Educators and policy makers in the United States have relied on tests to measure educational progress for more than 150 years, and have used the results for many purposes. They have tried minimum competency testing; portfolios; multiple-choice items, brief and extended constructed-response items; and more. They have contended with concerns about student privacy, test content, and equityand they have responded to calls for tests to answer many kinds of questions about public education and literacy, international comparisons, accountability, and even property values. State assessment data have been cited as evidence for claims about many achievements of public education, and the tests have also been blamed for significant failings. States are now considering whether to adopt the "common core" academic standards, and are also competing for federal dollars from the Department of Education’s Race to the Top initiative. Both of these activities are intended to help make educational standards clearer and more concise and to set higher standards for students. As standards come under new scrutiny, so, too, do the assessments that measure their results. This book summarizes two workshops convened to collect information and perspectives on assessment in order to help state officials and others as they review current assessment practices and consider improvements.
Center for Education & Committee on Best Practices for State Assessment Systems: Improving Assessment While Revisiting Standards
State Assessment Systems [EPUB ebook]
Exploring Best Practices and Innovations: Summary of Two Workshops
State Assessment Systems [EPUB ebook]
Exploring Best Practices and Innovations: Summary of Two Workshops
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Language English ● Format EPUB ● Pages 156 ● ISBN 9780309185332 ● Editor Alexandra Beatty ● Publisher National Academies Press ● Published 2010 ● Downloadable 3 times ● Currency EUR ● ID 7143395 ● Copy protection Adobe DRM
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