Difference between revisions of "Assessment"

Difference between revisions of "Assessment"

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{{Term|ASSESSMENT|Continuous process that seeks the objective of understanding and increasing learning by defining, selecting, designing, collecting, analyzing and interpreting the information obtained through observation and measurement of the learners. Assessments provide faculty with a better understanding of what learners are learning and engage them more deeply in the process of learning content. Learning and assessment are deeply related one to each other, since the learning task stimulate the learners to develop some competencies and the assessment ask them to demonstrate those same competencies. To make an assessment more effective the learners should be given the opportunity to practice with that form of evaluation before that it become effective. By using assessment strategies that draw learners into the assessment process, they learn more of the content while getting the benefits of learning skills that will be useful to them in the future. It also provides information to be used as feedback to modify the teaching and learning activities in which learners are engaged.<ref> [http://serc.carleton.edu serc.carleton.edu ](15 April 2008), [http://www.ltscotland.org.uk www.ltscotland.org.uk](15 April 2008)</ref> See also: [[Evaluation]]; [[Formative Evaluation]]; [[Summative Evaluation]]}}
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{{Term|ASSESSMENT|Continuous process that seeks the objective of understanding and increasing learning by defining, selecting, designing, collecting, analyzing and interpreting the information obtained through observation and measurement of the learners. Assessments provide faculty with a better understanding of what learners are learning and engage them more deeply in the process of learning content. Learning and assessment are deeply related one to each other, since the learning task stimulate the learners to develop some competencies and the assessment ask them to demonstrate those same competencies. To make an assessment more effective the learners should be given the opportunity to practice with that form of evaluation before that it become effective. By using assessment strategies that draw learners into the assessment process, they learn more of the content while getting the benefits of learning skills that will be useful to them in the future. It also provides information to be used as feedback to modify the teaching and learning activities in which learners are engaged.<ref> [http://serc.carleton.edu serc.carleton.edu ](15 April 2008), [http://www.ltscotland.org.uk www.ltscotland.org.uk](15 April 2008)</ref> See also: [[Performance Assessment]]; [[Evaluation]]; [[Formative Evaluation]]; [[Summative Evaluation]]}}
  
  

Revision as of 12:55, 18 December 2009

Term2.png ASSESSMENT
Continuous process that seeks the objective of understanding and increasing learning by defining, selecting, designing, collecting, analyzing and interpreting the information obtained through observation and measurement of the learners. Assessments provide faculty with a better understanding of what learners are learning and engage them more deeply in the process of learning content. Learning and assessment are deeply related one to each other, since the learning task stimulate the learners to develop some competencies and the assessment ask them to demonstrate those same competencies. To make an assessment more effective the learners should be given the opportunity to practice with that form of evaluation before that it become effective. By using assessment strategies that draw learners into the assessment process, they learn more of the content while getting the benefits of learning skills that will be useful to them in the future. It also provides information to be used as feedback to modify the teaching and learning activities in which learners are engaged.[1] See also: Performance Assessment; Evaluation; Formative Evaluation; Summative Evaluation



References

  1. serc.carleton.edu (15 April 2008), www.ltscotland.org.uk(15 April 2008)