Assessment: Difference between revisions
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== Definition == | == Definition == | ||
Assessment is a kind of [[evaluation]]. | |||
Note: This article will deal with assessment of student performance, i.e. student evaluation - not [[course evaluation]] nor teacher evaluation. | |||
== Assessment in the general context of evaluation == | |||
Here is a longer quote from Michael Scriven (1999): | |||
<blockquote> | |||
The discipline of evaluation is devoted to the systematic determination of merit, worth, or significance. It is divided into fields according to the type of entity evaluated--for example, program evaluation, or personnel evaluation--and there are more than twenty of these recognized fields of evaluation. Some specific aspects of evaluation methodology have been developed to solve problems of evaluation in only one or a few of these fields (e.g., bias control in panel selection, systematic side-effect identification in program evaluation, road-testing techniques in product evaluation). However, the underlying logic of the process of evaluation--for example, the difference between merit and worth, or between grading and ranking--and a substantial portion of its general methodology (e.g., techniques of measurement, causality determination, applying the requirement of informed consent) are shared across all or many of these fields | |||
</blockquote> | |||
== Links == | == Links == | ||
* | * [http://pareonline.net/Home.htm Practical Assessment, Research & Evaluation], A peer-reviewed electronic journal. ISSN 1531-7714. | ||
* [http://www.bc.edu/research/intasc/jtla.html The Journal of Technology, Learning and Assessment (JTLA)] is a peer-reviewed, scholarly on-line journal. | |||
== References == | |||
* | * Scriven, Michael (1999). The nature of evaluation part i: relation to psychology. Practical Assessment, Research & Evaluation, 6(11). Retrieved March 7, 2006 from [http://PAREonline.net/getvn.asp?v=6&n=11] |
Revision as of 10:21, 7 March 2006
Definition
Assessment is a kind of evaluation.
Note: This article will deal with assessment of student performance, i.e. student evaluation - not course evaluation nor teacher evaluation.
Assessment in the general context of evaluation
Here is a longer quote from Michael Scriven (1999):
The discipline of evaluation is devoted to the systematic determination of merit, worth, or significance. It is divided into fields according to the type of entity evaluated--for example, program evaluation, or personnel evaluation--and there are more than twenty of these recognized fields of evaluation. Some specific aspects of evaluation methodology have been developed to solve problems of evaluation in only one or a few of these fields (e.g., bias control in panel selection, systematic side-effect identification in program evaluation, road-testing techniques in product evaluation). However, the underlying logic of the process of evaluation--for example, the difference between merit and worth, or between grading and ranking--and a substantial portion of its general methodology (e.g., techniques of measurement, causality determination, applying the requirement of informed consent) are shared across all or many of these fields
Links
- Practical Assessment, Research & Evaluation, A peer-reviewed electronic journal. ISSN 1531-7714.
- The Journal of Technology, Learning and Assessment (JTLA) is a peer-reviewed, scholarly on-line journal.
References
- Scriven, Michael (1999). The nature of evaluation part i: relation to psychology. Practical Assessment, Research & Evaluation, 6(11). Retrieved March 7, 2006 from [1]