What Is Assessment?
What Is Assessment?
•It is an estimation.
•It is how we measure the students’ performance.
•It measures progress
•Diagnoses problems for useful feedback.
•It is the most useful data on what is happening in a
learning environment.
What is Evaluation?
Itinvolves all the factors that influence
the learning process.
Aims of the syllabus
The Course design.
Materials.
Methodology.
Teacher’s performance and assessment.
Problems and Prejudices
Assessment
Teachers to students.
Obligatory.
Separation learning and teaching and
assessment. Because of lack of effective
feedback.
Type of feedback.
Real help is not given.
What is tested.
Importance to only one skill.
Exams are given at the end.
Doesn’t encourage what has been learnt
rather than what hasn’t.
Students are not taken into consideration.
TYPES OF ASSESSMENTS
Formal Assessment (Official Exams)
Informal assessment.
Self assessment.
When should we assess?
Needs to be continuously.
Informal assessment shlould be done
every lesson.
More in-depth assessment (Formal)
should be periodically.
Self-assessment needs to be done at
regural intervals, so the Ss know what are
their strength and weaknesses.
Who should assess?
Traditionally, the teachers job. Formal
assessment should only be done by the
teacher. Ask the Ss to participate in the
process.
Self assessments help the Ss think for
themselves and doesn’t diminishes the
role of the teacher.
How should we assess?
Must be done constructively.
Should demostrate what they know.
Must be reliable. Under the same conditions and
the same performance the Ss should give a
similar result.
Establish criteria and clear procedures. It would
be bias for some Ss.
Ensure what you are assessing.
Economical
Accountable: be able to report.
INFORMAL ASSESSMENT
It is a way of collecting information about
our students’ performance in normal
classroom conditions.
THE HOW
We need to work out what we are going to
assess.
We must establish clear criteria for
assessing Ss. Don’t rely on impressions.
Link the assessments.
Informal assessment is not:
Replacement.
A way to avoid tests.
A form of evaluation without criteria.
A single system
Isolated
When and What to assess?
Traditionally, we tend to think of this type
of assessment as consisting solely of
MARKING AN ESSAY done for
homework or the teacher walking around
the during an activity to get a vague idea
of whether they are doing alright or not.
In the classroom is where we can get the
most data and we can monitor the four
skills.
When and What to assess?
STEPS
How much we are going to assess?
Time is limited
Weighting (Which areas are the most
important)
Establish clear weighting
How much informal assessment
compared to Formal assessment?
Informal assessment of linguistic factors?
Normally written assignments.
Problems
We omit other skills and areas.
We mark through impression
Not a clear idea of what is being assess.
At the end we tend to make judgements in terms of
impression.
It Is very important to make an effort to assess oral
skills.
Informal assessment of linguistic factors
Assessment criteria can be described in
terms of what we expect our students to
be able to do.
An alternative is to create a band (e.g. 0
to 5)
The more bands we have the more
delicate and descriptive the system will
be.
SPEAKING
Informal assessment is particulary important
for speaking as many teachers have practical
difficulties in organizing oral tests.
Informal assessment of speaking can have
an important effect on learners.
Informal assessment of speaking is done by
observing students’ oral performance in
class, by monitoring speaking activities as
they happen.
SPEAKING
With time and effort you will become a
whole working unit.
Give students points based on pre-difined
criteria. (systemize)
Unreliability and inaccuracy should be
considered.
Distorted idea do to large classes.
Monitored students (harder or worse)
SPEAKING
Possible solutions for unreliability and
inaccuracy
Produce a system that is objective and
reliable.
Create a band (reliable)
Establish our own criteria.
Work with collegues on a standard
criteria.
SPEAKING
ORAL ASSESSMENT CRITERIA
5 Speaks fluently-almost no errors
4 Speaks quite fluently-some errors
3 Some difficulty speaking-many errors.
2 Difficulty with speaking-almost
incomprehensible.
1 Unable to use language-incomprehensible
SPEAKING
Fluency
Message
Accuracy
Pronunciation
SPEAKING
HOW TO ASSESS SPEAKING
Assess Ss at a particular time.
Assess over a few lessons.
Prepare a series of speaking tasks.
Divide the Ss.
Type of tasks:
Pair work, interviews, group surveys,
roleplays, information gap activities,
expositions
SPEAKING
When should informal assessment of
speaking be carried out?
Depends on time
Frequency of reports
WRITING
Assessing our student’s written work can be very
time consuming and unless you are careful you
can find yourself with many hours of marking.
We need to decide how many and what sort of
compositions we are going to assess.
The importance should be reflected on your
syllabus plan.
How the writing will be done.
Feedback
Link between writing and self-assessment is vital.
WRITING
Crucial factors:
Must be reliable
Avoid grading from your head
Establish criteria
WRITING
Writing Criteria
5 Excellent writer
6 Good Writer
7 Modest Writer
8 Marginal writer
9 Poor writer
Comprehensibility, Accuracy, Spelling,
Organization
WRITING
HOLISTIC SCALES
General Overall Descriptions
ANALYTIC SCALES
Separated aspects of abilities
WRITING
MARKING
Analytic or Holistic Scales
Focus on a couple of aspects
Clear criteria for self assessment.
De-motivation
Correction code
Complement with formal assessment.
WRITING
CORRECTION CODE
S-spelling
P-pronunciation
WO-word order
V-vocabulary
Problems
Extremely to be written effectively
Distractors
Best answer
CLOZE PROCEDURE
Deforestation used to be something that few people apart from
environmentalists talked about, but in the last twenty years or so, it has
received increasing (1)___________ from governments and the media, and
is now generally considered one of the world’s most serious environmental
problems.
There is (2)___________ about how much forest has been disappearing,
but few people doubt there is much less forest now than there was, say,
fifty years ago.
Deforestation leads to the extinction of many (3)___________of forest
animals and the erosion of soil after trees have been removed, but the
(4)___________of deforestation that we hear most about is its contribution
to global warming. Trees naturally absorb carbon dioxide (CO2) from the
Earth’s atmosphere, so (5)___________ trees means higher levels of CO2,
which contributes to the atmosphere becoming warmer. Many scientists
estimate that about 20% of global warming is due to (6)___________.
CLASSROOM MANAGEMENT
WHAT IS CLASSROOM
MANAGEMENT?
It is giving the opportunity to the students
to