CEP 813

The blog posts on this page are part of a course I am taking through Michigan State University's Department of Counseling, Educational Psychology, and Special Education (CEP) in electronic assessment for teaching and learning (813). This online program - which takes place between mid May and mid August 2021 - requires regular blog posts related to the topic of assessment. Whenever possible, I will relate my work to the unique needs of middle schoolers, however, some writings may take a different direction based on the assignment. Hopefully, you will see evidence of my learning in these posts as the course progresses, and please keep in mind, we are still experiencing the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, so things in education and life are anything but normal. 

For the past four years, I have been working on a research project investigating a system of technology-enhanced accessible classroom assessment tasks called ONPAR. ONPAR assessments are designed to provide teachers and students with diagnostic feedback about students' progress towards the learning goals set out in the Next Generation Science...

How do you know if an assessment you intend to use with students is "good"? What criteria should you use to judge its quality? Are there certain "must haves" common to all classroom assessments or does the list depend upon the circumstances, such as content or audience? Once you've identified a potentially problematic item, what resources are...

Last week, I posted a description of an assessment I created for Google Classroom. This was part of an assignment for CEP 813 requiring the exploration of a Content Management System (CMS) we never used before and the creation of a sample assessment that resided completely within that CMS. I chose to explore Google Classroom because, even though...

Does the amount of cheating in online learning warrant the surveillance techniques employed by online exam proctoring services? Providers of services like ProctorU, Examity, HonorLock and Proctorio claim the answer to this question is a resounding yes, and educational institutions seem to agree. An April 2020 EduCause QuickPoll indicated that...

It has been several years since I checked out Google Classroom, and I must admit, I'm impressed! I recently used the Quiz Assignment tool to make an assessment designed to be used formatively with a group of middle school science students studying ecology, and it seems to have most of the features I need to create and administer a good assessment....

In this post, I take a look at a mid-unit assessment from the OpenSciEd eighth grade instructional unit on sound waves titled How can a sound make something move?. OpenSciEd is an online source of free, open resource instructional units for middle school science designed to exemplify the vision of the Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS)....

As educators, we are engaged in assessing our students all the time. Some assessments are pre-planned and formal, such as when we give tests and quizzes or assign projects, and others are more informal efforts to collect evidence of what students know and can do. Many of these informal assessments are based on questions students ask, snippets of...

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