Unlimted Growth Through Assessment

Saturday, August 10, 2024 Savannah, GA, USA

 


Time for an assessment!

Does that idea make you shudder? Does it sound like judgment? Sizing you up? Putting you in a box? Something to signal the end of learning? A chance to prove you're better than your peers? A chance to worry you aren't as good as your peers? Possibly even a way to punish or get even?

Or does it sound like helpful feedback? An opportunity for growth? A way to explore deeper and learn more? An exercise to know yourself better and work toward your dreams? Possibly even a way to help others?

Assessment is not the first thing you think of in a learning design because there is a good chance you've never thought it could be different.

But the importance of assessment in learning design cannot be overstated. Assessment reveals what is actually happening in a classroom and highlights the core values of an organization or group. It is a crucial indicator of what is truly important in any learning environment because everything that happens in that environment is downstream of how assessment is handled.

Let's start with a story. I was at a Montessori training held in a well-established and well-regarded Montessori school in Chicago. The school's program went from Primary to Upper Elementary (preschool to 6th grade). When the Q&A portion started, everyone wanted to know, since the school only went up to 6th grade, how the students did after they left? How did "regular" school work for them after being in a Montessori program their whole lives?

The students performed well and had no trouble adjusting to traditional school. 

However, the Montessori teachers seemed to feel a tinge of sadness for what they perceived as a loss. They shared a story about a bright student who was excelling at her new middle school, earning all A's. When she returned to her Montessori school to participate in a panel discussion and answer parents' questions about transitioning to a traditional school, she explained that the biggest adjustment was stopping work before doing her best. At her new school, she would stop once she achieved an A, whereas at her previous Montessori school, where there were no grades, she would work until she reached her highest potential.

This young woman's new school may have posters up on the walls that exclaim, "Be your best self!" or "Your potential is limitless!" But their assessment system tells otherwise.

Did you ever pick up a book in middle school to study a subject further and move yourself to mastery if you received a B or C on the final summative assessment, aka test? No, you didn't. You were trained to think of yourself as a B or C student in that area, move on, and most likely forget the items you did cram for. Your school may have posters or a school campaign championing a growth mindset, but their assessment system tells otherwise.

We could banter examples of this all day. No matter what forward-thinking goal a school has, a backward-thinking assessment system is going to hobble it. What Is the History of Grading? (turnitin.com)

The assessment system most of us know from school using grades is so ingrained that we are very nervous about letting go of those report cards with letters totaling up to a GPA. However, grade inflation is pushing those GPAs into the realm of meaninglessness. (National Trends in Grade Inflation, American Colleges and Universities and When GPA No Longer Matters (forbes.com))

Leaning on formative assessments to move learners toward unlimited growth and their personal best is not possible unless your assessment system supports it from beginning to end. With grade inflation making GPAs a suspicious form of measurement, why cling to an assessment system that forces the idea of limited growth to permeate your classroom?

At Aspire Savannah, we track our study habits and set goals for mastery in content areas where there are clear milestones. Mastering content sets learners up to be confident and ready for more advanced work, avoids holes in learning, and develops a growth mindset. In areas where milestones can be more subjective, we employ rubrics and critiques in order to work toward proof of achieving mastery in various competencies. What is gained through the ethos of this system of assessment is as valuable as the content itself.

Our assessment system, which has been thoughtfully created to encourage growth and learning, is an alternative to an assessment system that was never devised to benefit student learning in the first place. (What Is the History of Grading? (turnitin.com))

If you'd like to learn more about how assessment can look different, here are resources:

Rethinking Grading: Empowering Schools to Redefine Learning Assessment (youtube.com)
The Ocean School - Future of Education - 3rd Cut (youtube.com)
Reinventing the Traditional HS Diploma: Mastery Transcript Consortium ® - Aurora Institute (aurora-institute.org)
Q&A with Mastery Transcript Consortium - Challenge Success

These are tools we use in the area of assessment:

Mastery Portfolio
Mastery Transcript Consortium® (MTC)

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