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Edited by Joan Boykoff Baron and Dennie Palmer Wolf

Performance-Based Student Assessment

Challenges and Possibilities

The Ninety-Fifth Yearbook of the National Society for the Study of Education, Part II
350 pages,  6 x 9  © 1996
Series: National Society for the Study of Education Yearbooks

Cloth $45.00

ISBN: 9780226038032   Published April 1996

Reforming our nation's educational system has created the need for new ways to assess students' performance. The trend among educators, parents, and politicians to accommodate diversity in the student body demands new systems that accurately gauge the progress of students in relation to their peers while allowing for differences in what students know and how they acquire knowledge. This collection of essays addresses the problems—technical, political, and intellectual—of designing such a system.

The first section discusses the concepts of learning that underpin different approaches to performance assessment. These essays compare notions of fixed intelligence and developmental learning and outline the need to acknowledge and support diversity in America's classrooms. The second section considers the political issues surrounding assessment systems that have been pilot-tested in Connecticut, Vermont, and Kentucky. The third and final section reviews design possibilities for future systems to assess both aptitude and achievement.
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