Sunday, June 30, 2013

EDU 645 Week 3 Assignment

July 1, 2013
Blog Post
            When I was thinking about my test items I let the objectives guide my way. For example objectives two, five and six lend themselves to essay questions because I am asking my students to explain in detail or put into their own words the book. I am also asking them to compare the story as a whole to an event in the past or present. With these particular objectives I can only tell if the student has learned what I am looking for by having them give me an extensive answer that cannot possibly be covered by multiple choices or true/false.  I am asking the student use higher thinking skills and to use their problem solving skills with these objectives. I am not looking for them to relay information that is memorized or that can be taken from the text word for word (Kubiszyn, & Borich, 2013). I am looking for the students insights in the book, not the authors.
            For objectives one, three, and four I am looking for the students’ knowledge or objective items. So, with these three objectives I will use fill in the blank, true/false, matching, and even some multiple choice. Because I am looking for a test or tests that are easy to score, but that will show me that the students have read the book, these tests will be able to evaluate this knowledge for me (Kubiszyn, & Borich, 2013).  In This way I can cover the book more fully with the students, and make sure they understand what they have read and understand the book itself (Kubiszyn, & Borich, 2013). I can score them quickly and tell if the students are keeping up with their reading and understanding, or if we need to slow down or use different tactics (Kubiszyn, & Borich, 2013). These tests are not looking for opinions, or higher thinking, or problem solving, just what the student has read and the facts of what they have read (Kubiszyn, & Borich, 2013).
Reference:
Kubiszyn, T. & Borich, G. (2013). Educational testing & measurement: Classroom application and practice (10th ed.). John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken, NJ.


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