French novelist Marcel Proust instructs us that, "a voyage of discovery
consists, not of seeking new landscapes, but of seeing through new
eyes." Nowhere in the practice of education do we need to see through
new eyes than in the domain of assessment. We have been trapped by our
collective experiences to see a limited array of things to be assessed,
a very few ways of assessing them, limited strategies for communicating
results and inflexible roles of players in the assessment drama. This
edited book of readings jolts us out of traditional habits of mind about
assessment. An international team of innovative thinkers relies on the
best current research on learning and cognition, to describe how to use
assessment to promote, not merely check for, student learning. In
effect, they explore a new vision of assessment for the new millennium.
The authors address the rapidly expanding array of achievement targets
students must hit, the increasingly productive variety of assessment
methods available to educators, innovative ways of collecting and
communicating evidence of learning, and a fundamental redefinition of
both students' and teachers' roles in the assessment process.