NZ Cancelled Conference Conversations
Digital Conference
in May 2020.
I question the legitimacy of treating assessment for learning (AfL) as
assessment. The distinction between testing and assessment is first
made, then the defining characteristics of contemporary AfL are
identified. While AfL claims to be assessment, my analysis argues that
AfL is a pedagogical curriculum approach that has some process aspects
of assessment. However, because of the interactive and in-the-moment
characteristics of AfL, it fails to meet requirements of an assessment.
Specifically, because the in-the-moment and on-the-fly aspects of
effective classroom discussions and providing feedback happen in
ephemeral contexts it is not possible to scrutinize the interpretations
teachers make of student products and processes. Furthermore, we cannot
know if those interpretations were sufficiently accurate to guide
classroom interactions. Without social or statistical moderation,
stakeholders cannot be assured that valid conclusions are reached.
Additionally, the scale of error in both teacher and student judgment
means that AfL practices cannot be relied upon for decision making
beyond curriculum-embedded actions within a pedagogical process.
Because teaching requires robust evidence to support decisions made
about students and teachers, the practices commonly associated with AfL
cannot provide sufficient evidence on which to base anything more than
teaching interactions.