Assessment practices should be educationally sound and contribute to learning. Assessments may do this in a number of ways. Firstly, assessment activities should encourage in-depth and long-term learning. Secondly, assessments should provide feedback that assists students in learning and informs teachers' planning. Thirdly, where appropriate, assessment criteria should be made explicit to students to focus their attention on what they have to achieve and provide students with feedback about their progress.
Assessment needs to be comprehensive and balanced across various domains of learning and assess knowledge and higher order cognitive skills such as problem solving and critical thinking. Assessments need to be aligned with the curriculum and use a variety of assessment strategies, on the basis of their relevance to the knowledge, skills and understanding to be assessed and the purpose of the assessment.
Students need to be included in the assessment process. With expert support, students can learn to assess and evaluate their own learning in a way that further extends that learning. It is important that teachers are responsive to the unexpected ways students reveal their thinking. These opportunities can be used to extend or redirect teaching.
In-depth long-term learning refers to students having a deep foundation of factual knowledge; understanding ideas in the context of a conceptual framework; and organising knowledge in a way that facilitates retrieval and application.
It is therefore important that feedback to students provides logical connections between what they know and what they need to learn next. If feedback is to be effective, it needs to be clear, purposeful and compatible with students' prior learning.
Assessments also inform the teacher because they enable teachers to determine how successful their teaching strategies have been and which students require further instruction.
There are several ways you can ensure your assessments are educative.