Description
To build better assessment literacy, Heritage and Wylie seek to strengthen professional knowledge of ambitious teaching and use of both formative and summative classroom assessment practices. They clearly describe the knowledge and skills teachers need to better orient classroom assessment practices toward more positive learning experiences for all students. Critically, they urge educators to establish substantive learning goals, attend to the ways of eliciting evidence of student learning towards those goals, and reflect on the evidence to take action that intends to advance learning.
This book features real-world examples of assessment practices across a range of contexts and content areas, grade levels, and student populations, and shows how assessment literacy competencies can be achieved at scale with support from school and district leaders. Fair and Justice-Oriented Assessment provides a research-based and yet practical perspective on classroom assessment and advocates for the use of equity-oriented curricular and ambitious teaching.
About the Author
Margaret Heritage is an independent consultant in education. For many years her work has centered primarily on formative assessment, including how formative assessment supports regulatory processes, how it contributes to educational equity goals, and, more generally, how teachers can develop assessment literacy knowledge and skills.
E. Caroline Wylie is a senior associate at the National Center for the Improvement of Educational Assessment. She has focused her research and development work on formative assessment, the role it plays within balanced assessment systems, and the learning supports that teachers need to engage in these practices with their students. She regularly works with states and districts to support their work related to these issues.
Book Information
ISBN 9798895570128
Author Margaret Heritage
Format Paperback
Page Count 320
Imprint Harvard Educational Publishing Group
Publisher Harvard Educational Publishing Group