An Assessment to Every Purpose, Under Heaven – Marianne Perie

Assessment Learning Network, December 15, 2017


An Assessment to Every Purpose, under Heaven
To everything (turn, turn, turn)
There is a season (turn, turn, turn)
And a time to every purpose, under heaven
(the Byrds)

Today’s educators and parents often contend that there is too much testing. Yet policymakers worry that without measurement, parents will not know what their student has learned. Over the past two decades, the amount of assessment in schools has increased dramatically. However, contrary to popular belief, summative assessments do not take up most of the time spent on testing.  Based on a survey in 2016, less than 2% of instructional time was used for summative assessment. On the flip side, formative assessment is used daily. When a teacher probes a classroom for understanding, she is assessing for­matively. As one teacher said, “formative assessment is just good teaching.” The formative assessment process is part and parcel of the instructional cycle.

In the middle of these two types of assessment is the catch-all: interim assessment.  Interim assessments can serve diagnostic or predictive purposes, or provide a measure of growth within a school year. To be used well, however, educators need to understand when and how to use them and what to do with the results. Interim assessments can be useful, but they can also waste a lot of instructional time confirming what a teacher already knows.

Framing Questions
1.How can interim assessments be part of a balanced assessment system?

2.What do educators want to learn from interim assessment products?

3.What components would be necessary for an interim assessment to provide that information?

4.How are educators included in decisions of which interim assessment products to purchase?

5.Where is the balance between assessing and learning?

Event Resources

Presentation Video

An Assessment to Every Purpose, Under Heaven

Presenter: Marianne Perie

Marianne Perie, PhD., is the Director of the Center for Assessment and Accountability Research and Design (CAARD), formed in 2016 at the University of Kansas. This Center evaluates the use of learning maps to build formative tools for teachers, researches the comparability of various devices used in computer-based testing, and designs accountability systems under the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA). Previously, Dr. Perie served as the Director for the Center for Educational Testing and Evaluation (CETE) for three years. In that role she oversaw the Kansas Assessment Program, the Alaska Measures of Progress, the Career Pathways Assessment, two grants, and provided technical support on the Dynamic Learning Maps consortium. As a member of the University of Kansas (KU) graduate faculty in the School of Education, she has taught courses in advanced measurement theory and scaling. She currently serves on eight state technical advisory committees (TACs) and the research advisory committee for the AICPA.

Learning Moments

LM-Marianne Perie: Interim assessments
LM-Marianne Perie: Roles of interim assessments in a balanced assessment system
LM-Marianne Perie: What educators can learn from interim assessments
LM-Marianne Perie: How evidence from interim assessments can be used by educators and administrators
LM-Marianne Perie: Uses of interim assessment
LM-Marianne Perie: Components of interim assessments
LM-Marianne Perie: Educators involvement in purchase of interim assessment products
LM-Marianne Perie: Achieving a balance between assessing and learning

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