{"id":13391,"date":"2020-09-16T11:17:30","date_gmt":"2020-09-16T15:17:30","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/aurora-institute.org\/?post_type=cw_post&p=13391"},"modified":"2020-09-16T11:17:30","modified_gmt":"2020-09-16T15:17:30","slug":"summative-vs-formative-assessment-from-binary-choice-to-continuum","status":"publish","type":"cw_post","link":"https:\/\/aurora-institute.org\/cw_post\/summative-vs-formative-assessment-from-binary-choice-to-continuum\/","title":{"rendered":"Summative vs. Formative Assessment: From Binary Choice to Continuum"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"StudentThis post originally <\/em>appeared<\/em> on the\u00a0Great Schools Partnership\u00a0blog<\/a> on June 10, 2020.<\/em><\/p>\n

The Covid-19 pandemic has thrown persistent educational problems into sharp relief. What many of these problems share is that they were always there, hiding in plain sight in our systems, mindsets, and practices. Remote learning favors privileged students with secure homes and reliable internet access? It already did. Grading rewards compliance and playing the educational game as much as mastery of content and skills? It already did. Our most at-risk students are hard to find, let alone support? They already were. Assessments don\u2019t translate to environments outside of the classroom? They never did.<\/p>\n

Assessment has been on my mind over the last year, and remote learning has highlighted the fact that much of what we do for assessment simply does not translate outside the tightly controlled environment of a traditional classroom. In particular, it has highlighted real dissonance around formative and summative assessment.<\/p>\n

The main distinctions between formative and summative assessments are when they are given and how they are used. A quiz given before learning to find out what students already know is formative; the same quiz given at the end of the learning is summative. The purpose of the first quiz is to provide data to the teacher about what students do and don\u2019t know so that the teacher can design or adjust instruction to improve student learning. The purpose of the second quiz is to evaluate the student\u2019s level of learning. Educators aren\u2019t confused about these distinctions, and students readily understand them. The problem is not understanding, but application.<\/p>\n

The Effect of Ineffective Assessment<\/strong><\/p>\n

As schools attempt to improve their use of formative assessments in particular, some patterns emerge. Teachers who don\u2019t use formative assessment effectively tend to make a few mistakes:<\/p>\n