1st Edition

Developing Teachers’ Assessment Capacity

Edited By Christopher DeLuca, Sandra Johnson Copyright 2018
204 Pages
by Routledge

204 Pages
by Routledge

204 Pages
by Routledge

Given the academic benefits of assessment-driven teaching, and the growing accountability context of educational systems around the world, there is a rapidly developing need to educate teachers in effectively using assessments to promote, monitor, and report on student learning. However, assessment has historically been a neglected area in teacher education programmes, and empirical research has... Read more

Introduction: Developing assessment capable teachers in this age of accountability Christopher DeLuca and Sandra Johnson

1. Student teachers’ appraisal of the importance of assessment in teacher education and self-reports on the development of assessment competence Christoph Schneider and Rainer Bodensohn

2. Exploring the challenge of developing student teacher data literacy Bronwen Cowie and Beverley Cooper

3. Integrating assessment for learning in the teacher education programme at the University of Oslo Lisbeth M. Brevik, Marte Blikstad-Balas and Kirsti Lyngvær Engelien

4. Assessment for equity: learning how to use evidence to scaffold learning and improve teaching Mary F. Hill, Fiona Ell, Lexie Grudnoff, Mavis Haigh, Marilyn Cochran-Smith, Wen-Chia Chang and Larry Ludlow

5. A rubric to track the development of secondary pre-service and novice teachers’ summative assessment literacy Frances Edwards

6. Professional controversies between teachers about their summative assessment practices: a tool for building assessment capacity Lucie Mottier Lopez and Raphae¨l Pasquini

7. Standards of practice to standards of evidence: developing assessment capable teachers Claire Wyatt-Smith, Colette Alexander, Deanne Fishburn and Paula McMahon

8. Scaling up, writ small: using an assessment for learning audit instrument to stimulate site-based professional development, one school at a time Zita Lysaght and Michael O’Leary

9. Developing teachers’ capacities in assessment through career-long professional learning Kay Livingston and Carolyn Hutchinson

Biography

Christopher DeLuca is an Associate Professor in Educational Assessment at the Faculty of Education, Queen’s University, Kingston, Canada. His research examines the complex intersections of curriculum, pedagogy, and assessment as operating within evolving frameworks of educational accountability and standards-based teaching and learning. His work focuses primarily on developing and enhancing educators’ assessment capacity to better support positive student learning experiences and outcomes.

Sandra Johnson has extensive experience in teaching, research and assessment. She has served on government advisory committees on assessment, and provided assessment support and training for several international projects. She is a founding director of Assessment Europe, a founding member and Fellow of the Association for Educational Assessment – Europe, an Honorary Research Fellow in the University of Bristol’s Graduate School of Education, and an Honorary Member of the European Educational Research Association’s Network 9 (Assessment, Evaluation, Testing and Measurement).