A century ago, philosopher John Dewey advocated for an education system which would do more than teaching the basic core academic subjects. In the past two decades, several
Similar to many states across the country, the North Carolina State Board of Education has set forth goals outlining the school’s role to ensure 21st century skills are included in productive learning environments. Specifically, the SBE states:
NC Public Schools Will Be Led By 21st Century Professionals
ü Every teacher and administrator will use a 21st Century assessment system to inform instruction and measure 21st Century knowledge, skills, performance and dispositions.
NC Public Schools Will Produce Globally Competitive Students
ü Every student’s achievement is measured with an assessment system that informs instruction and evaluates knowledge, skills, performance and dispositions needed
in the 21st Century.
The problem, however, is the assessment system currently being used by the state measures only whether students’ possess a specific piece of knowledge. It does not measure whether students can analyze the information, evaluates its use, or create new knowledge from it (Silva, 2008).
Students today are becoming increasingly more technologically proficient outside of the classroom. As a result, schools are beginning to integrate technology both inside and outside of the classroom to capitalize on 21st century skill implementation opportunities. Some states are beginning to use technology to adapt to student evaluation (Tucker, 2009). Unfortunately, it seems as if
Tucker argues that technology has the potential to do more than just make the current testing approach more efficient. There are several new research projects to demonstrate how information technology can assess new skills and concepts more comprehensively (Tucker, 2009). These assessments use multiple forms of media that allow students to use visual and graphic representations for educators to examine students’ ability to solve problems. This, in turn, helps teachers to better understand a student’s cognitive ability and design instruction needed for that student to move forward (Tucker, 2009). Rationales, examples and detailed explanations of these models and other models can be found by visiting:
http://www.slideshare.net/teachandlearn/assessment-in-the-21stcentury-classroom-presentation
http://www.educationsector.org/research/research_show.htm?doc_id=716323
http://www.p21.org/documents/Assessment092806.pdf
Classroom teachers can employ assessments of 21st century skills by veering away from the traditional pencil paper recall of information assessments and utilizing more performance based assessments. These types of assessments use the work of researchers such as Marzano,
http://www.edutopia.org/reinvent-assessment-21st-century
http://www.classroom20.com/forum/topics/21st-century-skills-assessment
Teachers who have access to various types of technologies may find those to be beneficial assessment tools. The following links may be of use:
http://school.discoveryeducation.com/schrockguide/edtools.html
http://web20guru.wikispaces.com/Web+2.0+Resources
Resources:
Silva, E. (2008). Measuring skills for the 21st century. Retrieved from
http://www.educationsector.org/research/research_show.htm?doc_id=716323
Tucker, B. (2009). Beyond the bubble: Technology and the future of student assessment.
Retrieved from http://www.educationsector.org/research/research_show.htm?doc_id=716323
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