Webinar
Federal Policy, Leverage Career and Technical Education, Create Space to Pilot Systems of Assessments, State Policy, Build Balanced Systems of Assessments
Assessment Literacy to Support Competency-based Education Systems and other Deeper Learning Efforts
Assessment literacy has traditionally evoked measurement principles such as validity and reliability accompanied by complex equations, statistical terms, and images of normal curves, ogives, and error bands. We have to come to recognize that assessment literacy is better conceptualized as the knowledge and skills associated with designing, selecting, interpreting, and using high-quality assessments to improve student learning. Beyond using assessments in their classrooms, assessment literate educators should be equipped to deal with an onslaught of data from large-scale state assessments, interim assessments, local district- or school-wide assessments, and classroom-based assessments. Whatever the definition, there is widespread concern about the lack of assessment literacy among educators.
However, the call for improved assessment literacy is not isolated to teachers. Administrators and policymakers need to be assessment literate to understand how to support school improvement efforts and other major initiatives. Unfortunately, educational leaders are inundated with so much data that they often resort to ideology and prior knowledge to make decisions (Coburn, 2009; Gerzon, 2015).
Improving assessment literacy has been a major challenge in the assessment community for many years. Notably, people like Rick Stiggins have kept this issue at the forefront of professional measurement organizations for at least 30 years. While we have made some progress, we are also facing new challenges. Many are now pushing for educators, administrators, and policymakers to be literate about the assessment of student learning in competency-based education systems and related initiatives to promote deeper learning by students. Unfortunately, unlike designing scoring rubrics for evaluating student writing, for example, the assessment issues associated with competency-based education are just starting to be conceptualized within the measurement community. This makes enhancing literacy of assessment in a CBE context that much more challenging. For instance, when designing competency-based systems, educators and educational leaders need to work from research-based frameworks on how students develop discipline-based and interdisciplinary expertise. This raises challenges, among others, of creating assessments and assessment systems to support inferences of generalization (or transfer).
View this archived webinar to hear assessment experts Scott Marion and Lorrie Shepard discuss ways to promote assessment literacy in general and with competency-based education systems more specifically.
Presenters:
- Scott Marion, President and Executive Director, Center for Assessment
- Lorrie Shephard, Distinguished Professor and Dean Emerita, University of Colorado