that represent a student's performance over a period of time. Self-assessment: process of students using specific criteria to evaluate and reflect on their own work. Formal Assessments - CORRECT ANSWER ✔✔✔ (administered formally in the classroom) large-scale assessments at the school, district, state, national, and international levels; standardized tests Informal Assessments - CORRECT ANSWER ✔✔✔ (administered informally in the classroom) Observational measures; teacher conducted assessments; assessment support materials; and other achievement, aptitude, interest, and personality measures used in and for education. Mandated Core Components of 'Standards Based Reform' - CORRECT ANSWER ✔✔✔ a) content and performance standards set for all students; b) development of tools to measure the progress of all students toward the standards; c) accountability systems that require continuous improvement of student achievement.
An absence of bias and procedural fairness is essential for an assessment to have a high level of validity in measuring the knowledge, skills, and understandings that it is intended to measure. Reliability - CORRECT ANSWER ✔✔✔ consistency of measurement, that is, how consistent test scores or other assessment results are from one measurement to another Concerned with the consistency of the results. -provides the consistency that makes validity possible -indicates the degree to which various kinds of generalizations are justifiable. Bias in Tests and Testing - CORRECT ANSWER ✔✔✔ refers to construct-irrelevant components that result in systematically lower or higher scores for identifiable groups of examinees. the presence of some characteristic of an item and/or test that results in two individuals of the same ability but from different subgroups performing differently on the item and/or test. Therefore, it is most important that there are no ambiguities in the test items (questions and responses), passages, prompts, stimulus materials, artwork, graphs, charts, and test-related ancillaries. Construct Irrelevance - CORRECT ANSWER ✔✔✔ Extent to which test scores are influenced by factors (e.g., mode of presentation or response) that are irrelevant (not related) to the construct that the test is intended to measure. Different Types of Validity - CORRECT ANSWER ✔✔✔ Face validity: Do the assessment items appear to be appropriate? Content validity: Does the assessment content cover what you want to assess? Criterion-related validity: How well does the test measure what you want it to? Construct validity: Are you measuring what you think you're measuring? Factors That Lower the Validity of Assessment Results - CORRECT ANSWER ✔✔✔ 1. Tasks that provide an inadequate sample of the achievement to be assessed.
musical performance) a product (e.g., a theme, a written essay, a graph, a map, a painting, a poster, a model, a woodworking project, and a laboratory report, drawing, or insect display) or both (e.g., using tools properly in building a bookcase). Restricted Performance Tasks - CORRECT ANSWER ✔✔✔ highly structured and limited in scope Example: Construct a graph Extended Performance Tasks - CORRECT ANSWER ✔✔✔ typically less well structured and broad in scope Example: Design and conduct an experiment Analytic Scoring - CORRECT ANSWER ✔✔✔ The assignment of scores to individual components of a performance or product. Provides diagnostic information useful for improving performance. *grades specific criteria. Rating Scale - CORRECT ANSWER ✔✔✔ provides an opportunity to mark the degree to which an element is present. The scale for rating is typically based on one of the following: frequency with which an action is performed e.g., always, sometimes, never the general quality of a performance e.g., outstanding, above average, average, below average set of descriptive phrases that indicates degrees of acceptable performance e.g., completes task quickly, slow in completing task, cannot complete task without help. Holistic Scoring - CORRECT ANSWER ✔✔✔ The assignment of a score based on an overall impression of a performance or product rather than a consideration of individual elements. The overall judgment is typically guided by descriptions of the various levels of performance or scoring rubrics. can be guided by scoring rubrics that clarify what each level of quality is like. Holistic scoring rubrics and product
scales are especially useful where global judgments are being made. For an evaluation of the student's final level of performance The Knowledge Dimension - CORRECT ANSWER ✔✔✔ A. Factual Knowledge—The basic elements students most know to be acquainted with a discipline or solve problem in it. B. Conceptual Knowledge—The interrelationships among the basic elements within a larger structure that enable them to function together C. Procedural Knowledge—How to do something, methods of inquiry, and criteria for using skills, algorithms, techniques, and methods D. Metacognitive Knowledge—Knowledge of cognition in general as well as awareness and knowledge of one's own cognition Role of Instructional Objectives - CORRECT ANSWER ✔✔✔ objectives provide a description of the intended learning outcomes in performance terms—that is, in terms of the types of performance students can demonstrate to show that they have achieved the knowledge, understanding, or skill described by the objective. By describing the performance that we are willing to accept as evidence of achievement, we provide a focus for instruction, student learning, and assessment (objectives keep all three in close harmony) Stating Instructional Objectives - CORRECT ANSWER ✔✔✔ We are simply describing the student performance to be demonstrated at the end of the learning experience as evidence of learning. Percentile Rank - CORRECT ANSWER ✔✔✔ indicates relative position in a group in terms of the percentage of group members scoring at or below a given score. Grade Equivalents - CORRECT ANSWER ✔✔✔ indicates relative test performance in terms of the grade level at which the student's raw score matches the average score earned by the norm group. Absolute Grading - CORRECT ANSWER ✔✔✔ A common type is the use of letter grades defined by a 100-point system. In the case of an individual test, this 100- point system might represent the percentage of items correct or the total number of points earned on the test. When used as a final grade, it typically represents a combining of scores from various tests and other assessment results. Strengths
A variety of assessment strategies should be used. Assessment results will reveal information about student learning and performance which should be analyzed to assist with improvement of teaching and learning. Student performance patterns and changes over time can be recorded and analyzed to provide information about student growth. Some unexpected results or surprises may emerge. The data will raise questions that you can use for your own and your students' growth. Results can be compared to those of other teachers with similar classrooms and units of study to see if school-wide patterns emerge. Monitoring Student Progress - CORRECT ANSWER ✔✔✔ A recordkeeping system that uses a grid format can help you monitor the progress of individual students and the whole class at the same time. Since your tests are designed to measure student learning of specific objectives, this kind of display will allow you to see which students have mastered specific objectives and which students need additional help such as second-chance testing (which simply involves letting a student retake a test after additional instruction), remedial instruction, or accommodations The same grid used for monitoring individual progress can also give you a picture of the entire class. By tracking how students do on specific objectives, you can see which students (and objectives) require additional instruction A grid that charts performance for multiple assessments can help you see patterns of strengths and weaknesses. Looking at Assessment Data - CORRECT ANSWER ✔✔✔ The steps are as follows:
outcomes; (2) planning instructional activities; (3) planning assessment methods; and (4) checking on the alignment among objectives, instruction, and assessment. Re-authorization of Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) called Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) 2015 - CORRECT ANSWER ✔✔✔ Holds all students to high academic standards, prepares all students for success in college and career, provides more kids access to high-quality preschool, guarantees steps are taken to help students, and their school improve, reduces the burden of testing while maintaining annual information for parents and students, promotes local innovation and invests in what works