National Institute for Literacy
 

[SpecialTopics 187] Re: Formative Assessment in International Education

Susan Reid sreid at workbase.org.nz
Wed Sep 6 17:58:11 EDT 2006


I am at my desk in the ofice now where the quote is pinned on my wall

Sympathy doesn't raise standards , aspiration does

shows you how good my memory is

Regards Susan Reid


-----Original Message-----
From: Susan Reid
Sent: 7/09/2006 9:09 a.m.
To: specialtopics at nifl.gov; specialtopics at nifl.gov
Subject: [SpecialTopics 183] Re: Formative Assessment in International Education








Hi David

as you are aware New Zealand is taking part in the OECD study.

In New Zealand the Government has also undertaken a small scale research study on assessment in a range of adult literacy programmes ( called foundation learning in New Zealand). The purpose of the research study was to contribute to an understanding of what is required to enhance the assessment capability of tertiary education providers of learning in literacy, numeracy, and language. Formative assessment has been pushed hard in the compulsory education sector in New Zealand ( K-12) and as the report shows is a bit hit and miss in the adult literacy sector in New Zealand. We don't yet have standardised tests that we have to use in the adult literacy sector here.

the summary report about the research study is at http://educationcounts.edcentre.govt.nz/publications/tertairy/assessment-foundation.html

the full report is available for download at the bottom of the webpage about the summary report



Janet is it useful to give the urls for the PowerPoint presentations from the International Conference in Paris last year around Improving Learning through Formative Assessment - even though they are school focussed there is some interesting information in them. I really liked a quote from one of them - I am recalling this from memory and not sure whether it was your quote Janet - Hope doesn't build good schools - aspiration does

same applies for adult literacy although funding and perspiration seem to be factors as well.

Very interesting discussion - I like these Special Topics

Thank you

Susan Reid

Manager Professional Development

Workbase the New Zealand for Workforce Literacy

www.workbase.org.nz

see also the New Zealand Literacy Portal www.nzliteracyportal.org.nz








________________________________

From: specialtopics-bounces at nifl.gov on behalf of David Rosen
Sent: Thu 7/09/2006 12:16 a.m.
To: specialtopics at nifl.gov
Subject: [SpecialTopics 180] Formative Assessment in International Education



Special Topics Discussion Subscribers,

We would like to hear from you.

What has been your experience with formative assessment?
Do you use formative assessment strategies in your classroom?
Have you done research -- qualitative or quantitative, including
classroom research -- on the effects of formative assessment? What
did you find?
Are you satisfied with using only summative (standardized per-post
NRS-required) assessment?
Do we need to pay more attention to formative assessment in the U.S.?

Our discussion ends soon so please post your answers or questions now.

Thanks.

David J. Rosen
Special Topics Discussion Moderator
djrosen at comcast.net



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