December 9, 2021
Students embark on learning experiences with wide variation in their knowledge, skills and opportunities to learn and lived experiences. Good teachers acknowledge and celebrate this diversity — they know that the learning process is not one size fits all and strive for individualized, personalized instruction that meets students where they are and helps them move forward. While assessments often occur at the end point of the learning process, typical standardized assessments are not sensitive to this wide range of individual variation, nor to the contexts in which learning takes place. Just as for learning, this one-size-fits-all approach has clear limitations for assessment.
What if there was a more personalized digital assessment, that took such contextual and student-level differences into account and that posed an appropriate level of challenge, yielding tasks that are both more engaging to students and valid to support other uses of the data they provide (e.g., to inform instruction, to provide feedback, to offer just-in-time hints and so on)?
This is the vision we have for “caring” assessments — assessments that consider aspects of the student not taken into account with current standardized assessments. These aspects include knowledge, skills and other relevant cognitive, metacognitive and social-emotional characteristics (sometimes referred to as noncognitive attributes), and aspects of the learning context, to create assessment environments that offer appropriate conditions for students to demonstrate what they know and can do.