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General Responsibilities of Ethical Practices - Answer- 1. Protect the health and safety
of all participants
2. Be knowledgeable about and behave in compliance with state and federal laws
relevant to the conduct of professional activities
3. Maintain and improve their professional competence in educational assessment
4. Provide assessment services only in areas of their competence and experience,
affording full disclosure of their professional qualifications
5. Promote the understanding of sound assessment practices in educations
6. Adhere to the highest standards of conduct and promote professionally responsible
conduct with educational institutions and agencies that provide educational services
7. Perform all professional responsibilities with honesty, integrity, due care, and
fairness.
No Child Left Behind (NCLB) 2002 - Answer- is a government mandate to schools and
states to have ALL children up to grade level with their peers. It set unrealistic goals and
penalized schools that did not make Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP). The act also
required all teachers become "highly qualified". With these new benchmarks and
changes to the ways states' addressed education, came increased accountability.
Failure could mean a decrease in funding or dissolution of a school/district.
Achievement was linked to standardized testing done grades 3-8 and at least one year
during high school. Tied achievement to annual standardized tests. These tests are
administered to grades 3-8 and at least one year between 9-12th grades.
Elementary and Secondary Education Act 1994 (ESEA). Reauthorized - Answer-
Challenging standards were set for student achievement and to develop and
administered to "all" students and required that all schools make "Adequate Yearly
Practice". It also included "special needs students" in the definition of all students.
States were required to set challenging standards for student achievement, and develop
and administer assessments to measure student progress towards those standards.
Federal laws such as ESEA and IDEA can be seen as legislated attempts to 'raise the
bar.'
Instruction is most effective when - Answer- 1. Directed toward a clearly defined set of
intended learning outcomes.
2. The methods and materials of instruction are congruent with the outcomes to be
achieved.
3. The instruction is designed to fit the characteristics and needs of the students.
4. Instructional decisions are based on information that is meaningful, dependable, and
relevant.
5. Students are periodically informed concerning their learning progress.
6. Remediation is provided for students not achieving the intended learning.
, 7. Instructional effectiveness is periodically reviewed and the intended learning
outcomes and instruction modified as needed.
Assessment is most effective when - Answer- 1. Designed to assess a clearly defined
set of intended learning outcomes.
2. The nature and function of the assessments are congruent with the outcomes to be
assessed.
3. The assessments are designed to fit the relevant student characteristics and are fair
to everyone.
4. Assessments provide information that is meaningful, dependable, and relevant.
5. Provision is made for giving the students early feedback of assessment results.
6. Specific learning weaknesses are revealed by the assessment results.
7. Assessment results provide information useful for evaluating the appropriateness of
the objectives, the methods, and the materials of instruction.
Authentic Assessments - Answer- A title for performance assessments that stresses the
importance of focusing on the application of understandings and skills to real problems
in real-world; contextual settings.
Achievement Assessment - Answer- achievement assessment is a broad category that
includes all of the various methods for determining the extent to which students are
achieving the intended learning outcomes of instruction
Alternative Assessments - Answer- A title for performance assessments that
emphasizes that these assessment methods provide an alternative to traditional paper-
and-pencil testing.
Content standards - Answer- describe what students should know and be able to do at
the end of a specified period of learning (e.g., a grade or series of grades). They provide
a framework for curriculum development, instruction, and the assessment of student
achievement. Various professional organizations have also developed sets of content
standards in their particular subject areas. It is hoped that the use of such standards will
raise achievement expectations, increase the quality of public education, provide a
better informed citizenship, and make the country more competitive with other countries.
Placement Assessment - Answer- (measures entry behavior)
To determine student performance at the beginning of instruction
Example: Unit Pre-test
Performance-Based Tasks - Answer- may also be useful for determining entry skills. In
the area of writing, for example, obtaining writing samples at the beginning of instruction
can establish a base for later assessments of progress. This type of preassessment
would be especially valuable if portfolios of student work were to be maintained during
the instruction.
Formative Assessments - Answer- (monitors learning progress)