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Assessments for Young Children

By: ERIC Clearinghouse on Assessment and Evaluation (1999)

What is assessment?

Assessment is the process of gathering information about a student in order to make decisions about his or her education. One kind of assessment procedure is testing. In elementary and secondary schools, tests are given routinely to measure the extent to which we profit from instruction. We may have taken intelligence, aptitude, interest, personality tests or any number of other kinds of tests. Testing means presenting a person with a set of questions or tasks in order to obtain a measure of performance often represented by a score. The score is intended to help answer questions and produce information about the person tested.

Formal vs. informal assessment

Increasingly, educators are finding new ways to evaluate students' school performances using informal rather than formal, or standardized, assessment procedures. Collection of information by means of observation is often thought of as informal assessment, as is information gathered from interviews with parents or past teachers and by using teacher-constructed tests.

Over the past few years, some districts have increased the use of curriculum-based measurements (CBM). Several samples of a student's performance are collected, using items drawn from the local curriculum, usually in basic skill subjects of reading, math, spelling and written expression. Such brief tests are called "probes." Student performances are measured by a frequency count of, for example, words read, written or sequenced correctly, or math problems answered correctly. The norms used to compare a student's performance have been previously determined by testing random groups of students at each grade level. CBM has been used as part of the overall assessment program for purposes of screening, program placement, instructional planning and monitoring student progress. Curriculum-based measurement provides the teacher with a relatively fast and frequent method to measure student progress in the regular school subjects. Both group and individual administration are used, depending on the school subject being tested.

The following are some examples of the two categories:

Formal Assessments Informal/ Natural Assessments
Norm-referenced tests Observation
Criterion-referenced tests Play-based
  Check lists and rating scales
  Parent interviews

Formal assessments:

Norm-referenced tests have standardized, formal procedures for administering, timing and scoring. They have been "normed" or administered to a representative sample of similar age or grade level students so that final test results can be compared to students of similar characteristics. Test results indicate a person's relative performance in the group. These standardized tests must be administered as specified in the manual to ensure valid and reliable results.

Criterion-referenced tests

Criterion-referenced tests (CRT) measure what the person is able to do and indicate what skills have been mastered. CRT compare a person's performance with his or her own past performance. An example is the number of spelling words correct. If Molly spells 15 of 20 words correct, that is 75% correct, higher than the past week when her score was 60% correct. In criterion-referenced measurement, the emphasis is on assessing specific and relevant behaviors that have been mastered rather than indicating the relative standing in the group.

Informal/natural assessments:

Play-based assessment is a tool used while a child is playing usually in his/her natural environment. The observer is able to see the interactions between the child and peers as well as noting speech and language, and motor abilities.

Checklists and rating scales

Checklists and rating scales are used to make judgments about children's behavior. The two should be used in different settings to determine patterns in behavior (Lerner, Lowenthal, & Egan, 1998).

Parent interviews are judgments based upon the observations of significant people in the child's life.

Types of assessment for developmental areas

Cognition:

Language/communication:

Motor:

Social/emotional:

Self-help/adaptive:

For more information concerning tests and assessments visit ERIC Clearinghouse on Assessment and Evaluation

References

J. Lerner, B. Lowenthal, R. Egan (1998). Preschool Children with Special Needs: Children At-risk and Children with Disabilities. Needham Heights, MA: Allyn & Bacon.

E. Hean Hosterman, Ed. (1989). Special Education Tests: A Handbook for Parents and Professionals. Minneapolis, Minnesota, PACER Center, Inc.

For more information concerning tests and assessments visit ERIC Clearinghouse on Assessment and Evaluation