Re-envisioning pre-service teachers’ beliefs and feelings about assessment: the important space of authentic assignments
Material type: TextSeries: European journal of teacher education ; 47v,2Publication details: United Kingdom:Taylor & Francis,2024Description: 246-266pSubject(s): Online resources:Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Article | Library and Documentation Division NCERT | Not for loan |
In early 2020, Initial Teacher Education providers were forced to reimagine many long-established practices due to pandemic restrictions. One post-primary concurrent Initial Teacher Education programme in the Republic of Ireland responded by conceptualising and developing an initiative to engage pre-service teachers in an authentic assessment task through the preparation of a classroom-based assessment from the perspective of the pupil. They then engaged in peer review and peer feedback on these classroom-based assessments and partook in a Subject Learning and Assessment Review meeting. This required the professional development of assessment literacies on the part of pre-service teachers, as well as disturbing their personal assessment beliefs at a cognitive and affective level. This paper finds that the collaborative assignment experience challenged pre-service teachers’ previous conceptions about the purposes of assessment while providing them with insight and preparation for formative assessment processes in use throughout Irish post-primary schools.
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