This volume examines the multiple meanings of the term assessment in teacher education from an historical and international perspective, integrating ideas from research and practice. Christine Harrison argues for a need to focus on the development of classroom assessment literacy and teacher assessment capability within teacher education programmes in order to support teachers’ confidence and capacity to respond and adapt to the often fast changing demands in this area.
Finding an assessment system that works for schools and provides sufficient evidence to gain public confidence is a global challenge. On the one hand, there is a need to adhere to and contribute to national education policy on assessment. On the other, there is a requirement to fashion appropriate systems and practices at local level.
Christine Harrison provides an overview of this conflicted term, offering a better understanding of assessment principles and practices through teacher education to optimise the potential of assessment, enabling teachers and schools to challenge current conventional uses of measurement in favour of assessment practices that support learning and respect sociocultural diversity. Developing assessment capability can be both a humane and humanizing activity – for students and for teachers.
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Series Editors Preface
Introduction
1. History of assessment in teacher education
2. Aims, purposes and teachers’ beliefs
3. Inside the Black Box
4. What matters in assessment in teacher education
References
Index
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Examines assessment from an historical and international perspective, showing how teacher education can optimise the potential of assessment to support learning and respect sociocultural diversity.
Examines the term assessment in relation to teacher education research and showcases international examples of exemplary work in assessment regardless of the subject area being tested
Taking cultural theorist Raymond Williams’s concept as an organizing device, the Keywords in Teacher Education series offers short, accessibly written books on the most pressing and challenging ideas in the field. Teacher education has a high profile in public policy and professional debates given the enduring associations between how teachers are prepared and how well their students do in school. At the same time, research perspectives on the important topics in the field are increasingly polarized with important consequences for the kind of teacher and the qualities of teaching that are most valued. Written by internationally recognized experts, these titles offer analyses both of the historical emergence and the consequences of the different positions in these debates.
Editorial Board:
Christine Harrison (King's College London, UK)
Jo Lampert (La Trobe University, Australia)
Qiming Mao (Central China Normal University, China)
Maureen Robinson (Stellenbosch University, South Africa)
Ken Zeichner (University of Washington, USA)
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781350173286
Publisert
2022-10-20
Utgiver
Vendor
Bloomsbury Academic
Høyde
198 mm
Bredde
129 mm
Aldersnivå
U, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
144
Forfatter