Glossary of Education Terms and Acronyms
Glossary of Education Terms and Acronyms
Glossary of Education Terms and Acronyms
2002
authentic assessment: An assessment presenting tasks that reflect the kind of mastery
demonstrated by experts. Authentic assessment of a student's ability to solve problems,
for example, would assess how effectively a student solves a real problem.
authentic task: School assignment that has a real-world application. Such tasks bear a
strong resemblance to tasks performed in nonschool settings (such as the home, an
organization, or the workplace) and require students to apply a broad range of knowledge
and skills. Often, they fill a genuine need for the students and result in a tangible end
product.
CRESST National Center for Research on Evaluation, Standards, and Student Testing
critical thinking: Logical thinking that draws conclusions from facts and evidence.
curriculum (plural curricula): A plan of instruction that details what students are to
know, how they are to learn it, what the teacher's role is, and the context in which
learning and teaching will take place.
distance learning: Using technology such as two-way, interactive television, teacher and
student(s) in different locations may communicate with one another as in a regular
classroom setting.
E
equity: The state of educational impartiality and fairness in which all children—
minorities and nonminorities, males and females, successful students and those who fall
behind, students with special needs and students who have been denied access in the past
—receive a high-quality education and have equal access to the services they need in
order to benefit from that education.
facilitator: A role for classroom teachers that allows students to take a more active role
in learning. Teachers assist students in making connections between classroom instruction
and students' own knowledge and experiences by encouraging students to create new
solutions, by challenging their assumptions, and by asking probing questions.
graphing calculator: A calculator with a large display that enables the user to see math
functions and data graphically.
higher-order questions: Questions that require thinking and reflection rather than single-
solution responses.
higher-order thinking skills: Understanding complex concepts and applying sometimes
conflicting information to solve a problem, which may have more than one correct
answer.
holistic scoring: Using a scoring guide or anchor papers to assign a single overall score
to a performance. (See scoring guide.)
informal knowledge: Knowledge about a topic that children learn through experience
outside of the classroom.
inquiry: A process in which students investigate a problem, devise and work through a
plan to solve the problem, and propose a solution to the problem.
"less is more": A principle built on the idea that quality is of higher importance than
quantity. It is reflected in instruction that guides students to focus on fewer topics
investigated in greater depth, with teachers performing the task of prioritizing subjects as
well as specific skills within those subjects.
LSS Laboratory for Student Success (serves states in the Mid-Atlantic area)
M
manipulative: Any physical object (e.g., blocks, toothpicks, coins) that can be used to
represent or model a problem situation or develop a mathematical concept.
metacognition: The process of considering and regulating one's own learning. Activities
include assessing or reviewing one's current and previous knowledge, identifying gaps in
that knowledge, planning gap-filling strategies, determining the relevance of new
information, and potentially revising beliefs on the subject.
modeling: Demonstrating to the learner how to do a task, with the expectation that the
learner can copy the model. Modeling often involves thinking aloud or talking about how
to work through a task.
new math: The teaching of highly abstract and conceptual math, which was popular
during the early 1960s.
open-ended question: A question that has many avenues of access and allows students to
respond in a variety of ways. Such questions have more than one correct answer.
problem solving: A method of learning in which students evaluate their thinking and
progress while solving problems. The process includes strategy discussion--determining
solution strategies to similar problems and pinpointing additional problems within the
context of their investigation.
Project 2061: A reform initiative, developed by the American Association for the
Advancement of Science, which seeks to improve the quality, increase the relevance, and
broaden the availability of science, math, and technology education.
S
scaffolding: An instructional technique in which the teacher breaks a complex task into
smaller tasks, models the desired learning strategy or task, provides support as students
learn to do the task, and then gradually shifts responsibility to the students. In this
manner, a teacher enables students to accomplish as much of a task as possible without
adult assistance.
scale: The range of scores possible for the student to achieve on a test or an assessment.
Performance assessments typically use a 4- to 6-point scale, compared to a scale of 100
or more with traditional multiple-choice tests.
scientific knowledge: Knowledge that provides people with the conceptual and
technological tools to explain and describe how the world works.
scoring guide: A set of guidelines for rating student work. A scoring guide describes
what is being assessed, provides a scoring scale, and helps the teacher or rater correctly
place work on the scale. (See rubrics.)
standardized tests: Assessments that are administered and scored in exactly the same
way for all students. Traditional standardized tests are typically mass-produced and
machine-scored; they are designed to measure skills and knowledge that are thought to be
taught to all students in a fairly standardized way. Performance assessments also can be
standardized if they are administered and scored in the same way for all students.
standards: Statements of what students should know and be able to demonstrate. Various
standards have been developed by national organizations, state departments of education,
districts, and schools.
systemic reform: Change that occurs in all aspects and levels of the educational process
and that impacts all stakeholders within the process—students, teachers, parents,
administrators, and community members—with implications for all components,
including curriculum, assessment, professional development, instruction, and
compensation.
WestEd: The Regional Educational Laboratory serving Arizona, California, Nevada, and
Utah.
zone of proximal development: A level or range in which a student can perform a task
with help.