Home Assessment COVID Variants Forced Districts to Find New Ways to Assess Learning

COVID Variants Forced Districts to Find New Ways to Assess Learning

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At this point last year, we hoped we'd be on the other side of COVID-19 by now. Instead, the combination of COVID variants and back-to-school meant educators and administrators have found themselves in a continued state of flux. New cases are still happening and students and teachers are still quarantining. In some instances, there aren't always enough teachers in school buildings to conduct in-person learning.

As we enter the third school year affected by the pandemic, teachers are facing a whole new type of disruption to their ability to teach. Now more than ever they need to be able to continually assess learning, to have a line of sight into what students know, and what students do not yet know.

Why is it so hard right now?

It was challenging enough for teachers to figure out how to quickly transition all of their instruction to a remote environment, and to creatively assess how much students were learning and retaining. Teachers are now battling constant change, with classes or entire schools temporarily shuttering and then reopening. Pockets of students are coming in and out of the classroom due to quarantines, or sickness. Teachers or substitutes are often impacted in a similar fashion. The result is a perpetual disruption of instruction, impacting different students and educators at different moments continuously.

No surprise educators are overwhelmed

The past two years months have been the hardest for our education community in over a century. Before the pandemic, researchers estimated that one out of six American teachers was likely to leave the profession. That has now jumped to one in four according to the nonprofit RAND Corporation.

Educators who stayed for the 2021/22 school year, are entering it playing catch up. In a recent survey by Instructure, half of educators and parents felt students have significantly fallen behind due to COVID-19. The impact of Delta means that teachers suddenly find themselves trying to determine the academic impacts of the last school year, while simultaneously figuring how to keep students on track amid uncertainty and disruption.

Teachers need the right tools and skills for assessment

The pandemic reignited the debate around shifting away from high stakes testing to a more balanced assessment approach that’s part of the regular instructional cycle. In that same Instructure survey, only 29% of parents and teachers felt high-stakes testing was an important measurement of their learning. Whereas 76% of educators delivered formative assessments or assessments for learning, to check students’ understanding during remote learning.

We can't begin to address learning needs without taking the time to assess and understand what students know in a way that will provide teachers with immediate, actionable data so they can improve student outcomes in real-time. With access to meaningful assessment data, teachers can drive personalized learning plans, determine which students need additional support and which standards need reteaching.

Don’t overwhelm teachers and students with assessment

While it's critically important to understand the continuous academic impact of disruptions to teaching and learning, educators must approach assessment thoughtfully. We need to shift our mindset and embrace an actionable approach to formative assessment that's a seamless part of the regular instructional cycle.

At the same time, let’s not make teachers learn how to be psychometricians. District leaders should seek effective assessments that teachers can quickly use and benefit from, offering vetted item banks and reliable assessments in easy-to-use formats. That includes proper training and development to build the basic skill set required, with specific tactics for how to use assessment data to support hybrid learning if necessary.

We also don’t want to overwhelm students as they adjust to being back in the classroom. We know students are entering the school year with increased anxiety, and assessment is an added stress-point. Experts have established a link between stress caused by high-stakes standardized testing and students' performance on those tests, with economically disadvantaged students more negatively impacted.

We don’t know what the future will hold as the pandemic continues. However, one thing has become clear: our teachers need us to invest in a reliable way to continuously gauge student learning and progress, no matter where or how that instruction takes place.

 

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Trenton Goble serves as the VP of K12 Strategy for enton co-founded MasteryConnect after more than twenty years as a public school teacher and principal. With its acquisition by Instructure, the makers of Canvas. The Instructure Learning Management Platform supports more than 30 million educators and learners around the world. Goble is also a former school principal and author of the book ‘Reclaiming the Classroom: How America's Teachers Lost Control of Education and How They Can Get It Back'.

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