Student
learning of the Art TEKS may be demonstrated in multiple ways,
including paper/pen format, products, and video or audio logs
of works-in-progress. Though educators often think the primary
purpose of assessment is grading, a thorough assessment plan,
consisting of a variety of evidence on student acquisition of
the TEKS, facilitates learning in many ways:
- Aiding
in planning, indicating when to reteach and when to move
ahead
- Developing
a base of evidence documenting student achievement
- Providing
tools for student self-assessment
- Providing
tools for evaluating overall teaching performance.
The
following table shows performance assessment formats appropriate
for documenting achievement of the Art TEKS. The first column
is appropriate for grades K6 while the formats in both
columns are appropriate for grades 712. Teachers should
bear in mind that multiple assessments provide more complete
information on student achievement than any one type of assessment
alone.
|
Performance
Assessment
Formats for K6
|
Additional
Performance
Assessment Formats for
Grades 712 |
-
Observation
- Inquiry
- Class discussion/group
critique
- Interview
- Portfolio
- Demonstration
- Journals/logs
- Self-assessment
- Checklist/rating form
- Projects
- Oral critique
- Written critique
|
- Oral test
- Written test
- Oral research report
- Written research report
- Critique by experts
- Products
|
Whatever
assessment tools are selected, teachers should align
their assessment practices with the following principles:
- Assessment
provides information on a variety of dimensions of student
art processes and products and uses multiple sources of
information.
- Teachers
continually monitor students' creative processes, providing
formative evaluations so students learn self-assessment
and learn to explain their thinking processes in the creation
of artworks.
- Students
are assessed only on content or skills that they have had
an opportunity to learn.
- Criteria
for satisfactory performance are made explicit before students
begin a new task, and students themselves often participate
in generating the criteria.
- The
teacher communicates student achievement clearly to students
themselves, parents, and other professionals.
- Targeted
feedback is much more helpful in improving processes and
products than non-specific praise.
- Evaluation
is more than the grading of a finished product; it also
includes student self-evaluation.
- Art
teachers provide descriptive evaluation, supplementing rigid
numerical or alphabetical grading systems. They do not record
grades directly on student products.
Rubrics
A
rubric is a tool for helping teachers implement effective
assessment of the Art TEKS. Rubrics communicate a clear continuum
of performance levels in art and help students learn to critique
their knowledge and skills and to assess their growth. Though
rubrics can take many forms, they are often shown in a table.
The
first step in developing a rubric is to determine the critical
dimensions of the performance or project that will be assessed.
As shown below, these dimensions are placed in the far left-hand
column of a table. Next, decide on the number of performance
levels to be delineated. This number determines the total
number of remaining columns in the table.
Now,
describe the differences among performances along each continuum.
This is easiest if a sample of products is available. Samples
can be grouped by level of knowledge and skill demonstrated,
and common characteristics can be described. Without samples,
teachers make their best predictions. Involving students in
this process can create a great deal of "buy-in"
on the part of learners. Students can provide descriptions
of successful and unsuccessful projects describing the skills
and knowledge portrayed in sample projects. Once a rubric
has been used, it should be revised for future use. Teachers
should also retain sample products that illustrate desirable
demonstrations of knowledge and skill. Using multiple samples
of strong performances shows learners that there are multiple
ways to demonstrate high standards.
Some
characteristics of effective scoring rubrics include:
- A
scale based on criteria that reflect the knowledge and skills
assessed by the task
- Specific
information about learning that helps the teacher make instructional
decisions and communicates to students what they have learned
and what they still need to learn
- Clear
and easy to understand descriptors
- Ease
of use
- Examples
of student products
- Reliable
scores (i.e., ratings of various scorers are fairly consistent).
Teachers
who have not used a rubric before will experience a learning
curve. The development and use of rubrics will become more efficient
and effective over time. Here are some cautions for first-time
users:
- Dont
expect to get the rubric exactly right the first time. Like
all assessment tools, a rubric must be field tested and
adjusted based on actual use.
- The
rubric is not a checklist. The rubric provides a guide to
analyzing the total project.
- A
student project may not fall neatly into one level. It may
have characteristics of more than one level of performance.
In this model of scoring, the score assigned should be the
one that most closely resembles the performance.
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