Formative assessment is one of the
components of the term assessment for learning in which the main aims is to
promote students’ learning through the adaptation of students’ current
understandings to facilitate their learning from that point. This form of
assessment has proven to create a supportive environment where students are not
afraid to make mistakes, but rather is able to acknowledge and utilize them to
develop understanding. Besides that, students become active participants and
are responsible for their learning by creating their own understandings. In the
perspective of the learner, formative assessment encourages students by
providing explicit feedback on what is needed to improve. Through assessment
and feedback in the form of comments, meaningless competition for a higher
grade is forgone, and instead, the opportunity to enhance students’ learning is
offered. Formative assessment also encourages multiple types of collaboration;
teacher-teacher, student-student as well as teacher-student collaboration. Collaboration
brings about more effective teaching and learning as it allows its users to
share problems, solutions and ideas through interaction with each other.
I
fully support the statement in regards to the negative effects of scores/grades
in the article which mentions how comments, in turn help parents focus on the
learning issues. In our society where parents are the immediate stakeholders of
their children’s education, comments on aspects to work on truly allow parents
to address the shortcoming of the learner rather than on a summative grade,
which does nothing to one’s improvement in the subject. Hence, I cannot entirely
agree that summative tests can become a positive part of learning as the
results of summative tests are numerical figures, and this creates competition
amongst students even if the results are used to develop students’ learning. It
also depends on the objectives of the test and what the test actually tests.
As a student, I
have always experienced summative assessment in that my teachers have always
assumed the roles of the “information transmitter” while the students passively
accepts information often times without understanding or being able to apply
the knowledge. Following that, tests and examinations are given out for
gate-keeping and placement purposes with no follow-up to promote learning.
Therefore, the idea of formative assessment appeals to me as what I strive for
as a teacher is to truly educate my students. I think it is important to
encourage students to constantly improve themselves, and for this to happen, I
have to play my part in facilitating the process by providing constructive
feedback.
It takes teacher
collaboration and the support from schools to allow the concept of formative
assessment to be implemented and for it to work (i.e. not giving grades, but
instead targets and comments) in our schools. I am also dubious about how
increasing think time will eventually result in the same way as it did, based
on a teacher’s account in the article. Especially since our students here are
taught to input information and answers without critical thinking, although
this is a very interesting concept that I would like to see implemented in our
shy and spoon-fed culture.
Don't you think it's such a great way of encouraging learning? It may seem daunting to go against the traditional way of spoonfeeding , but since you've probably realized how much you've lost from having gone through a rote-learning, zombie-mentality system, I hope you'll prepare yourself well and strategize for a battle worth fighting when you become a teacher!
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