Innovative Testing Tools Online
Course Outline
Course Description
In the age of accountability, assessment is the key element in any restructuring of the educational system and is the primary focus for both individual school achievement and improvement (Chapman and King, 2005). This course will deal directly with the issue of integrating instruction with assessment or what has been popularly referred to as teaching to the test. The paradigm featuring assessment of learning will be flipped over to reveal assessment for learning.The focus will be on creating the skills necessary to make classroom exercises and activities so compelling and powerful that the two separate fields of instruction and assessment will merge into a single domain (Bond, 2006). Teachers will begin instructional planning, with the end (assessment) in mind, by identifying the desired results and competency targets as related to their specific subject and grade level. Teachers will address how evidence is gathered through a variety of formal and informal assessments to effectively gauge student performance (Wiggins, McTighe, 1998). Related issues such as classroom management, motivation and test anxiety will be addressed. Alternative methods of assessment will be introduced and incorporated into practical and classroom-friendly activities.
Objectives
- Assess the course content
- Evaluate traditional assessment
- Describe the elements of alternative assessment
- Evaluate authentic assessment throughout the school day
- Create the outline and criteria for an authentic assessment
- Create an authentic assessment task
- Compare and contrast teaching to the curriculum and . teaching to standardized metrics
- Create an authentic assessment approach, pre-test strategy or post-test strategy
- Compare developmental and summative rubrics
- Compare analytical and holistic rubrics
- Create task-specific and unit rubrics
- Evaluate relavancy of assessment strategies
- Assess the benefits of portfolios
- Evaluate the effectiveness of an instructional unit
- Assess a classroom for stressors
- Evaluate the impact of assessment
- Compare methods of movement and how they can be used in a classroom
- Design activities to incorporate positive self talk
- Design lessons based on standards and benchmarks
- Design a lesson that integrates technology
- Create a comprehensive definition of assessment
Curriculum Design & Time Requirements
There are a series of major assessment concepts systematically presented by the instructor using the Socratic or Instructional Conversation method. Each concept acts a building block to form a basic understanding that teachers can weave into their own classroom strategies and best practices to assist teachers in creating a school setting where assessment and learning go hand in hand. This is a sixty-hour, three credit graduate level course completed over a thirteen-week period. Modules One through Nine will be completed one per week. Module Ten will be completed over a two-week period so students will have time to revise and complete the final integration project.Hardware & Computer Skill Requirements
Students may use either a Macintosh computer or a PC with Windows 2000 or higher. Students should possess basic word processing skills and have internet access with an active e-mail account. Students also are expected to have a basic knowledge of how to use a Web browser, such as Microsoft Internet Explorer, Safari, Mozilla Firefox etc.Course Materials
The required textbook for this course is Assessment as Learning: Using Classroom Assessment to Maximize Student Learning by Lorna M. Earl. In this text educators will learn to embrace assessment as an integral part of the learning process in their classrooms-with this comprehensive resource that discusses the changing role of schooling and learning practices, as well as reasons behind the confusion and discomfort surrounding assessment. A textbook and student guide will be provided for all students. Case studies, rubrics and lesson plans are included.Session Outline
Session 1: A Reintroduction to AssessmentContents:
- Member introductions
- Individual and group expectations
- Course sessions, resources and requirements
- Defining assessment
- Assessment terminology
- The purpose of assessment, targets and benchmarks
- Assignments
Session 2: Standards and Benchmarks
Contents:
- Weighing the pros, cons and perceptions of standards
- Relating standards to curriculum development: Why students need learning targets
- Which came first, the curriculum or the test?
- Benchmarking performance of the class and students through the academic year
- Getting creative in meeting standards within the curriculum
- Assignments
Session 3: Standardized Tests
Contents:
- Accountability and school/state testing
- Using standardized tests as a teaching tool
- Assisting students to become good test takers
- Specific strategies to teach test-taking skills (SIMS Model)
- Parental involvement and test-taking
- Diminishing the negative perceptions of standardized tests.
- Assignments
Session 4: Identifying and Understanding Test Anxiety
Contents:
- Students in survival mode
- The difference between stress and distress
- Stress and the visual, auditory, motor and memory systems
- Stressors impacting student performance
- Assignments
Session 5: Steps Toward Eliminating Test Anxiety
Contents:
- Affirmations as a stress reduction toolVisualization techniques
- Restructuring brain (neural) patterns
- Getting rid of A.N.T.s (Automatic Negative Thoughts)
- Movement-related activities to reduce test anxiety
- Assignments
Session 6: Comparing Alternative project-based/qualitative) with Traditional Assessment
Contents:
- Evaluating traditional assessment
- Discovering the elements of alternative assessment
- Evaluating authentic assessment throughout the school day
- Creating the outline and criteria for an authentic assessment
- Creating an authentic assessment task
- Assignments
Session 7: The Role of Rubrics
Contents:
- Comparing analytical and holistic rubrics
- Evaluating task specific and unit rubrics
- Developing criteria for an assessment worksheet
- Rubrics as holistic and analytical assessment tools
- Using standards to create rubrics
- Assignments
Session 8: Utilizing Portfolios
Contents:
- The benefits of portfolios
- Development of portable life skills: Critical thinking, Organization and Self-Direction
- Creating timelines and checkpoints for portfolio development/growth
- Effective self assessment for students and teachers
- Quantifying/grading portfolios
- Assignments
Session 9: Organizing Instruction Based on Assessment
Contents:
- Linking pretest results to the course of study
- Identify ways of pre-testing: Oral, Written, Socratic questioning
- Building efficiency into instructional time
- Developing grading guidelines
- Learning styles and testing options
- Learning accommodations for individuals and groups
- Assignments
Session 10: Incorporating Technology/Final Exam
Contents:
- Using web-based resources
- The NTeQ approach
- Electronic portfolios
- Final exam and project
Grading
| Assignment | Points | Grading Scale | |||||||
| Forum Participation | 30 | 100 93 | A | ||||||
| Reading Assignments & Reflections | 20 | 92 85 | B | ||||||
| Final Integration Project | 30 | 84 77 | C | ||||||
| Final Exam | 20 | ||||||||
| Total Points | 100 |
Student Requirements
| 1. | Actively participate in all Forum activities | |
| 2. | Reading assignments: Complete all readings and reflection assignments. | |
| 3. | Students are required to put the assessment strategies and concepts into action and will be required to construct a portfolio during the course that will serve as a toolkit of specific ideas and protocols for their classrooms as a part of their final project which will include a final exam and will be due by the end of Module 10. | |
| 4. | Pass a final exam. |

