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Page 1: Assessment - Uptown School

Assessment at Uptown School

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A Vision for Student Learning at Uptown

Every Child Challenged

Every Child Successful

Every Child Supported

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Assessment at Uptown Primary

•  Uptown is an IB World School

•  Assessment is in the line with the philosophy, principles and requirements of the IB for the PYP and MYP programmes

•  Assessment principles and practices at Uptown are embedded in current educational practice

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Assessment Principles

Principle 1: assessment should first and foremost inform and improve student Learning Principle 2: Assessment procedures help teachers discover what students can and cannot do – forming the basis for planning and differentiated learning Principle 3: Every assessment should be selected with a specific purpose in mind

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Assessment Principles

Principle 4: assessment should be linked to accountability Principle 5: assessment should allow teachers and parents to identify a student’s progress and attainment in a comparative context Principle 6: assessment should be used to track individual progress and growth over time Principle 7: assessments should be reliable, valid, and efficient, preserving as much time as is possible for teaching and learning

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The primary purpose of assessment is not to

rate, rank and sort students, but to provide meaningful feedback that informs decisions

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Assessment Practices in Effective Schools

•  Continuous (Formative) classroom Assessment for Learning (part of the learning process)

•  Common Summative Assessments (developed by collaborative teacher teams to assess the learning targets for a specific time period / area of study)

•  Annual external standardised testing undertaken to compare performance and achievement in a larger context than a single school

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Assessment of Learning & Assessment for Learning

Two key forms of assessment employed

•  Assessment of Learning is summative and descriptive, supporting programme review and planning – it comes at the beginning or end of a period of learning – it follows a cycle

•  Assessment for Learning is formative and ongoing, supporting adjustment to teaching and learning as the student is learning – it follows a cycle

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Summative Assessment Cycle for Planning and Review

Long-Term (Unit) Learning Goals

Assessment – what do they already ‘know’?

Analysis and review

Planning, teaching & differentiation

Assessment – what do they know now?

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Assessment for Learning

•  Ongoing ‘daily’ activities in the classroom that form part of the learning and teaching process

•  Undertaken by teachers and by their students to provide information to be used as feedback to the student and to modify teaching and learning activities

•  Provides continuous descriptive rather than evaluative feedback

•  Acknowledges the critical importance of teachers and students working as a team

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Formative Assessment; Assessment for Learning Cycle

Short-term Learning Goals

Assessment

Feedback to and with student – goal setting

Differentiation

Assessment

Feedback to and with student – goal setting

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External Standardised Assessment at Uptown

•  ACER, International Benchmark Tests (IBT) •  Annual Assessment in English, Mathematics and

Science - Grades 3 to 6 (November) •  Over 50,000 students in international and national

schools – growing year by year •  Norm referenced against students of a similar age;

norm referenced against TIMSS world assessment in Science and Mathematics

•  Excellent diagnostic feedback at individual, class and grade level

•  Disaggregated data i.e. boys / girls / native speakers / second language learners etc.

•  Long-term tracking of individual students

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Principles of Assessments in the Classroom

•  Using representative examples of students’ work or performance to provide information learning

•  Collecting evidence of students’ understanding and thinking

•  Documenting learning processes of groups and individuals

•  Engaging students in reflecting on their learning •  Students assessing work produced by themselves

and others •  Developing clear rubrics •  Identifying exemplar student work

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Assessment Tools

•  Rubrics: An established set of criteria for rating in all areas - developed by students as well as teachers

•  Exemplars: Samples of students’ work that serve as concrete standards against which other samples are judged

•  Checklists: Lists of information, data, attributes or elements that should be present

•  Anecdotal records: Brief written notes based on observations of students that can be analysed at a later stage

•  Continuums: visual representations of developmental stages of learning -show a progression of achievement or identify where a student is in a process

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Subject Specific Assessments

•  Ongoing, anecdotal records of observations, quizzes, paper tests, performance tasks, written products, projects, end of unit projects etc.

•  Early concepts about print, running records, miscue-analysis, conferencing, reading logs and journals. Writing prompts, written responses and rubric-based writing assessments

•  Basic mathematics concepts assessment, discrete skills assessments (times tables, number bonds etc.) common end of unit mathematics assessments

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Reporting to Parents

•  Parent Conferences

•  Student Led Conferences

•  Interim Reports

•  Written reports

•  Portfolios