1 / 24

Student Assessment and Rubric Construction

Learn about student assessment methods, including objective and subjective assessment, formative and summative assessment, and the use of rubrics for scoring.

tylerernest
Download Presentation

Student Assessment and Rubric Construction

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 9 C H A P T E R 9 Student Assessment

  2. Terms • Measurement • Administering a test and collecting scores • Evaluation • Analyzing and interpreting those scores • Assessment • The testing process that includes both measurement and evaluation (continued)

  3. Terms (continued) • Objective and subjective assessment • Objective: Well-defined scoring system; eliminates any teacher bias • Subjective: No standardized scoring system; teacher judgment determines score • Formative and summative assessment • Formative: Occurs during a lesson or throughout a unit • Summative: Occurs at the end of a unit or term (continued)

  4. Terms (continued) • Validity • The test measures what it’s supposed to measure • Reliability • The test demonstrates consistency • Objectivity • The test reflects impartiality (teachers using the same assessment tool on a student end up with the same score)

  5. Student Assessment • Many ways to assess student learning • Traditional: Written tests, fitness tests, skill tests • Authentic (i.e., in realistic situations): Game play, designing a fitness program, creating a skill video or brochure, performing a dance or aerobic routine • Assess sport or activity skills • Process: Assess the form or technique of a skill rather than the end product

  6. Rubric: An Assessment Tool • Rubric: A rating scale or scoring guide • Types: • Checklist: Determines if a task has been mastered (continued)

  7. Checklist Rubric (continued) • Checklist using a point system (continued)

  8. Types of Rubrics (continued) • Rating scale rubrics: Allows for quality to be assessed • Numerical rating scale (levels with point value) (continued)

  9. Rating Scale Rubrics (continued) • Worded rating scale: describes expected quality for each level Preparation phase of the forehand groundstroke (continued)

  10. Types of Rating Scales (continued) • Holistic rubric: Rates the entire task as a whole Tennis forehand groundstroke

  11. Rubric Construction • Determine assessment elements • Set limit of three to six elements to assess • Determine a rating scale • Set minimum of three levels • Create scoring criteria • Determine expectations for each level • Determine the cutoff level (acceptable/expected) (continued)

  12. Creating Scoring Criteria (continued) • Expected or passing levels of performance • Three-level rubric • Four-level rubric (using a letter grade)

  13. Creating Scoring Criteria (continued) • Point values must reflect corresponding letter grades Poor example: (continued)

  14. Point Value Considerations Better example:

  15. Grading Considerations • Elementary • Most often based on level of achievement • Secondary • Based on a letter grade • Grade should be justifiable and reflect a level of student learning or achievement • Grading solely on attendance, attire, or participation does not reflect student learning (continued)

  16. Grading Considerations (continued) • Grade on overall points or on a percentage? • Percentage grading: Allows emphasis to be placed on important elements (i.e., knowledge, skills, responsibility, fitness) • Grade on effort or attitude? • Use with caution • Grade on fitness? • Is daily time dedicated to enhancing fitness levels? Do all people respond to training? Do all lessons contribute to moderate to vigorous intensity levels?

  17. Written Test Construction • General considerations • Include instructions for each test item • Create an answer space • Use appropriate spacing and organization • Check for patterns in answers • Start with easier questions

  18. True or False Items (Alternate Choice) • Make sure each statement is totally true or false. • Include more false than true statements. • Keep statements fairly similar in length. • Avoid using absolute wording (e.g., never, always). • Avoid trivial or irrelevant statements (e.g., court dimensions).

  19. Multiple-Choice Items • Two parts • Stem: Main question or statement • Foils: Possible choices • Include a minimum of four foils • All foils should be possible answers • Arrange numerical foils in order • List foils down each column (continued)

  20. Multiple-Choice Items (continued) • Incorrect example: • After moving to hit a badminton shot, it is important to return to the ________. a. end line b. right side of the court c. front of the court d. home-base area • Correct example: • After moving to hit a badminton shot, it is important to return to the ________. a. end line c. front of the court b. right side of the court d. home-base area

  21. Matching Items • Use abbreviated phrases (stems) • Include more foils than stems • Include headings for stems and foils Player ActionReferee’s Call 1. Initially putting ball into play a. Charge 2. Personal contact against a stationary defender b. Double dribble 3. Unopposed shot allowed after a shooting foul c. Field goal 4. Steps taken while holding the ball d. Free throw e. Jump ball f. Traveling

  22. Recall Items • Fill-in-the-blank statements • Keep statements clear • Place the answer line in the middle or at the end of the phrase • Short-answer questions • Answers can include words, short phrases, or a few sentences (continued)

  23. Recall Items (continued) • Essay questions • Fast to write; take a long time to grade • Write specific essay questions so students know what to include in their answers • Develop a scoring rubric to score essay questions fairly

  24. Summary • Assessment and grading are important areas of education. • Assessments determine whether program objectives have been met. • Assessments inform students, parents, and administrators of learning outcomes and achievement.

More Related