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This book presents a new framework for how teachers develop their assessment capacity, based on a multi-year study conducted in four countries—Australia, Canada, England, and New Zealand—which focused on student-teacher learning in assessment throughout their initial teacher education programs. It examines how teacher learning is shaped by the complex dynamics of assessment capacity within larger teacher education contexts.
The framework proposed here identifies four domains involved in cultivating assessment capacity and characterizes assessment learning as always integrating cognitive,
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Produktbeschreibung
This book presents a new framework for how teachers develop their assessment capacity, based on a multi-year study conducted in four countries—Australia, Canada, England, and New Zealand—which focused on student-teacher learning in assessment throughout their initial teacher education programs. It examines how teacher learning is shaped by the complex dynamics of assessment capacity within larger teacher education contexts.

The framework proposed here identifies four domains involved in cultivating assessment capacity and characterizes assessment learning as always integrating cognitive, philosophical, and moral dimensions with assessment’s social, emotional, and physical dimensions, while recognizing that each capacity is continually shaped by the learning context. The book draws on the survey of teacher education programs in each of the four focal countries and data from student teachers to shed light on how the various pedagogies, program structures, and policies encountered provide beginning teachers with codes for classifying and framing assessment capacity and form a template for developing this capacity throughout their careers.

Offering suggestions for future research and teacher education practice, the book concludes with an outlook on future steps to cultivate teachers’ assessment capacity.

Autorenporträt
Christopher DeLuca is an Associate Dean at the School of Graduate Studies and Postdoctoral Affairs and Professor in Educational Assessment at the Faculty of Education, Queen’s University (Ontario, Canada). He leads the Classroom Assessment Research Team and is Director of the Queen’s Assessment and Evaluation Group. ORCID: 0000-0001-5962-0827.

Jill Willis is an Associate Professor in the Faculty of Education at Queensland University of Technology (Brisbane, Australia). Her research focuses on reflexivity and agency in classroom assessment and evaluation processes. She currently leads research on accessibility in assessment, and student evaluations of vertical schools. ORCID: 0000-0001-5200-5039

Bronwen Cowie is Associate Dean Research Te Kura Toi Tangata, Division of Education, University of Waikato (Hamilton, New Zealand). Her research interests include assessment and assessment education, science education, and preservice and beginning teacher experiences. She has a particular interest in collaborative classroom-based research that includes student voice. ORCID: 0000-0003-3578-0791

Christine Harrison is a Professor of Science Education at King’s College (London, UK). Her research interests are in assessment and science education, especially the ways teachers deal with the interplay between assessment and teaching. She is currently working on how assessment and teaching play out in science practical lessons in primary and secondary schools. ORCID: 0000-0002-1675-6107

Andrew Coombs is a Teaching Assistant Professor at Memorial University (Newfoundland & Labrador, Canada). Andrew’s research focuses on understanding the factors shaping early career teachers’ assessment practices and assessment learning needs. He quantitative and qualitative research methods, curriculum theory, and classroom assessment.