Assessment for Learning and Ideas about Science: background information
Development process
Assessment for learning clarifies the relationship between teaching and assessment of Ideas about Science. It helps teachers to provide guidance to students on their progress in knowledge and understanding of Ideas about Science. It may also give them a higher profile.
Development of Assessment for Learning Ideas about Science
In October 2006 a small group of Twenty First Century Science teachers met to discuss how Assessment for Learning (AfL) approaches could be applied to the teaching and learning of Ideas about Science. The meeting was chaired by Peter Robinson, SNS consultant for Bury LA, and Jenifer Burden, Co-director for Twenty First Century Science at the University of York Science Education Group.
The pilot group decided to look at GCSE Science modules in two ways:
• to review each module for activities that offered opportunities for Assessment for Learning approaches;
• to develop a Key Assessed Task to help students identify their progress in the Ideas about Science taught in a particular module.
In producing pilot Key Assessed Tasks, teachers started by using Appendix F of the OCR GCSE Science specification as guidance to the expected outcomes for Ideas about Science. Teachers designed a task taking no more than one hour to complete, which they felt would be appropriate for students who had completed some or all of a particular GCSE Science module. They wrote a ‘progress ladder’ to help students identify their next steps in grasping concepts in a particular Idea about Science. Then they trialled the Key Assessment Task with one or more groups of students.
For further information email Peter Campbell at the Nuffield Curriculum Centre pcampbell@nuffieldfoundation.org
