Synopses & Reviews
For too many years, in too many schools, implementing higher standards has meant using the same methods to teach more and harder content, usually unsuccessfully. With this important book, Beverly Falk challenges that thinking. She explores the complexities of assessment, accountability, and standards-based reform, and their impact on classroom practice. And by offering strategies for using standards and assessments to support meaningful learning for all students, she truly gets to the heart of the matter.
Included are the tools for moving forward and using education to improve the lives of children:
- an examination of the problems of traditional standardized tests - and of the benefits of performance assessments
- an overview of how performance assessments can be created and used to serve a variety of purposes
- a discussion of standards, their strengths and weaknesses, and ways to assess them for worthy goals and opportunities for appropriate, effective practices
- guidelines for developing and organizing standards-based curriculum and assessment
- ways to use standards and assessments to enhance professional learning and to create a coherent, schoolwide educational program.
By placing the discussion in the context of teaching for understanding and critical inquiry, Falk's perspective is refreshing. she provides and alternative to the demand for high-stakes, skills-only standardized testing and pressures to track and retain students that have proliferated in the name of standards-based reform. More important - for teachers, administrators, teacher educators, and anyone in despair over defective models of standards and accountability - she provides hope.
Review
In this immensely thoughtful book, Falk lucidly explains how standards and assessments can serve learning and teaching. What's at stake? Nothing less than students who joyfully embrace their learning, teachers who are respected as professional decision makers, and a society that strives for social justice.Linda DarlingHammond, Charles E. Ducommun Professor of Education, Stanford University
Synopsis
For too many years, in too many schools, implementing higher standards has meant using the same methods to teach more and harder content, usually unsuccessfully. With this important book, Beverly Falk challenges that thinking. She explores the complexities of assessment, accountability, and standards-based reform, and their impact on classroom practice. And by offering strategies for using standards and assessments to support meaningful learning for all students, she truly gets to the heart of the matter.
Synopsis
Beverly Falk explores the complexities of assessment, accountability, and standards-based reform, and their impact on classroom practice.
About the Author
BEVERLY FALK is an associate professor at the School of Education, City College of New York. She has been a teacher of early childhood through graduate education courses, the founder and principal of a New York City public elementary school, a district administrator, a consultant to schools, districts, and states, and the Associate Director of the National Center for Restructuring Education, Schools, and Teaching (NCREST) at Teachers College, Columbia University. She is also the creator of The Early Literacy Profile and coauthor of Authentic Assessment in Action (with Linda Darling-Hammond and Jacqueline Ancess, Teachers College Press)
Table of Contents
1. What Gets in the Way of Important Learning: Problems of Tests and Testing Practices
A Better Way to Support Learning: Performance Assessment's Purposes and Characteristics
Keeping Track of Student Learning: Inquiry Assessments
Evaluation in a Different Key: Standards-Based Performance Assessments
Possibilities and Problems of a Standards-Based Approach: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
Using Standards and Assessments to Support Teaching and Learning
Sitting Down to Score: Professional Learning Through Standards and Assessments
Getting to the Heart of the Matter: Challenges for Educators in Challenging Times