Claire Wyatt-Smith, Lenore Adie, Michele Haynes
Professionalizing Teacher Education
Performance Assessment, Standards, Moderation, and Evidence
Claire Wyatt-Smith, Lenore Adie, Michele Haynes
Professionalizing Teacher Education
Performance Assessment, Standards, Moderation, and Evidence
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This book provides a significant contribution to conversations about teacher quality and graduate readiness for teaching. It presents empirical insights into how a multidisciplinary team of researchers, teacher educators and policy personnel mobilized for collective change in a standards-driven reform initiative.
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This book provides a significant contribution to conversations about teacher quality and graduate readiness for teaching. It presents empirical insights into how a multidisciplinary team of researchers, teacher educators and policy personnel mobilized for collective change in a standards-driven reform initiative.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: CRC Press
- Seitenzahl: 254
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Juni 2022
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 390g
- ISBN-13: 9780367332129
- ISBN-10: 0367332124
- Artikelnr.: 63222499
- Verlag: CRC Press
- Seitenzahl: 254
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Juni 2022
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 390g
- ISBN-13: 9780367332129
- ISBN-10: 0367332124
- Artikelnr.: 63222499
Claire Wyatt-Smith (Ph.D.) is Professor of Educational Assessment and Measurement and the Director of the Institute for Learning Sciences and Teacher Education, Australian Catholic University. Her research focusses on standards, moderation, professional judgment, and the implications of digital disruption for teacher professionalism. Current research includes a large-scale Australian study working with a national Collective of universities on the design and implementation of the Graduate Teacher Performance Assessment (GTPA). She has held leadership roles in universities and schools in Australia and advisory roles internationally. She currently leads a longitudinal quantitative analysis of the quality and impact of initial teacher education. She has undertaken many large-scale studies with Australian Research Council and other research consultancy funds. Her latest books with colleagues are Digital Disruption in Teaching and Testing: Assessments, Big Data and the Transformation of Schooling (2021, Routledge) and Teaching Performance Assessments as a Cultural Disruptor in Initial Teacher Education: Standards, Evidence and ollaboration (2021, Springer). Lenore Adie (Ph.D.) is Associate Professor of Teacher Education and Assessment, and Senior Research Fellow at the Institute for Learning Sciences and Teacher Education, Australian Catholic University. Her research focuses on assessment and moderation processes as these contribute to quality assurance and improvement purposes. Her research has generated new knowledge in the field of assessment, focusing on quality in assessment practices and processes, in particular, within systems of standards-referenced assessment. She currently leads an Australian Research Council project investigating the use of scaled annotated exemplars of achievement standards in online moderation to improve teacher assessment capability. She has extensive professional experience working in schools as a teacher and in leadership positions, and in teacher education for over 30 years. Michele Haynes (Ph.D.) is Professor of Data Analytics for Education Research at the Institute for Learning Sciences and Teacher Education, Australian Catholic University. She is an accredited statistician in Australia with extensive experience as a statistical methodologist and innovator using longitudinal data for education research. Michele has expertise in the estimation of complex models for social applications using data from multiple sources, including panel surveys and administrative data. Chantelle Day (Ph.D.) is Research Partnerships Manager at the Institute for Learning Sciences and Teacher Education, Australian Catholic University. A significant priority within her portfolio includes management of the Institute¿s largest, longitudinal research project titled the Graduate Teacher Performance Assessment: Standards and Moderation Project. Chantelle has experience in managing and supporting research projects involving various stakeholders and has worked at the Institute since the completion of her doctoral studies in 2017. Chantelle¿s research expertise extends to the fields of equity and inclusion in higher education, teacher education, and assessment.
Part 1. Conceptualization, Design and Implementation 1. Standards,
large-scale evidence, professional judgment, and the affordances of digital
technologies in teacher education 2. The move to assessing competence in
professions 3. Three essential features in a new conceptualization of
complex performance assessments: Authenticity, system and site validity,
and intelligent accountability 4. How do we know that teacher graduates are
ready for professional practice? Designing an assessment for evidence of
readiness 5. Teaching Performance Assessments and Considerations of
Fairness (Joy Cumming and Diana Pullin) Part 2. Data Analytics, Systems
Thinking and Digital Architecture 6. Validation, reliability and standard
setting in the GTPA: A focus on methodologies and judgment 7. The design
features of cross-institutional moderation for demonstrating comparability:
Building a nationally sustainable model 8. Why teacher education needs a
feedback loop: Connecting standards and evidence to inform program planning
and renewal 9. Changing culture in Initial Teacher Education: How shall we
know quality and impact? 10. Teaching performance assessments and
considerations of potential legal challenges (Diana Pullin and Joy Cumming
) 11. Our journey of discovery: Looking back, looking sideways, and looking
forwards
large-scale evidence, professional judgment, and the affordances of digital
technologies in teacher education 2. The move to assessing competence in
professions 3. Three essential features in a new conceptualization of
complex performance assessments: Authenticity, system and site validity,
and intelligent accountability 4. How do we know that teacher graduates are
ready for professional practice? Designing an assessment for evidence of
readiness 5. Teaching Performance Assessments and Considerations of
Fairness (Joy Cumming and Diana Pullin) Part 2. Data Analytics, Systems
Thinking and Digital Architecture 6. Validation, reliability and standard
setting in the GTPA: A focus on methodologies and judgment 7. The design
features of cross-institutional moderation for demonstrating comparability:
Building a nationally sustainable model 8. Why teacher education needs a
feedback loop: Connecting standards and evidence to inform program planning
and renewal 9. Changing culture in Initial Teacher Education: How shall we
know quality and impact? 10. Teaching performance assessments and
considerations of potential legal challenges (Diana Pullin and Joy Cumming
) 11. Our journey of discovery: Looking back, looking sideways, and looking
forwards
Part 1. Conceptualization, Design and Implementation 1. Standards,
large-scale evidence, professional judgment, and the affordances of digital
technologies in teacher education 2. The move to assessing competence in
professions 3. Three essential features in a new conceptualization of
complex performance assessments: Authenticity, system and site validity,
and intelligent accountability 4. How do we know that teacher graduates are
ready for professional practice? Designing an assessment for evidence of
readiness 5. Teaching Performance Assessments and Considerations of
Fairness (Joy Cumming and Diana Pullin) Part 2. Data Analytics, Systems
Thinking and Digital Architecture 6. Validation, reliability and standard
setting in the GTPA: A focus on methodologies and judgment 7. The design
features of cross-institutional moderation for demonstrating comparability:
Building a nationally sustainable model 8. Why teacher education needs a
feedback loop: Connecting standards and evidence to inform program planning
and renewal 9. Changing culture in Initial Teacher Education: How shall we
know quality and impact? 10. Teaching performance assessments and
considerations of potential legal challenges (Diana Pullin and Joy Cumming
) 11. Our journey of discovery: Looking back, looking sideways, and looking
forwards
large-scale evidence, professional judgment, and the affordances of digital
technologies in teacher education 2. The move to assessing competence in
professions 3. Three essential features in a new conceptualization of
complex performance assessments: Authenticity, system and site validity,
and intelligent accountability 4. How do we know that teacher graduates are
ready for professional practice? Designing an assessment for evidence of
readiness 5. Teaching Performance Assessments and Considerations of
Fairness (Joy Cumming and Diana Pullin) Part 2. Data Analytics, Systems
Thinking and Digital Architecture 6. Validation, reliability and standard
setting in the GTPA: A focus on methodologies and judgment 7. The design
features of cross-institutional moderation for demonstrating comparability:
Building a nationally sustainable model 8. Why teacher education needs a
feedback loop: Connecting standards and evidence to inform program planning
and renewal 9. Changing culture in Initial Teacher Education: How shall we
know quality and impact? 10. Teaching performance assessments and
considerations of potential legal challenges (Diana Pullin and Joy Cumming
) 11. Our journey of discovery: Looking back, looking sideways, and looking
forwards