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Exploring classroom-based assessment activities and learner roles in two tertiary institutions in Guangdong, ChinaJiang, Yan, 蒋燕 January 2014 (has links)
Classroom assessment can be a powerful means of enhancing student learning, but there has been insufficient examination of how this potential can be realized, especially in the Chinese educational context. The student role in assessment is repeatedly emphasized in articles about learning and teaching, but surprisingly few studies have systematically investigated how to activate it in classroom practice. This study explores classroom-based assessment activities and learner roles in two tertiary institutions in mainland China.
A qualitative multiple-case design was adopted, involving four teachers and thirty-one students from four classes. Data were collected primarily through classroom observation and semi-structured interviews. Quantitative analysis was conducted to identify major patterns in assessment practices. Qualitative analysis was also conducted in order to reveal the participants’ perceptions.
The findings showed that a variety of assessment activities, from formal tests to informal teacher observation, were implemented in the four classes to varying extents. Teacher questioning and peer assessment were two prominent methods used. The learner role in teacher questioning was reported at three stages of the questioning process. At the initiation stage, convergent questions dominated and learners were placed in a passive position of knowledge reception. At the response stage, choral and individual answers were most common; the former possibly disguising learner difficulties and the latter acknowledging the student role through encouragement of independent thinking. At the evaluation stage, meaningful interventions were rarely composed to activate the learner role and move learning forward.
The learner role in peer assessment was found to be associated with the participants’ conceptions of this practice. The adherents viewed learners as active participants playing the central role in assessment; those supporting peer assessment but with reservations regarded learners as immature assessors capable of providing valuable comments but in need of teacher support; the opponents saw students as incompetent assessors and considered teachers to be the leaders in assessment.
Various factors were found to have interacted to shape the learner role in classroom-based assessment activities. These included teacher and student factors at the individual level, such as teacher beliefs and student academic competence; contextual factors at the classroom and institutional level, such as institutional culture; and contextual factors at the wider socio-cultural level, such as Confucian-influenced thinking.
The study enriches our knowledge about classroom-based assessment in the Chinese context and offers critical insights into the student role in this process. It contributes to the understanding of the role of teacher questioning in classroom interaction, as well as factors influencing the learner role in classroom-based assessment. Further, the study offers insights into peer assessment implementation in ordinary English courses and has implications for effective implementation of peer assessment in the Chinese context. / published_or_final_version / Education / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
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A study of the difficulty of the test items of the Stanford Binet Intelligence Scale, Form L, for a group of Negro children.Butler, J. Wilsonia 01 January 1940 (has links)
No description available.
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A study of two anthropometric measures of the children of the Spelman College Nursery School, Atlanta, GeorgiaEberhardt, Dorothy Nell 01 January 1942 (has links)
No description available.
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An analysis of the eye health in grades 4, 5, and 6 of Oglethorpe School, Atlanta, GeorgiaEdwards, Henry Feard 01 January 1948 (has links)
No description available.
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A comparison of the gross scores of one hundred college freshmen, fifty girls and fifty boys, on the Thurstone Psychological Examination with their time and error scores on a motor learning testColston, James Allen 01 January 1933 (has links)
No description available.
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A comparative study of the scores made by two hundred fifty-one Morehouse College students on the Psychological Examination for College FreshmenCraft, Pearlie Mae 01 January 1943 (has links)
No description available.
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USING ITEM DATA FOR EVALUATING CRITERION REFERENCE MEASURES WITH AN EMPIRICAL INVESTIGATION OF INDEX CONSISTENCYMeredith, Keith Edward, 1943- January 1973 (has links)
No description available.
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The goal programming approach for test constructionHsu, Yung-Chen, 1962- January 1993 (has links)
A goal programming approach for selecting items from an item bank to construct a test, based on item response theory (IRT), was proposed. This approach can simultaneously handle multiple and conflicting goals, which is more realistic and practical than the linear programming approach that deals with only a single goal. An example was presented to show the procedures of applying the goal programming approach for constructing a test based on IRT one-parameter logistic model. The results provide the test constructor flexible ways to select items to meet different needs.
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The prediction of achievement in Army Chemical Corps school coursesJackland, Thomas Alfred, 1926- January 1952 (has links)
No description available.
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A critical and historical evaluation of the accomplishment quotientWalker, Margarette January 1930 (has links)
No description available.
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