学习评估特刊

IF 1.2 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Curriculum Journal Pub Date : 2014-10-02 DOI:10.1080/09585176.2014.981381
L. Hayward, S. Higgins, K. Livingston, D. Wyse, E. Spencer
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引用次数: 2

摘要

课程、评估和教学法的相互联系是本刊的中心主题;然而,在实践中,任何真正意义上的联系似乎都是一个遥远的梦想。课程的设计往往没有充分考虑到课程的实现,既没有考虑到年轻人可能会学到什么(以及如何辨别学习),也没有考虑到新课程如何在学校和教室中成为现实。本期特刊的文章聚焦于评估和在不同国家的不同课程和不同政治和政策环境中保持学习重点的挑战。学习评价是一种国际现象。评估的主要目的是支持学习,而将评估数据用于各种其他目的之间的紧张关系在国际上是有争议的。Baird, Newton, Stobart, Hopfenbeck和Steen-Utheim(2014,第4页)提醒我们,这种紧张关系的新自由主义起源,以及它在各国之间产生的经济竞争,以衡量他们拥有“最多和最好的知识工人”的程度。这给教育系统带来的压力已经明显存在一段时间了。Hanson(2000)假设会有一个点,能指(评估)会比所指(学习)更重要。在一些社会中,我们可能离那个位置不远了。本期特刊的目的是抵制将评估视为能指和重要的观点,并将重点放在评估应该意味着什么、学习以及评估实现和加强学习的潜力上(学习评估)。在这种情况下,学习与在一个特定国家成为一个受过教育的人的愿景有关。越来越多的国际课程超越了知识的陈述,包括应用知识和解决问题的能力,以及培养学习者个人和学习者群体的信心和独立思考的能力。这些结果往往取决于课程所经历的学习、教学和评估活动的性质。课程设计和制定对学习不够重视,会使课程中真正重要的东西处于危险之中。必须注意如何辨别年轻人的学习情况,如何监测教师对课程的理解程度以及他们在实践中对课程的理解程度,以及社会如何、为什么以及以何种方式对教育负责。这些因素都会对课程制定产生影响。然而,我们没有统一的理论
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Special issue on assessment for learning
The inter-connectedness of curriculum, assessment and pedagogy is a central theme for this journal; yet any real sense of their connectedness in practice seems a distant dream at times. All too often, curricula are designed without sufficient consideration being given to their realisation, either to what young people might learn (and how learning might be discerned) or to how new curricula might be made real in schools and classrooms. The articles in this special issue focus on assessment and the challenge of keeping a focus on learning in differing curricula and different political and policy environments in various countries. Assessment for learning is an international phenomenon. The tension between the primary purpose of assessment, to support learning and the use of assessment data for a variety of other purposes is contentious internationally. Baird, Newton, Stobart, Hopfenbeck, and Steen-Utheim (2014, p. 4) remind us of the neo-liberal genesis of this tension and the economic competition it has generated among countries to measure the extent to which they have the ‘most and best knowledge workers’. The pressure that this puts on education systems has been evident for some time. Hanson (2000) postulated that there could come a point where the signifier, the assessment, would be of greater importance than the signified, the learning. In some societies, we may not be far from that position. The intention of this special issue is to counteract a view of assessment as the signifier, as what matters, and to focus on what assessment should signify, learning and the potential for assessment to enable and enhance it (Assessment for Learning) . In this context, learning relates to the vision of what it is to be an educated person in a given country. Increasingly, international curricula go beyond statements of knowledge and include, for example, the ability to apply knowledge and solve problems and the development of confidence and independent thinking in individual learners and among groups of learners. Often such outcomes depend on the nature of the learning, teaching and assessment activities through which the curriculum is experienced. Curriculum design and enactment that pay insufficient attention to learning put at risk what really matters in that curriculum. Attention has to be paid to how the learning of young people will be discerned, how the extent of teachers’ understanding of the curriculum and their realisation of that curriculum in practice should be monitored, and how, why and in what ways society might hold education to account. Each of these factors will have an impact on curriculum enactment. Yet, we have no unified theory
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来源期刊
Curriculum Journal
Curriculum Journal EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
6.20%
发文量
48
期刊最新文献
Curriculum making and knowledge conceptions in classrooms in the context of standards‐based curricula Review of: Curriculum challenges and opportunities in a changing world: Transnational perspectives in curriculum inquiryB.Green (Eds.) M.Brennan (Eds.) P.Roberts (Eds.) Palgrave MacMillan, 2021, XVII + 355 pp. ISBN 978‐3‐030‐61666‐3. 129,99 € (Hardcover). Teachers’ Perceptions of Physical literacy Curriculum in context Learners’ views of literature in EFL education from curricular and assessment perspectives
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