The potential of the effective use of formative assessment strategies to improve student outcomes has been well established (Black et al., 2004; Black & Wiliam, 1998) along with the characteristics and principles of effective assessment to support learning (Group, 1999). By informing teachers and students about learning progress, assessment can be used to enable students to regulate their learning and teachers to respond to the learning needs of their students. Assessment can support students to become independent learners able to draw on their learning skills beyond the confines of formal education (Boud, 2000).
Despite acknowledgement of the importance of assessment to support learning in educational policies internationally, uptake of alternative assessment at the classroom level remains limited. In this Roundtable we will explore some of the challenges to implementation of alternative assessment strategies that are particular to the secondary mathematics classroom.
Timeline:
5 minutes: Introduction, background and the study
7 minutes: Discussion: What challenges do mathematics teachers face when choosing assessment strategies?
7 minutes: Discussion: What factors drive mathematics teachers’ focus on tests?
7 minutes: Discussion: What are mathematics teachers’ experiences of peer and self-assessment and what are their beliefs about the potential of peer and self-assessment to improve learning?
7 minutes: Discussion: Are there subject specific nuances that make some forms of assessment more or less valuable in mathematics classrooms?
5 Minutes: Wrap up and further questions from participants.