Pre-service Teachers’ Thinking about Student Assessment Issues
Abstract
Pre-service teachers are typically concerned with student assessment and view related issues
through varied experiences and backgrounds. Understanding how they think about assessment
issues within the current educational context helps to better prepare them. In this paper we
describe pre-service teachers’ thinking about assessment issues, the theories that underlie their
thinking, and how it evolves as a result of using an introspective critical approach called the
objective knowledge growth framework. The framework combines the diary and the think
aloud protocol and brings pre-service teachers to identify initial assessment problems, propose
tentative solutions, and challenge their solutions. Thirty-one pre-service teachers took part in
this study and received a one hour workshop on the use of the introspective approach to solve
their self-identified assessment issues. Brookhart’s ‘Tensions in Classroom Assessment
Theory and Practice’ framework was then used to explore the theories at play when pre-service
teachers go through their problem solving processes. The participants identified group work,
test failure, accommodation, fairness, multiple assessment opportunities, and academic
enablers as key areas of concern. Particularly notable in the study, was the greater importance
attached by the pre-service teachers to assessment for classroom management, student
motivation, and social justice purposes, than to support learning. The analysis of these
concerns using Brookhart’s framework and of the reasoning about them suggests that the
intersection of measurement, psychological, and social theories continues to impact the
decision making process regarding assessment.