Publication | Closed Access
Comparing Teacher Assessment and Standard Task Results in England: the relationship between pupil characteristics and attainment
21
Citations
27
References
1998
Year
Educational PsychologyEducationEarly Childhood EducationElementary EducationLanguage Assessment (Second Language Acquisition)Teacher AssessmentTeacher EducationLarge LeaPrimary EducationLanguage Assessment (Speech Language Pathology)Classroom AssessmentLanguage StudiesEducational TestingEducational StatisticsEducational MeasurementWord Recognition TestStandard Task ResultsNational CurriculumStudent AssessmentTeacher EvaluationSpecial EducationReading AssessmentEducational EvaluationEducational AssessmentEducation PolicyPupil Characteristics
Abstract This study examines the 1992 National Curriculum assessment data from one large LEA in England in order to address the issue of equity. For comparison purposes we also present additional data obtained front the same sample of pupils on an NFER standardised word recognition test. The report focuses on the relative performance of gender, low income, linguistic, and special needs groups on a standardised reading test and the teacher (TA) and standard task (ST) performance assessments administered in 1992 to 7‐year‐olds as part of the national curriculum (NC) in England and Wales. The impact of schools and teacher effectiveness on student attainments scores is also examined and discussed. Briefly, the findings show that irrespective of the method of assessment, differences in attainment were found between most pupil groups investigated. However, importantly, only very modest evidence was found that particular methods of assessment appeared either to reduce or increase the differences in attainment and overall no clear patterns emerged. The findings are discussed in the context of various factors that may have an impact on the assessment of student attainment.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1