Are students still learning during COVID-19? Formative assessment can provide the answer

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Estudiantes en un salón de clase en Armenia Estudiantes en un salón de clase en Armenia

As schools around the world have closed due to coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic (and many have extended closures for the remainder of the school year), students, teachers, and parents are settling into the "new reality" for the foreseeable future. Many schools are implementing their distance learning contingency plans (some of them put together recently), and connecting students and teachers through online platforms and tools. National and local governments are partnering with broadcasting service providers to deliver educational content via television and radio during dedicated hours. Under these unexpected circumstances, teachers and parents have had to quickly adapt to teaching in this new reality to ensure that students engage in learning.

What are the learning assessment challenges and priorities in the current context?

Assessment of student learning is "the process of gathering and evaluating information on what students know, understand, and can do in order to make an informed decision about the next steps in the educational process." (See What Matters Most for Student Assessment Systems: A Framework Paper). Learning assessment is a fundamental feedback mechanism in education, allowing all stakeholders of the learning process to understand what is being learned and where learning resources need to be focused. Assessment may take different modalities depending on its purpose. Along with high-stakes examinations and large-scale assessments, formative assessment is, under normal circumstances, carried out by teachers in the classroom as part of the teaching process and encompasses everything from teacher observation to continuous feedback to homework. Formative assessment is particularly relevant to understand the learning needs of each and every student and to adjust instruction accordingly. In addition, teachers usually implement summative assessments whereby specific educational content is reviewed to determine the extent to which students reached the expected learning goals and acquired critical knowledge and skills.

Prior to the COVID-19 crisis, all modalities of learning assessment had been strongly dependent on students' physical presence – either for administration or for observing the learners' daily progress. Current school closures necessitate development of alternative approaches to delivering the critical feedback function of learning assessment. While all types of assessment of student learning are important, the need for formative assessment right now is particularly critical because learning needs to take place outside of the physical classroom, and teachers and parents-turned-teachers need to understand whether students are absorbing the content that is delivered to them in formats that differ from business-as-usual.

How can formative assessment support learning in the context of school closures?

Formative assessment can be administered in synchronous and asynchronous forms. In the synchronous form, where the teacher and the student are working together at the same time (via online platforms like Zoom and Microsoft Teams), as well as directly by phone, teachers can provide feedback to students in real time. The United States has a history of combining TV instruction with synchronous phone-based connection between learners and teachers. In the 1990s, the Los Angeles Unified School District in California worked with the local TV channel to produce "Homework Hotline," an educational TV program that was paired with teachers connecting to students using a toll-free number.

In the asynchronous form, where students and teachers are separated by both space and time, online tools such as Google Classrooms and Moodle can help teachers to provide feedback to students through questions, tasks, activities, and quizzes. Various online applications such as Recap: Video Response and Reflection for Education, WURRLYedu, and Screencastify can be used to record performance tasks created by students and shared with teachers. Especially for younger students, parents also need specific guidance on how to communicate the results of formative assessment to teachers. These instructions should be made available in electronic and/or printed form and emailed or mailed to homes or made available for pickup from the school or other designated location.

Even in low-resource and low-connectivity contexts, formative assessment can happen during school closures. Teachers can provide feedback to students through mailed or emailed instructions and tasks. Messaging platforms (such as Messenger and WhatsApp) can also be used: companies are making available solutions that allow teachers to design, deliver, and track multiple-choice and short answer assessments through text messaging. In the United States, when Florida issued stay-at-home guidance, Miami-Dade County Public Schools moved the physical distance learning helpline center that had been created at the start of the school closures to a virtual format, with questions from students, teachers, parents, and administrators on learning content and technical issues being routed, via a software program, to the computers of content-area and information technology experts.

Direct phone calls between teachers, students, and parents can also be utilized even under lockdowns. "Homework hotlines" have been used in several states prior to COVID-19 to provide feedback to students and parents, and they have expanded in some locations during COVID-19 to support learning.  This has been done in Tennessee, where dedicated local phone numbers connect students and parents to certified teachers who provide support in many school subjects in English and in six other languages, in Kansas, and in Michigan, with the latter also providing mental counseling and emotional support as well as support for students with disabilities and/or special/diverse educational needs through a toll-free phone number. In addition, homework hotlines have been created to support students with print disabilities during COVID-19, as demonstrated by National Homework Hotline for Blind/Visually Impaired Students (NHH-BVI).

Irrespective of how formative assessment is communicated, it needs to be valid, timely, constructive, and specific to the learning needs of the child. The validity element is linked to the alignment of assessment content with the knowledge content the student should have acquired as part of the learning process. The timeliness aspect refers to the opportune use of the assessment to take quick action and provide remedial support if needed. The constructiveness element refers to the assessment's capacity to deliver feedback to the student and for the student to gain information that helps him or her identify misunderstandings, get guidance on how to improve, and understand the goals of the learning process. Finally, the specificity of formative assessment implies its ability to inform teachers and students about whether specific learning goals are being reached, and what is needed in case they are not there yet. Teachers and parents need to be empowered with resources and means to conduct formative assessment in line with these elements, even in low-resource environments.

Various resources can be used by teachers and parents to support formative assessment in the context of COVID-19, and companies are making their tools more available to a broad range of users during this time (however, in choosing any specific tool, it is important to check the contract terms and confirm that the its use is in line with all applicable laws and regulations). Some examples of applications for formative assessment use include DreamBox Math (which provides math instruction based on performance and enables teachers to create targeted activities using the AssignFocus option), Questbase (a free online tool to create quizzes compatible with most browsers and IOS), and Woot Math (a free application that automatically generates and assesses thousands of problems to meet each student's learning needs). In low-resource contexts, where connectivity and access to smart devices cannot be taken for granted, printed materials can be developed to support early reading skills for younger children, and to provide support for teachers and families.

Even though in many places it is currently not possible for teachers and students to come together in the same space, it is necessary for teaching and learning to continue to avoid learning losses and to stay on track in decreasing learning poverty. Formative assessment can help all students to continue along their learning trajectory, providing them, their parents, and their teachers with the necessary information to support the learning process, albeit from a distance.

 

Disclaimer: Resources in this article are provided for informational purposes only. The World Bank does not endorse any of the tools, companies, or applications mentioned in the article.

 

 

 

 


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Celestin Monga
Shanta: Good to see that there is interest in revisiting industrial policy, and in the spirit of debate, I hope you as well as your faithful blog readers will check out my rejoinder post on 'Let's Talk Development' Link-https://blogs.worldbank.org/developmenttalk/growth-identification-and-facilitation-let-the-debate-begin

Shanta: Good to see that there is interest in revisiting industrial policy, and in the spirit of debate, I hope you as well as your faithful blog readers will check out my rejoinder post on 'Let's Talk Development' Link-https://blogs.worldbank.org/developmenttalk/growth-identification-and-facilitation-let-the-debate-begin

olugbenga adesanya
The Lin-Monga proposal is apt and a step in the right direction. African nations need more of ideas than grants and loans that adds to the debt burden due to highly undefined policies and self serving project management styles. Can i have access to the full study?

The Lin-Monga proposal is apt and a step in the right direction. African nations need more of ideas than grants and loans that adds to the debt burden due to highly undefined policies and self serving project management styles. Can i have access to the full study?

Shanta
You can access the full study by clicking on Justin's name in the original blog post. It will take you to the working paper.

You can access the full study by clicking on Justin's name in the original blog post. It will take you to the working paper.

Bernhard
Dear Shanta. I am writing this and at the same time not having a lot of hope to be fully understood (Out of experience in talking to people and decision makers). Closely watching the state of the earth as a whole, especially the amount of available resources left, here again especially fossil fuels left, one must be shaken by the insights. Insights, a lot of leaders of this world seem to deny out of, to me, unknown reasons. Some call it "denial of reality". As the end of cheap oil in sight and already experiencing, everything is going to change. Steps taken "early" could mitigate the consequences for at least some countries and areas in favourable climate. These steps in favourable climate can only mean to bring people, given the opportunities, back to producing food without involving fossil fuels. As for Africa, there might be solutions left, and there are indeed a lot of people and organizations recommending this. On the other hand, the actual opposite is evolving, as countries are giving away their fertile land to heavy industrialized agricultural industries of foreign countries and companies. (E.g. http://www.farmlandgrab.org/ ) To give, at least a chance, to mankind in some areas with favourable climate of the earth, only agriculture on a sustainable level, means close to markets, not involving fossil fuels not even fossil produced fertilizer, bringing the waste back to the land to keep the land fertile, involving man labour and at the maximum draught animals, can help and mitigate. I know this letter might look like the writing of just another alarmist. But I have been an optimistic person, watching closely for decades and hoping for good solutions for mankind. It turns out very different from my hopes. The ones who want to see and put the bits and pieces evolving into a picture, can easily be quite speechless, at least at first. I do hope to receive an answer in one or the other way. As I see you are in such a responsible position, maybe some people can make a change to at least some people of the world. Kind regards, Bernhard

Dear Shanta. I am writing this and at the same time not having a lot of hope to be fully understood (Out of experience in talking to people and decision makers). Closely watching the state of the earth as a whole, especially the amount of available resources left, here again especially fossil fuels left, one must be shaken by the insights. Insights, a lot of leaders of this world seem to deny out...

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olugbenga adesanya
Thank you Shanta.

Thank you Shanta.

olugbenga adesanya
The 35 page document is not in English. Kindly avail me with an English version.

The 35 page document is not in English. Kindly avail me with an English version.

Mapi
Shanta, Justin Lin has responded to your blog post here: https://blogs.worldbank.org/developmenttalk/choosing-countries-as-models-for-industrial-growth

Shanta, Justin Lin has responded to your blog post here: https://blogs.worldbank.org/developmenttalk/choosing-countries-as-models-for-industrial-growth

olugbenga adesanya
Africa should grow at double digits to avoid not being left behind. Let us concentrate on food security, industrialization and poverty eradication rather than exploitative tendencies of multinationals. Even the template of the southern economic engines grew via this pathway.

Africa should grow at double digits to avoid not being left behind. Let us concentrate on food security, industrialization and poverty eradication rather than exploitative tendencies of multinationals. Even the template of the southern economic engines grew via this pathway.

Shanta Devarajan
My apologies. Here is the URL for the English version: http://go.worldbank.org/POZV61JT30

My apologies. Here is the URL for the English version: http://go.worldbank.org/POZV61JT30

olugbenga adesanya
Thanks for the English version. Why did Lin recommend local industry protection? It could be counterproductive in my view.

Thanks for the English version. Why did Lin recommend local industry protection? It could be counterproductive in my view.