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Assessment of Learning: Standards, assessment maps and progression points Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority

Assessment of Learning: Standards, assessment maps and progression points Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority

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Page 1: Assessment of Learning: Standards, assessment maps and progression points Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority

Assessment of Learning:

Standards, assessment maps

and progression points

Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority

Page 2: Assessment of Learning: Standards, assessment maps and progression points Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority

Focus for this session

• Assessment of student learning

• Using the standards in an assessment process

• Using resources to help make on-balance judgments

Page 3: Assessment of Learning: Standards, assessment maps and progression points Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority
Page 4: Assessment of Learning: Standards, assessment maps and progression points Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority

Assessment – key issues

• Why assess?

• Characteristics of effective assessment

• What evidence do we gather?

• How do we assess student learning?

• Making on-balance judgments of student achievement

Page 5: Assessment of Learning: Standards, assessment maps and progression points Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority

Why assess student achievement?

• To improve student performance(Assessment as and for learning)

• To provide useful information to report to parents on student achievement(Assessment of learning)

Page 6: Assessment of Learning: Standards, assessment maps and progression points Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority

Characteristics of effective assessment

• Based on how students learn

• Integral to program design

• Clear purpose, goals, standards and criteria

• A variety of measures

Page 7: Assessment of Learning: Standards, assessment maps and progression points Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority

Characteristics of effective assessment

• Valid, reliable and consistent methods

• Attention to outcomes and processes

• Ongoing is best

• Feedback and reflection

Page 8: Assessment of Learning: Standards, assessment maps and progression points Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority

Collection of on-going assessment

Page 9: Assessment of Learning: Standards, assessment maps and progression points Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority

Standards

• Describe what students should know and be able to do

• Set for six levels from Prep to Year 10

• Signposts at widely spaced points along an underlying continuum

• Basis for curriculum planning

• Basis for assessment and reporting

Page 10: Assessment of Learning: Standards, assessment maps and progression points Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority

Planning and gathering evidence

• Identify focus domains, levels and specific elements of standards

• Refer to standards above and below

• Select assessment activities appropriate to demonstrate learning

• Develop assessment criteria and/or rubrics drawn from standards

Page 11: Assessment of Learning: Standards, assessment maps and progression points Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority

Collection of on-going assessment

Page 12: Assessment of Learning: Standards, assessment maps and progression points Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority

Assessing more than one domain

Multi-domain units of work

• One teacher might teach and assess all aspects of a student’s learning

• Two or more teachers might teach and assess different aspects of a student’s learning

Page 13: Assessment of Learning: Standards, assessment maps and progression points Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority

Students with additional learning needs

• Modify tasks

• Allow students to demonstrate learning in different ways

• Refer to individual learning plans

• Refer to Students With Disabilities Guidelines and English as a Second Language Companion

Page 14: Assessment of Learning: Standards, assessment maps and progression points Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority

Using evidence to make judgments

• Collect a variety of evidence

• Base judgment on evidence overall

• Work through school processes

• Use standards, assessment maps and progression points

Page 15: Assessment of Learning: Standards, assessment maps and progression points Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority

Assessment maps - purpose

Assist teachers to:

• Develop common understanding of standards

• Assess student work consistently

Answer the questions:

• What does work at this standard look like?

• What are typical features of work of students progressing towards the standard?

Page 16: Assessment of Learning: Standards, assessment maps and progression points Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority

Assessment maps - features

• Developed for each domain

• Work samples illustrate achievement of elements of the standard/s

• Work samples progressing towards a standard at three points

Page 17: Assessment of Learning: Standards, assessment maps and progression points Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority

Work samples

• Address specific elements of standard/s

• Describe context for assessment task

• One or more samples illustrate typical features of student work

• Annotations identify attributes of the work linked to elements of standard/s

Page 18: Assessment of Learning: Standards, assessment maps and progression points Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority

Progression points

• Schools required to report to parents using A to E

• Standards at six levels

• Finer scale developed to support reporting

• Three points between each standard to show progress towards the standard

• Three points to show progress beyond Level 6

Page 19: Assessment of Learning: Standards, assessment maps and progression points Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority

Progression point examples

• Assist common interpretation of progression points when reporting

• Illustrate typical development of some concepts and skills in the standards

• Some concepts and skills developed across more than one level

• Content references are examples – not prescriptive

Page 20: Assessment of Learning: Standards, assessment maps and progression points Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority

Level 5 Standard – Thinking Processes

At Level 5, students use a range of question types, and locate and select relevant information from varied sources when undertaking investigations. When identifying and synthesising relevant information, they use a range of appropriate strategies of reasoning and analysis to evaluate evidence and consider their own and others’ points of view. They use a range of discipline-based methodologies. They complete activities focusing on problem solving and decision making which involve an increasing number of variables and solutions.

Reasoning, processing and inquiry

Page 21: Assessment of Learning: Standards, assessment maps and progression points Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority

Standards and progression points

At 4.25• with teacher direction

and using a range of strategies and self-formulated questions, identification of information that would be appropriate for an investigation, analysis or report

At 4.75• use of self-generated

selection criteria to locate and critically assess information from varied sources for investigative purposes

Level 5Students use a range of question types, and locate and select relevant information from varied sources when undertaking investigations.

At 4.5• identification and

synthesis of relevant information from given sources, using appropriate strategies to evaluate evidence; for example, identifying subjective or misleading information

In Thinking Processes, the work of a student progressing towards the standard at Level 5 demonstrates, for example:

Page 22: Assessment of Learning: Standards, assessment maps and progression points Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority

Collection of on-going assessment

Page 23: Assessment of Learning: Standards, assessment maps and progression points Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority

Making an on-balance judgment

• Evidence based – rather than where the student ‘should be’

• Assessment is holistic and on-balance• Take account of differing nature and complexity

of each assessment task• Key question: which standard or progression

point does this collection of evidence best match?

• Assessment maps and progression points are a further reference

Page 24: Assessment of Learning: Standards, assessment maps and progression points Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority

Reviewing the evidence

• Review a range of evidence• Evaluate what the evidence as a whole

demonstrates about the student’s learning • Qualities may reflect statements or examples in

more than one standard or progression point• Use moderation processes, assessment maps,

progression point examples to refine judgment • Determine which standard or progression point,

on-balance, the identified qualities best match

Page 25: Assessment of Learning: Standards, assessment maps and progression points Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority

Online resources

Department of Educationhttp://www.sofweb.vic.edu.au/blueprint/fs1/assessment.htm

• Assessment advice, Assessment professional learning modules, Multi-domain assessment tasks, Reporting advice

VCAAhttp://vels.vcaa.vic.edu.au/assessment/index.html

• Standards and progression points, Assessment maps, Assessment principles, Assessment tasks, Assessment resource