Working Together, Sharing Ideas
Alison Simmons
Editor
SABES Central Resource Center
/ World Education
The seventh volume of Adventures
in Assessment highlights writings from The Partnership Project,
a mentoring project funded by the Massachusetts Department of Education
which allowed practitioners interested in learning about participatory
assessment to become partners with other practitioners who have
been developing and using participatory procedures and tools. As
you work your way through the first section of this volume, youll
follow the route of 12 practitioners who chose mentoring as a research
vehicle to explore the landscape of alternative assessment. As a
reader you can become involved by looking at the articles as a panorama
of experiences that you can add to or subtract from, given your
experiences and your program needs.
The Partnership Writers
The writers involved in The Partnership Project highlight the importance
of having the resources and support needed to come together as peers
around a common theme. As a group these articles raise a lot of
questions about assessment and mentoring as another vehicle for
dissemination of alternative assessment. Most of the writers here
focus their inquiry and development not only in assessing learners
skills in a particular content area but they also recognize the
importance of looking deeper into the other factors that make learners
teachable. Rudee Atlas and Dan Wilson respond to the
fears, anxieties, and needs of students at the very beginning of
their learning who have little or no education in their own countries.
Deirdre McLaughlin, Marti Tassi-Richardson, Loretta Pardi
and Estelle Williams raise questions about learners who come
to class with barriers and issues that prevent them from par-ticipating
in a traditional classroom setting as well as setting and achieving
their goals. These practitioners developed tools that assess particular
skill areas (i.e. GED content areas) but also in the process raise
the self esteem of their learners. It is assumed that by raising
the self esteem of the learners there will be an increase in motivation
for learners to continue their education and see the attainment
of their goals as a viable option.
With Lesly Desire and Henry Joseph we catch a glimpse
of the struggle they faced when trying to sort through the assessment
materials handed to them as part of The Partnership Project. In
their vision of alternative assessment they wonder if there is an
ending to this inquiry as Lesly states It (assessment)
is ever changing and never finished. We hope to get an
update on their findings in a future issue of Adventures.
Barbara Krol-Sinclair and Pauline OLeary work
on developing a tool that would encourage parents to plan and assess
their literacy activities with their children.
As a partnership, Carolyn Gear, co- coordinator of the project,
and Widi Sumaryano, mentee, discuss the impact this project
has had on Widis learners as well as on his growth as a teacher.
In another type of self reflection Caroline talks about the richness
of being a mentor and the key factors that make a mentoring relationship
work.
To give us an overview of the project and its goals Paul Trunnel,
co- coordinator, talks about the process and the why of the
Partnership Project. He also reflects on the process and its impact
on dissemination of alternative assessment in Massachusetts.
With Don Robishaws article we walk away from The Partnership
Project but not some of the ideas and questions that the group has
raised. Don takes the questions of self esteem and goal setting
a bit further by saying that some students need a unlearning process
before they can actively participate in these activities in a meaningful
way and become self-directed learners. He states that students may
not be ready for the participatory processes that require students
to define their goals and evaluate themselves towards attainment
of these goals. In his article he looks at an intervention program
that he has developed that addresses the question of self direction
and student preparation for goal setting and the participatory classroom.
In her response to Judy Hofer and Pat Larsons article (see
Responding to the Dream Conference, AIA, Spring 1994), Janet
Isserlis takes us on a questioning journey into literacy practices
and community development by forcing us to look at how our roles
as practitioners are defined in terms of community development.
In the process of asking us to think critically about our roles,
she describes the program she is working with in Vancouver and how
she is defining her role.
Kenneth Tamarkin and Susan Barnard in The Right
Answer look at open-ended questions as an alternative process
for the ADP math assessment. They propose that testing for critical
thinking skills in addition to computa-tional skills will give us
an understanding of the learners thought processes involved
in solving math problems. The article documents the process and
results of their research and examples of the questions themselves.
Debbie Tuler discusses the revision of an assessment tool
in a workplace education program in Newton, MA. The need for revising
an existing tool was a common concern between all stake-holders
(learners, managers, supervisors and teachers) that it was not giving
them the information needed to make informed decisions about attending
classes, informing teaching, and placing learners in the appropriate
classes. Debbie also talks about the process of revising the initial
assessment and the challenge of meeting the needs of all stakeholders.
In learning from experience, Elizabeth Santiago talks about
her experience as a GED recipient and raises the question of equivalency
and the stigma that goes along with the Alternative Diploma.
A poem about assessment is included in this volume from Diane
Pecarora in Minnesota. It is a first in Adventures in Assessment
and I hope it sets a precedent for those who would rather poetry,
not prose. We will continue to encourage alternative forms of expression
as long as it fits into the printed page.
Lenore Balliro reviews Dimensions of Change: An Authentic
Assessment Guidebook by Melody Schneider and Mallory Clarke
from Seattle, Washington. This guide book is the documentation of
a special assessment project entitled Integrated Assessment:
Being Accountable to Teachers and Students where the authors
worked with teachers and learners around assessment in Washington
State.
Adventures in Assessment has a new Editor: Alison Simmons
from SABES Central Resource Center at World Education. Alison has
a background in ESL and is a literacy specialist with SABES. Rick
Schwartz will continue to be the Assistant Editor for the journal.
For future Adventures in Assessment, we will maintain the
scope of the journal, which is practitioner based, and see how we
can include the voice of the learner in the dialogue. We will also
be publishing Adventures in Assessment once a year each Fall to
make way for a new journal through SABES on program and staff development.
We still encourage people to write for our various components of
getting started, on-going, looking back, what counts, letters from
the field, learning from experience and publications review. Although
Volume 8 will highlight some articles from the workplace, we encourage
people to respond to articles in this issue or share with us your
alternative/authentic practices.
Alison Simmons
This article was published in Adventures
in Assessment, Volume 7 (December 1994), SABES/World Education,
Boston, MA, Copyright 1994.
Funding support for the publication of this document
on the Web provided in part by the Ohio State Literacy Resource
Center as part of the LINCS
Assessment Special Collection.
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