I really like the
concept of active learning, and fully incorporating students in assessments. A
lot of the time when I was going through school it felt like teachers kept the
final goal a secret, and we were just expected to do as told. Telling students
ahead of time exactly what is expected of them, and why they are learning it is
a powerful tool. Students will be more willing to learn and work if they know
the purpose behind it. Being able to actually apply that knowledge is good as
well. There is a point to the learning then, and students know its not just
busy work.
The point that a
multiple-choice test will not be a good assessment really sticks out to me. Its
true that so much goes into these projects that there is no way student effort
can be captured in a multiple choice format, even if it is easiest for the teacher.
Multiple assessments that give a full picture of everything that go into a project
is definitely the way to go.
Creating anchors
is a good way to see where your students start, and in turn how far they go.
Its also a good starting point for creating those final assessments. Grades
along the way should also matter. If the teacher is making the work along the
way really meaningful it will be easier to build to a final goal. The
objectives will be clear, instead of having assignments that don’t seem to mean
anything.
With technology
there are many ways students can show what they have learned. Students can
orally explain how far they have come with podcasts, or they can create
something that sums up what they have learned. Teachers can even draw on
experts and give students a real world assessment, having the experts look at
student work and determine the strengths in it. Assessment is becoming the
focus in education, but that does not mean it has to be standardized and meaningless
to students.