Assessment of Learning
Assessment of Learning
Assessment of Learning
refers to strategies designed to confirm what students know, determine whether or not
they have met curriculum outcomes.
Assessment is the systematic collection, review, and use of information about
educational programs undertaken for purpose of improving student learning and
development.
Measurement is the process of quantifying or assigning number to the individual's
intelligence, personality, attitudes and values, and achievement of the students.
Evaluation is a process of summing up the results of measurement or tests, giving
them, some meaning based on value judgments;
Classroom Assessment can be classified into two:
A. Nature of Assessment
1. Maximum Assessment
It is used to determine what individuals can do when performing at their best (e.g.,
aptitude test, achievement test)
2. Typical Assessment
It is used to determine what individuals will do under natural conditions (e.g., attitude,
interest, personality inventories, observational techniques and peer appraisal)
B. Format of Assessment
1. Fixed-choice Test
An assessment used to measure knowledge and skills effectively and efficiently (e.g.,
multiple-choice, true or false)
2. Complex-performance Assessment
An assessment procedure used to measure the performance of the learner in contexts
and on problems valued in their own right (e.g., experiments, projects, essays).
Role of Assessment in Classroom instruction
1. Placement Assessment is concerned with the entry performance and typically
focuses on the questions: Does the learner possess the skills needed to begin
the planned instruction?
2. Formative Assessment is a type of assessment-used to monitor the learning of
the students; to provide immediate feedback to both student and teacher
regarding the success and failures of learning.
3. Diagnostic Assessment is a type of assessment given at the beginning of
instruction or during instruction to identify the strengths and weaknesses of the
students
4. Summative Assessment is a type of assessment usually given at the end of a
course or unit to determine the extent to which the objectives have been met.
METHODS OF INTERPRETATION OF TEST DATA
1. Norm-reference interpretation (Performance are compared to another group)
It is used to describe student performance according to some relative position in
some known group.
2. Criterion-reference interpretation (Mastery Level)
It is used to describe student performance according to the specified domain of
clearly defined learning tasks.
TYPES OF TESTS
Non-standardized test versus Standardized test
❖ A non-standardized test is a type of test developed by classroom teachers.
❖ Standardized test is a type of test developed by specialists.
Objective test versus Subjective test
❖ Objective test is a type of test in which two or more evaluators give an
examination the same score
❖ Subjective test is a type of test in which the scores are influenced by the
judgment of the evaluators: there is not one correct answer. -essay, Problem
solving, performance
Supply test versus Fixed-response (or Select type of test)
❖ Supply test requires the examiner to provided answers.
❖ Fixed response test has options which the examines can select from.
Mean Absolute Deviation is the average deviation of the absolute score value from the
mean.
Standard Deviation is the measure of how spread out the numbers are from the
mean in a distribution.
Positive Skewness (skewed to the right) Negative Skewness (skewed to the left)
Distribution has a longer tail to the right. Distribution has a longer tail to the left.
Mo < Md < Mean Mean < Md < Mo
More students go below the mean More students got above the mean
Most of the students did not perform Most of the students performed well
well
Measure of Kurtosis shows the relative flatness or peakedness of distribution