Sunday, May 5, 2013

WEEK 5: Alternative Assessment

THOU TEATCHETH THOU SHALT ...
                                                                                                       "Assess alternatively"


Throughout the years, language practitioners have probed into many concepts related to the domain of Testing and Evaluation. These include Summative Assessment, Formative Assessment, Standardized Testing. This weeks reading assignment article develop one such concept of Assessment which is Aternative Assessment. But before making a summary of that article let us give a meaning to the notion of Assessment. Assessment can be understood as the process of making judgment about specific aspects of behaviour, consists of a set of skills by which determines whether or not the learner has mastered the objectives established. (FASTEF training Portefolio 2006)  
The article Assessing Learning, Alternative assessment, exposes the main features or distinctive traits of alternative Assessment. They can be summed up as follow:

Focus on the students’ strengths rather than weaknesses
Authentic tasks for communication goals
Focus on communication, not correctness 
More active role of learners in  assessment criteria determination
Oriented towards learner self-assessment and  peer assessment 
  

 
Looking at this diagram, it apprears that alternative assessment caters more for the need of a communicative and learner centered orientation of assessement. While assessment responsability solely resided on the teacher side, alternative assessment integrates an inclusive, progressive and communicative dimension to assessment. But, what are the assessment tools of this framework?

The two commonly used tools for alternative assessment are Checklists and Rubrics.
These are really important tools in the hands of both the learners and the teachers. For the groups, the checklist can serve as a guideline against which the steps to complete for a given project, activity or assignement are to be checked. They are are less descriptive and than rubrics. 


Rubrics on the other hand can be used for many purposes. They have been used in language teaching for diagnostic purposes or errors identification. They have come more into fashion with the development of online learning activities such as webquests. These tools are really handy when conducting a Project basedd learning (PBL). One advantage they have is they can enable students to keep tracks of their progress. Second, following the principles of Alternative Assessement, learners can participate in the determination of the evaluation criteria and cast  reflective thoughts about their own progress and learning skills. By designing a rubric, the teacher can control the level of expertise and difficulty required to perform some tasks and evaluate the learners accordingly.
According to the article,  Assessing Learning, Alternative assessment, rubrics can be grouped into four types which are:
  1. Holistic rubrics 
  2. Analytical rubrics 
  3. Primary traits rubrics 
  4. Multitraits rubrics
 The chart below attempts to repertoriate the different aspects of those rubrics.



TYPES OF RUBRICS
Purpose
Advantages
Limitations
Holistic rubrics
  • Holistic assessment of language
  • mostly suitable for large scale
  • Not precise when evaluating  separate or discreet learners problem
Analytic rubrics
  • Analytic assessment of students’ performance
  • Offers an analysis of different dimensions of the learner’s performance
  • multiple weighting and separate scoring
  • non holistic approach
  • Requires more preparation
Primary trait rubrics :              

  • Focus on one criterion
  • Easy and quick to grade writing or speaking
  • Information  may not easily translated into grades.

  • need constant adaptation of dimensions if to be reused for a different task

(cf : Types of rubrics: Primary Trait and Multiple Trait )

Multitrait rubrics:
  • Enables the multiple traits rating related to tasks
  • allow separate scoring
  • Scoring related to task features
  • Too much focus on the task may be to the detriment of the language dimensions
  • May be more time consuming to prepare and analyze

Please help to improve this chart!

7 comments:

  1. Hello,

    Your description is so wide and clear with charts, I am very impressed. I hope you will leave it for long time as I could use it for reference.

    Best,
    Jurgita

    ReplyDelete
  2. thanks, Jurgita, I will leave it here for a long time and I hope to be able to update the information as well.
    Please, feel free to make suggestions on how to improve it, after all it's our course blog.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Hi Abdouse ,

    I read you quoted this idea: "Focus on the students’ strengths rather than weaknesses", how would you recommend to apply it but in a way that doesn't prevent us to help students balance all their communicative skills?

    Regards,
    Luis

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Luis
      Thank you for your comment. You raise a very important issue. I think this has been said by the writer because many too times, we try to test very complicated and difficult tricky things which are not directly students. This has also to do with the fact that. What the writer means, I believe, is developing a pedagogy of success and not of failure. The type of feedback a learner receives can impact positively or negatively on teir future performance. Therefore we as teacher should develop strategies that will help our students improve without alienating them. Part of the answer is provided by alternative assessment in that they involve the learners in the determination of the criteria of the assessment. I think this would imply discussing with the students about the output of their performance, written or oral, paper versus digital and so on.
      I would recommend first determining their learning styles, (back to focussing on their strengh) then little by little incorporate activities that address multiple intelligences (cf Gardner) and equip our students with strategies to cope with the skills they have problems with. Lastly, still in line with PBL, we can design multi-traits or primary traits rubrics and play on weighted scaling so as not to penalize too much our learners. After all they are learning.

      Delete
  4. I would say it is worth my while to read the blog article again. As a teacher, I am far behind you in as to theoretical level. Going through your article does help me a lot. Thank you.
    Chengkuo

    ReplyDelete
  5. Hi Abdouse,
    I guess I time to time forget to focus on my students' strenghts. Thank you for reminding us this fact. I also enjoyed the charts. They touch upon important details.
    Thanks
    Hacer

    ReplyDelete
  6. Dear Abdouse, ,
    I know that you are a distinguished one . If you are interested in games ,this is an audio visual material in teaching and learning which motivate them to listen ,speak and react happily you can download it freely
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    Regards,
    Belal

    ReplyDelete