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The outcomes and impact of school based evaluationGroves, Robin Clive, n/a January 1983 (has links)
This study concerns school based evaluation; evaluation of a
school or some aspect of its operation which is carried out by the
teachers and other interested members of the school community. When
the decision to evaluate and the control of the evaluation are at the
school level a complex, dynamic situation is created. The teachers in
the school concurrently have roles as evaluators and as those being
evaluated, as well as continuing in their other normal teachers' roles.
The history of educational evaluation in the United States of
America, the United Kingdom and Australia is traced. An outline is
given of the developments in the more traditional methods based on
measurement of achievement of objectives on the one hand, and on the
'informed judgement of experts' on the other. It is suggested that
improvements in both methods have led to a constructive method of
evaluation with its roots in both traditions. Some checklists and
guidelines for planning evaluations are also reviewed.
Interviews were carried out in an A.C.T. high school which had
completed an evaluation almost a year earlier. Twenty people were
interviewed: some teachers, some parents and a member of the
Evaluation and Research Section of the A.C.T. Schools Office. All
had been involved with or affected by the evaluation.
If an evaluation is initiated and controlled at the school level
many new complexities are introduced into the situation. The process
of the evaluation becomes of paramount importance. The way the
evaluation is initiated and planned, the way information is collected
and analysed, and the way decisions are arrived at are uppermost in
participants' minds. Probably the early stages are the most crucial in
establishing the climate and structure for the evaluation, and in
developing participants' skills. The effects on staff relationships,
staff/parent relationships and the general climate of the school are
what the participants are most aware of. There usually are outcomes
of a school based evaluation arising from recommendations, but these
often are more subtle than those of a traditional evaluation by
outsiders. Changes may also occur during the evaluation, rather than
at the end after the presentation of a report as was more traditionally
the case.
There is a place for school based evaluation in Australian schools,
but it should be recognised as a complex process which may involve
participants in new roles in an extremely dynamic situation.
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Two school-based evaluations at a Catholic high school in the ACT a reviewMoore, Peter Joseph, n/a January 1986 (has links)
The completion of two school-based evaluation reports at a
Catholic High School in the ACT highlighted the need for
support structures both for evaluating staff and for the
management of an evaluation report. The writer (a school
principal) felt a need to review school-based evaluations
in a more professional manner, and to ensure that
evaluations were managed with greater support for the staff
involved.
In the absence of known Australian checklists, designed to
review school-based evaluations, two recognised evaluation
checklists, those of Russell and Maling-Keepes, are tested
as instruments of review, by applying them to the two
school evaluation reports. Four evaluation reviews are
documented, in all. The main purposes of this research
were:
(1) to determine the merits of the completed evaluations by
applying the checklists of Russell and Maling-Keepes,
(2) to test the relevance of the evaluation checklists of
Russell and Maling-Keepes as instruments of review at
the school level,
(3) in the light of this research, to be in a better
position to recommend
a) a suitable review method for use by Catholic
School Principals,
b) support structures, both at a system level and a
school level, to assist the development of
school-based evaluations.
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