Type | Working Paper |
Title | Thermometer, pill, placebo or virus? The ongoing debate on when to use standardised assessments and how |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2011 |
URL | http://www.myemissions.co.za/Gustafsson_Moloi_2011_11_05.pdf |
Abstract | The chief concern of this paper is when and how to use standardised assessments in a schooling system to improve the quality of learning and teaching. The arguments made in the literature on this topic are intense and positions often seem irreconcilable. Positions are clearly informed by ideology but, less obviously, also by context, specifically regional and historical factors including recent experiences with standardised tests. A key contribution of this paper is a mapping of positions taken by analysts with respect to standardised testing against the context in which the analyst argues. It is expected that such a mapping can assist in the policy debates on the degree and type of standardised assessment to have within a specific context. The limited evidence available for or against the effectiveness of different forms of standardised assessment in different contexts receives attention. The academic literature in English from developed countries is considered, but also the grey literature and literature (some of it non-English) from developing countries, including African and Latin American ones. |
» | South Africa - Southern and Eastern Africa Consortium for Monitoring Educational Quality 2000 |