Synopses & Reviews
Beyond Tests and Quizzes
Because the drive toward external assessment speaks almost exclusively in terms of standardized testing, we need to be reminded of the internal purposes of assessment: measuring learning for both student and teacher so that instruction can be adjusted and improved. This book is written for college instructors who are striving to creatively change assessment practice to better reflect learner-centered teaching. It is intended to consider not only the multiple ways in which individuals learn content, but also the multiple avenues to assessment the variety of learning styles demands.
Creative assessment is defined here as assessments that spin, twist, and reform what might be a standard kind of assessment in an ordinary classroom. Instructors should use these examples of creative assessment as starting points, and as the beginnings of an internal discussion on what matters most in the courses they teach: What components of each course count the most for solving a range of problems in the discipline? If facts are important, and they usually are, how can they be used to support a flexible approach to thinking, solving, considering options, and gathering and interpreting evidence? What are the facts not telling us?
The approaches suggested in this book focus on learning, on what students can do as a result of learning, and on how teachers can observe what students do. The assessment models presented here include concept mapping, variable grading, learning logs, moving from memorization to analysis, making labs more practical, exams as learning experiences, web-based assessment, thinking styles, tracking learning over time, and assessment in the real world. Each translates to a range of academic settings and is easily adaptable for use by a variety of instructors in any discipline.
Synopsis
The Mezeskes (a husband and wife team) serve as general editors on this volume that includes contributed chapters from over a dozen professors with extensive experience across a range of disciplines and course types. They offer fresh, creative assessment techniques that can be used in any type of higher education institution and discipline based on sound theoretical underpinnings but with a heavy emphasis on application— showing ways individual professors can actually use these techniques in their own classrooms. Some of these include concept mapping, variable grading, learning logs, moving from memorization to analysis, making labs more practical, exams as learning experiences, web-based assessment, thinking styles, tracking learning over time, assessment in the real world, and an evaluation of student assessment itself.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction
Why Creative Assessment?
Concept Mapping
Getting Creative in a Required Course
From Now on You’ ll be History
Resurrecting the Lab Practical
Exams as Learning Experiences
Web-Based Assessment
Challenging Students (and the Professor) to Use All of Their Brains
Demonstrating Synthesis
Assessing an Engineering Design Team Project
Tracking Learning Over Time in health Care Education
Verbing the Noun
Hands-On Assessment Can Work for Pre-Service Elementary Teachers
Building Assignments Within Community
Do Classroom Assessment Techniques Improve Student Learning and Fulfill Larger Assessment Goals?
Synopsis
Beyond Tests and Quizzes
Because the drive toward external assessment speaks almost exclusively in terms of standardized testing, we need to be reminded of the internal purposes of assessment: measuring learning for both student and teacher so that instruction can be adjusted and improved. This book is written for college instructors who are striving to creatively change assessment practice to better reflect learner-centered teaching. It is intended to consider not only the multiple ways in which individuals learn content, but also the multiple avenues to assessment the variety of learning styles demands.
Creative assessment is defined here as assessments that spin, twist, and reform what might be a standard kind of assessment in an ordinary classroom. Instructors should use these examples of creative assessment as starting points, and as the beginnings of an internal discussion on what matters most in the courses they teach: What components of each course count the most for solving a range of problems in the discipline? If facts are important, and they usually are, how can they be used to support a flexible approach to thinking, solving, considering options, and gathering and interpreting evidence? What are the facts not telling us?
The approaches suggested in this book focus on learning, on what students can do as a result of learning, and on how teachers can observe what students do. The assessment models presented here include concept mapping, variable grading, learning logs, moving from memorization to analysis, making labs more practical, exams as learning experiences, web-based assessment, thinking styles, tracking learning over time, and assessment in the real world. Each translates to a range of academic settings and is easily adaptable for use by a variety of instructors in any discipline.
Synopsis
Because the drive toward external assessment speaks almost exclusively in terms of standardized testing, we need to be reminded of the internal purposes of assessment: measuring learning for both student and teacher so that instruction can be adjusted and improved. This book is written for college instructors who are striving to creatively change assessment practice to better reflect learner-centered teaching. It is intended to consider not only the multiple ways in which individuals learn content, but also the multiple avenues to assessment the variety of learning styles demands.
Creative assessment is defined here as assessments that spin, twist, and reform what might be a standard kind of assessment in an ordinary classroom. Instructors should use these examples of creative assessment as starting points, and as the beginnings of an internal discussion on what matters most in the courses they teach: What components of each course count the most for solving a range of problems in the discipline? If facts are important, and they usually are, how can they be used to support a flexible approach to thinking, solving, considering options, and gathering and interpreting evidence? What are the facts not telling us?
About the Author
Richard J. Mezeske is professor of teacher education and chair of the Department of Education at Hope College.
Barbara A. Mezeske is associate professor in the Department of English at Hope College.
Table of Contents
About the Authors.
Acknowledgments.
Introduction: Why These Assessment Opportunities Make Sense in a World Where Assessment of Factual Knowledge Has Taken Hold (Elizabeth Gayton).
1. Why Creative Assessment (Richard J. Mezeske, Barbara A. Mezeske)?
2. Concept Mapping: Assessing Pre-Service Teachers' Understanding and Knowledge (Richard J. Mezeske).
3. Getting Creative in a Required Course: Variable Grading, Learning Logs, and Authentic Testing (Barbara A. Mezeske).
4. "From Now On You'll Be History": The Transition from Memorization to Analysis (Janis M. Gibbs).
5. Resurrecting the Lab Practical (Kathy Winnett-Murray).
6. Exams as Learning Experiences: One Nutty Idea After Another (Thomas Smith).
7. Web-Based Instruction and Assessment in a German Culture Course (Lee Forester).
8. Challenging Students (and the Professor) to Use All of Their Brains: A Semester-Long Exercise in Thinking Styles and Synthesis (Elizabeth A. Trembley).
9. Demonstrating Synthesis: Technology Assessment Tools for Field Experience Learning (Susan Cherup).
10. Assessing an Engineering Design Team Project: Build It, and They Will Come (Michael Misovich and Roger Veldman).
11. Tracking Learning Over Time in Health Care Education Using Clinical Proficiency Transcripts (Richard Ray).
12. Verbing the Noun: Grammar in Action (Rhoda Janzen).
13. Hands-On Assessment Can Work for Pre-Service Elementary Teachers (Mary DeYoung).
14. Building Assignments Within Community: Assessment in the Real World (David B. Schock).
Conclusion: Do Classroom Assessment Techniques Improve Student Learning and Fulfill Larger Assessment Goals (Scott VanderStoep and Carla Reyes).
Index.