Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- one Introduction
- two Curriculum
- three Assessment
- four Pedagogy
- five Advice and guidance
- six Information, communication and learning technologies
- seven School design
- eight Innovation
- nine The teaching profession
- ten Leadership
- eleven Firm foundations
- Sources and suggestions
- Appendix: Participants in the seminars
- Index
three - Assessment
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 January 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- one Introduction
- two Curriculum
- three Assessment
- four Pedagogy
- five Advice and guidance
- six Information, communication and learning technologies
- seven School design
- eight Innovation
- nine The teaching profession
- ten Leadership
- eleven Firm foundations
- Sources and suggestions
- Appendix: Participants in the seminars
- Index
Summary
“I should have liked to be asked to say what I knew. They always tried to ask what I did not know. When I would willingly have displayed my knowledge, they sought to expose my ignorance. This sort of treatment had only one result: I did not do well in examinations.” (Winston S. Churchill)
Formal testing has moved much too far in the direction of assessing knowledge of questionable importance in ways that show little transportability. The understanding that schools ought to inculcate is virtually invisible on such instruments; quite different forms of assessment need to be implemented if we are to document student understandings. (Howard Gardner, 1999a)
It is a matter of almost universal agreement in the education service – outside the Department for Education and Skills (DfES), that is – that our assessment systems are in urgent need of reform. Sadly, there is no consensus about which aspects need to be reformed or in what ways. The weaknesses of the assessment systems – the plural is in order: that there are several of them is part of the problem – are rarely scrutinised from the point of view of lifelong learning. To do so here offers a distinctive perspective on the analysis of a major preoccupation of practitioners and policy makers. What are the problems that beset our assessment systems? How did they arise and what are their effects? What might be done to remedy the problems? And, most important of all, do the ways in which the learning and achievement of students are assessed during their school years affect their attitudes to, and participation in, lifelong learning?
At present, the most common complaint is that there is simply too much (formal) assessment: too many tests and examinations and too much course work. For some students, every year between the ages of 10 and 20 or so will contain at least one formal examination. An associated allegation is that the examinations boards – the unitary awarding bodies, AQA, Edexel and OCR – are inefficient, making too many mistakes in the way they handle GCSEs, AS-and A-levels. But many claim that however efficient the exam boards, the extent of formal assessment should be reduced, since it brings too much stress to students and teachers and distorts the true purposes and practices of education.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Learning for LifeThe Foundations for Lifelong Learning, pp. 15 - 24Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2004