Kurebwa mercy thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for doctor of philosophy



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2.4 RATIONALE FOR ASSESSMENT


The use of formative assessment for learning or other diagnostic efforts within the classroom provides information that should help facilitate improved pedagogical practices and instructional outcomes (Karee, Dunn & Scan 2009). Goodrum, Hackling & Rennie (2001:2) assert that, “an assessment is a key component of teaching and learning process.” The assessment process fits into a variety of classroom decision-making contexts and serves as a means of conveying information to learners (Stiggins & Conklin 1992:179). Goodrum et. al (2001; 2),

“Assessment enhances learning, provides feedback about learner progress, builds confidence and self esteem, and develops skills in evaluation”. Unfortunately research shows that high quality formative assessment is relatively rare in classrooms and most teachers do not engage well in such assessment (Fair Test, 2007). They go on to say, formative assessment facilitates improved instructional practices, identifies gaps in the curriculum and contributes to increased learner performance. Black & William (1998:10), define formative assessment as, “All those activities undertaken by the teacher, and or their learners which provide information to be used as feedback to modify teaching and learning activities in which they are gauged.”


Because assessment can be designed and packaged as formative and summative, summative assessments, by contrast are usually conducted at the end of a particular course or specific points. The purpose is to form a judgment about the effectiveness of a course or an instruction (The Teaching and Evaluation Guide, 2002:3). The judgment may be used to make decisions that include certification, award of scholarships, the curriculum or teaching adjustment. The purpose of assessment is to find out whether learners have benefited from instruction (Airasain, 1994). Stiggins & Conklin 1992:179 contend that, an assessment process fits in a wide variety of classroom decision making contexts and serves as a means of conveying information to learners and teachers in order to make decisions that include:

  • Diagnoses of the strengths and weaknesses of individual learners.

  • Diagnoses of class and group needs.

  • Grouping learners for instruction within or across classes.

  • Identifying and selecting learners who are in need of special services.

  • Assigning grades on report cards.

  • Evaluating the effectiveness of their instructional effort.

  • Communicating instructional objectives or achievement expectations.

  • Communicating social or inter- personal expectations.

  • Controlling learner behaviours and motivation, and

  • Enhancing test-taking skills.

Gipps & Stobart (1993) identify six uses of assessment below:



  • Screening: this refers to the process of testing groups of learners, normally at primary level, to identify individuals who are in need of special help.

  • Diagnosis: this involves the use of tests to identify children’s strengths and (more usual) weaknesses.

  • Record-keeping: test scores and teacher assessments are put into learner records to then help in the transfer process from one school level to the next.

  • Feedback: results provide feedback about the progress of individual learners and the teacher’s success. On the other hand, results of classes can provide information to the school administration about the progress and success across the school, and school results can be used by outsiders to ‘evaluate’ schools and teachers.

  • Certification: a learner is provided with a qualification that signifies that he or she has reached a certain level of competence or knowledge.

  • Selection: learners are selected into different institutions for further and higher education. They can also be allocated to different streams or sets within institutions.

The primary purpose of learner assessment is to support this learning, (Cameron et al. 1998: 6) hence the need for teachers to understand assessment processes. The introduction to Primary School Curriculum (1999) strongly supports that assessment contributes significantly to teaching/learning and states that,

Assessment is central to the process of teaching and learning. It is used to monitor learning process and to ascertain achievement in each area of the curriculum. Through assessment the teacher constructs a comprehensive picture of the short term and long-term needs of the child and plans future work accordingly. Assessment is also used to identify children with specific learning difficulties so that the nature of the support and assistance they need can be ascertained, and appropriate programmes put in place to enable them to cope with particular difficulties they are encountering.

Assessment assists the communication about children’s progress and development between teacher and child, between teacher and parent and between teacher and teacher (Primary Teacher Curriculum, 1999; 17)


Thus teachers are expected to use assessment to guide effective decision making, particularly with respect to the identification, remediation, and ongoing evaluation of learners with learning difficulties. From the foregone observations, the power of classroom assessment primarily resides in formative practices that allow adaptation of teaching and learning activities to learner needs, but appropriate forms of summative assessment can also be designed to support the teaching and learning process (Stiggins, 1992). Assessment provides evidence of performance relative to content and performance standards. It provides teachers and learners with insight into learner errors and misconceptions and helps lead the teacher directly to action.

Classroom assessment informs teachers how effectively they are teaching and learner show effectively they are learning. Through classroom assessment, teachers get continual feedback on whether and how well learners are learning what teachers hope they are teaching. And learners are required, through a variety of classroom assessment exercises to monitor their learning, to reflect on it, and to take corrective action while there is still time left in the semester (Cross, 1998: 6).


Teachers are required to have a clear understanding of their learners’ abilities. Without a clear understanding of learners’ abilities, teachers have no definite idea whether or not learners are meeting standards. With little or no teacher educationin assessment, the ability to define learner achievement becomes a daunting task for the teacher (Stiggins, 1992).
The foregone discussion indicates that assessment plays a pivotal role in the teaching and learning situation, however according to (Black and William1998a) in Butt, (2010:8) day to day assessment in classrooms reveal the following shortcomings;

  • Superficial rote learning often takes place, with classroom assessment based on the recall of details of knowledge which learners soon forget.

  • Teachers fail to review the forms of assessment used, do not discuss assessment practices with other teachers and rarely reflect on what is being assessed.

  • There is an over-emphasis on grading and an under emphasis on learning.

  • There is a tendency to use normative rather than criterion referenced assessment systems.

  • Teachers emphasize competition through their assessment method rather than personal achievement and performance.

  • Assessment methods tend to reinforce perception of failure among the less able leading to de-motivation and loss of confidence in their ability to learn.

  • Dominance in external summative testing is still the norm.

Black et. al, (2003) have also found that the general problems related to assessment can be broadly divided into three categories; those concerned with effective learning; those concerned with negative impact and those concerned with the managerial role of assessment.

  1. Effective learning. Effective learning is diminishing because testing encourages rote and superficial learning; assessment methods are not critically reviewed among teachers in schools, and the quantity and presentation of work are emphasised at the neglect of its quality.

  2. Negative impact. This is exacerbated by the over emphasis on rewarding grades and under the provision of useful advice, reinforces a lack of emphasis on the role of learning

  3. Managerial role. The managerial roles tend to dominate rather than relating assessment to learning. Often teachers can predict their learners’ likely performance on external test, usually because their own assessment regimes closely imitate these but are less aware of learners’ needs Butt (2010:8).

To sum it all (Delandshere, (2001: 130) finds it striking that in countries like the United States, the assessment situation is gloomy when he posits,

In countries such as United States educational assessment practices still reflect for the most part the legacy of the past: the purposes are narrow and the methods used generate limited data. The assumptions and theories of learning are implicit; examinees submit to the process without active and equal participation (e.g. critique, reflection, self-reflection), and secrecy, reward, and punishment remain key concepts.


In this view, Greaney & Kellaghan (2004:61) highlights that ,despite the central role of assessment in the teaching and learning process there is evidence however, that quality of classroom assessment may be deficient in many ways .Problems that have been identified include the use of poorly focused questions, a predominance of questions that require short answers involving factual knowledge and the evocation of responses that involve repetition rather than reflection and a lack of procedures designed to develop higher order cognitive skills (Black & Wiliam, 1998; Madaus & Kellaghan,1992). Greaney & Kellaghan (2004) also commented that, “Classroom assessment practices include the prevalence of poorly qualified teachers, large class sizes and poor facilities and shortages of learning materials (including books and places to store them.”In the Zimbabwean situation most of the teachers are qualified, but large class sizes and poor facilities are prevalent in most schools. These may pose as a hindrance to effective assessment. Furthermore the quality of teachers teacher educationand the frequency of staff development will determine the nature of assessment in the schools .If teachers are not adequately trained and fail to receive the needed staff development then, this will adversely affect assessment in the schools resulting to assessment problems in the primary schools.


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