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Assessment For Learning: Putting it into Practice

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"This is a surprising and welcome book... a heartening read that shows the power of assessment for learning and the potential for academics and teachers jointly to put into practice ideas that can improve classroom learning and teaching."
TES The starting point of this book was the realisation that research studies worldwide provide hard evidence that development of formative assessment raises students' test scores. The significant improvement in the achievements of the students in this project confirms this research, while providing teachers, teacher trainers, school heads and others leaders with ideas and advice for improving formative assessment in the classroom.

Assessment for Learning is based on a two-year project involving thirty-six teachers in schools in Medway and Oxfordshire. After a brief review of the research background and of the project itself, successive chapters describe the specific practices which teachers found fruitful and the underlying ideas about learning that these developments illustrate. Later chapters discuss the problems that teachers encountered when implementing the new practices in their classroom and give guidance for school management and LEAs about promoting and supporting the changes.

This book offers valuable insights into assessment for learning as teachers describe in their own words how they turned the ideas into practical action in their schools.

152 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2003

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Paul Black

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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Michael Loveless.
318 reviews6 followers
July 23, 2024
Assessment For Learning is more academic than most books about pedagogy. The authors talk more about the research they did on formative assessment. In fact the whole book is about is base on a research study that involve a relatively small number of teachers from a few different schools that met together with each other and the researchers to find new ways to use formative assessment effectively. They focused on math and science teachers and later added English teachers. The book goes into considerable detail about how the study was organized and carried out. The review of literature points out an interesting paradox. The use of formative assessment has proven to have powerful, positive effects, and most teachers who try to use it don't see much success with it. These two facts suggest that when a school decides to focus on the use of formative assessment to improve learning, it's important that teachers have a time, support, training, and a high level of commitment.

The book suggests four basic methods of using formative assessment: questioning, written feedback, peer and self-assessment, and the formative use of summative tests. For questioning, the authors suggest more open-ended questions, more wait time, and encouraging students to respond to each other's comments. For written feedback, the authors suggest timely, specific feedback about the characteristics of student work - maybe without any letter grades at all. Peer and self-assessment can be done only if students have clear rubrics that indicate what quality work should look like. Finally, the authors suggest using summative tests for formative purposes by discussing questions missed and by allowing students opportunities to correct errors.

The book was a little dry and academic, but it's filled with good ideas to move kids past simple rote learning to deeper thinking.
Profile Image for Nicholas Little.
107 reviews2 followers
July 27, 2018
This is a really useful book for anyone in the teaching profession at any level, and one to keep for later reference. A nuanced book grounded in rigorous research.
9 reviews33 followers
March 21, 2011
This was a fantastic introduction to assessment _for_ learning, a method of teaching that helps students learn in a much, MUCH more efficient way than what most people are already doing.

It contains enough concrete examples to get someone started---I am looking forward to implementing the ideas in my classroom this semester.
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