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Assessment Training Institute
- To: ARN State <ARN-state@yahoogroups.com>, ARN Main List <arn-l@interversity.org>, arn2-strategy <arn2-strategy@yahoogroups.com>
- Subject: Assessment Training Institute
- From: Peter Campbell <campbellp@mail.montclair.edu>
- Date: Thu, 4 May 2006 20:46:13 -0500
I highly recommend the work that Rick Stiggins, Judy Arter, Jan
Chappuis, and Stephen Chappuis are doing through their organization,
the Assessment Training Institute (ATI). ATI was just acquired by ETS
in March, so I don't know what the future holds for the quality of
their work. However, I just returned from a 3-day seminar with Rick,
Judy, and Jan in Portland, OR, and was absolutely blown away. The
work focuses on high-quality formative assessment, which they refer
to as "assessment FOR learning." They contrast this with the
traditional mode of summative assessment, which they call "assessment
OF learning." While summative assessment certainly has a role to
play, it does little to promote teaching and learning. The key to
implementing their principles is to create learning teams in the
school building that focus on the on-going creation of high-quality
assessments for learning. In this way, assessment is
indistinguishable from instruction because assessment drives
instruction. Also, peer-based professional development becomes a part
of the culture of the school, not a one-day in-service training that
sounds great, but quickly fades from memory.
More info at
http://www.assessmentinst.com/
While it's relatively easy to critique the stupidity of NCLB, it's
much more difficult to articulate a vision of something that can
replace it, especially a vision that can be implemented in a
practical way. But as far as school-based reform goes, Stiggins, et
al, go the farthest of anyone I know in articulating a vision of
teaching, learning, and assessment that can (and does) work.
Peter Campbell
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