1. What does the future hold for e-assessment? Martin Ripley World Class Arena Ltd www.worldclassarena.net
2. Development and adoption of project Cisco, Intel, Microsoft joint contribution to improve education Joint company taskforce – 9 members Dr Robert Kozma as consultant Aim to improve 21st century skills Define them clearly Make them measurable Connect with the classroom Cisco, Intel Microsoft now supporting an international team
3. Assessment in 21st Century Existing models of assessment are typically at odds with the skills, knowledge, attitudes and characteristics of self-directed and collaborative learning that are increasingly important for our global economy and fast changing world. New assessments are needed that measure these skills and provide information that is needed by students, teachers, parents, administrators, and policymakers to catalyze and support systemic education reform. These assessments should engage students in the use of technology and digital resources and the application of a deep understanding of subject knowledge to solve complex, real world tasks and create new ideas, content, and knowledge. Intel, Microsoft, and Cisco Education Taskforce Transforming Education: Assessing and Teaching the Skills Needed in the 21st Century A Call to Action
4. Engagement of countries and other companies Founder Countries Australia, Finland, Portugal, Singapore, UK, USA Other countries can join Collaborative electronic space Other companies can fund work If it fits the project’s program If the company has relevant expertise If the company agrees thatall results will be in the public domain, asCisco, Intel and Microsoft have.
5. White papers developed in 2009 by working groups Defining 21st Century Skills Ms Senta Raizen, WestEd Methodological Issues Dr Mark Wilson, University of California, Berkeley Technological Issues Dr Beno Csapo, University of Szeged, Hungary Classrooms and Formative Evaluation. Dr John Bransford, University of WashingtonDr Marlene Scardamalia, University of Toronto Policy Frameworks for New Assessments Dr Linda Darling-Hammond, Stanford University
9. Defining 21st Century Skills Conceptual structure Ways of thinking Creativity and innovation Critical thinking, problem solving Learning to learn, metacognition Ways of working Communication Collaboration (teamwork) Tools for working Information literacy ICT literacy Living in the world Citizenship – local and global Life and career Personal, social responsibility
10. A framework for 21st century skills Assessments signal priorities for curriculum and instruction Teachers model the pedagogical approach Curriculum developers respond Schools and teachers tend to focus on what is tested rather than underlying standards or learning goals May encourage a one-time performance orientation and transmission-type teaching Instructional/teaching time is diverted to specific test preparation activities
12. Participation skills Low Peripheral participation Low subjective responsibility for outcomes of collaboration, leading to lurking behaviour Simple epistemological beliefs (knowledge is perceived as fixed and to be transmitted from teacher/textbook to learner) Middle Activity in scaffolded environments Responding to cues in communication Medium subjective responsibility for outcomes of collaboration Developed epistemological beliefs (knowledge is perceived as fixed, but can be elaborated through communication and collaboration) High Initiating and promoting interaction Activating and scaffolding others in participation Ensuring equal participation rates among group members High subjective responsibility for outcomes of collaboration Sophisticated epistemological beliefs (knowledge is perceived as fluid, constructed, and inherently social/collaborative in nature)
13. Perspective taking skills Low Low levels of empathy High egocentric bias Social projection (expectation of others as highly similar to oneself) Ignoring contributions from others Contributions are not tailored to participants Middle Medium levels of empathy Medium level of egocentric bias Receptive ability (being able to understand what others want to convey, e.g. from overhearing) Contributions from others are taken into account Contributions are moderately tailored to recipients High High levels of empathy Low or no egocentric bias Contributions from others are embraced and contextualized with respect to collaborators’ opinions and skills Eliciting contributions from others (e.g. through questions) Contributions are tailored to recipients (audience design)
14. Task regulation skills Low Trial and error hypothesis testing Unorganized sequence of solution attempts Little or no goal setting Variety of taskwork mental models will be ignored Middle Forward search through a problem space Organized sequence of solution attempts Setting of unspecific goals Variety of taskwork mental models will be taken into account High Reflective regulation Forward and backward search through a problem space Strategic oversight over collaborative strategy Setting of specific goals Variety of taskwork mental models will be harnessed productively
15. Knowledge building skills Low Knowledge telling Sharing of information Isolated contributions Lack of argumentation patterns Middle Critical analysis of information Building on input from others Adding information/data Forming of incomplete arguments High Knowledge transforming Integration and synthesis of multiple artefacts Forming of complete, proper arguments (explanatory coherence)
16. Social regulation skills Low Low tolerance for ambiguity Competitive or individualistic social value orientation Low readiness to negotiate joint understanding Tendency to withdraw after conflict arises Middle Cooperative social value orientation Attempts to negotiate joint understanding Conflicts will be avoided Initiation of compromises High Pro-social attitudes Strategies for conflict resolution Conflicts are regarded as productive tensions Initiation of successful compromises