Alternative assessment tools is an ongoing process that can be used for all ages. Learn about self-assessment and the idea guiding alternative assessment.
Alternative assessment tools can be defined as those that are not discrete point tests. The advantages of alternative assessment focus on "how well," rather than "how many" (Gripps, 1994) and the individual achievement relative to self. The other advantage of alternative assessment is the emphasis on competence rather than intelligence or in simpler terms, how well one knows the material for the test.
In these best case scenarios, the students are not haunted by standardization, but focus on how to improve rather than to prove. An individual student can make an enormous amount of progress and can learn a great deal from working with alternative assessment tools.
Student assessment, otherwise known as self-assessment, is one of the most reliable forms of assessment. Here are a few examples of student assessment.
At the end of each lesson, learners can either fill in a type of student assessment form or write for ten minutes what they have learned from the following main assessment tools:
Criteria for assessment of portfolios is another assessment tool. These can be determined from the portfolio:
Alternative assessment tools such as projects and portfolios are not for every teacher; nor are they suitable for every working group of students. One way to find out how receptive your students might be to alternative assessment in general is to take ten or fifteen minutes out of the lesson to conduct a self-assessment questionnaire or a page of written reflections.
Here is an example of a few self-assessment type questions around the topic of practicing vocabulary:
If and when the teacher decides to pursue the route of alternative assessments, students should always be given an additional way to improve their grades such as revising a piece for the second or third time. This is an incredible learning experience which does not adversely affects a learner's sense of self-esteem representative of traditional tests.
Work Cited
Gripps, C.V. Beyond Testing: Towards a Theory of Educational Assessment. London: Falmer Press, 1994.