Best education assessment books according to redditors

We found 32 Reddit comments discussing the best education assessment books. We ranked the 22 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top Reddit comments about Education Assessment:

u/magnafix · 20 pointsr/mildlyinteresting

Read 'The Smartest Kids in the World', which provides some stories and data about the countries whose kids earn the highest marks as a group -- Korea & Finland.

The stories about Korea are frankly horrifying -- MOST families pay for after-school tutoring for up to eight hours. Your entire life, your family name, dependent on your high school final test, which determines your education, which determines your career potential.

Finland is completely different, but has a similar result -- very well educated young people.

u/boner79 · 5 pointsr/programming

I'm convinced the Finnish know what they're doing having read Smartest Kids in the World

u/BinaryIdiot · 5 pointsr/technology

Edit3: Parent poster edit his post. Originally /u/TyCooper8 states that all links characters count against you until you post at which time it is shortened which is completely false. He has since updated his posted to correct his error then pointed out that I am wrong. This is hilarious. Leaving my original post below.

This is completely false. Go to www.twitter.com and try it.

Edit: Here, go to Twitter.com and paste the following URL in. It is 134 characters which, according to you, should only give you 6 characters left of text in the characters remaining countdown, right? http://www.amazon.com/This-Not-Test-Narrative-Education/dp/1608463702/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1463458455&sr=8-1&keywords=this+is+a+test

When you paste it, while it doesn't show the URL shortened, you still have 117 characters left because it's only counting the characters from the shortened URL, not the long URL as you purport.

Edit2: http://imgur.com/tHoxdRc

u/mimosastclair · 3 pointsr/AskAcademia

State testing is always a fun one - James Popham's The Truth About Testing explores how standardized testing has been misinterpreted by politicians and the media: https://www.amazon.com/Truth-About-Testing-Educators-Action/dp/0871205238

WMU did a study about KIPP schools (https://www.edweek.org/media/kippstudy.pdf) and here is KIPP's response to the findings: http://edreform.blogspot.com/2011/04/kipps-response-to-western-michigan.html which would be interesting to discuss.

u/unusualperusal · 3 pointsr/Teachers

I think there are many simple ways to deal with it, to varying degrees of impact. Just taking the median rather than the average will be a step up, since extremes at both ends don't have outsize effects on the data. Or consider the students last few grades only. You can average them for an easy fix, or think about trajectory--is the most recent grade reflective of increasingly high grades and thus potentially valid, or is the data more erratic?

You're right--if they can ace it with no effort, why are you penalizing them for knowing it? This is a consistent problem with gifted children--they don't care about the busy work they're given, and then get penalized for being knowledegable.

Honestly though, grades are generally a pretty broken system and in the US they get used very inappropriately such as giving a kid a 0% for not putting their name on it, or even for not doing it (think: how does no data about their math work tell you that they can't do math? It has nothing to do with actually achievement of learning, which is what grades are allegedly for, and everything to do with work habits, which don't really involve math understanding). Grades also don't encourage learning--they see the letter or percent and then ignore all feedback.

The better solution to grading is feedback, and [rubrics] (https://smile.amazon.com/Create-Rubrics-Formative-Assessment-Grading/dp/1416615075/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1537924177&sr=8-1&keywords=grading+with+rubrics) help with that. But there are less "drastic" [changes] (https://smile.amazon.com/Repair-Kit-Grading-Assessment-2007-05-11/dp/B01JXQ1HGC/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1537924255&sr=8-3&keywords=15+fixes+for+grading) that can be done as well.

u/freshwaterchacos · 3 pointsr/Teachers

I actually don't put much weight on different learning styles, but I loved the forms in this book- I've used them for about 5 years. I've personally worked with the authors and they produce big data driven results.

u/furiouscowbell · 2 pointsr/CSEducation

In my opinion, teaching is a profession that requires an understanding of Cognitive Science and Educational Theory before you step into a classroom. That being said, Teacher Education is often terrible so you aren't far behind.

I highly recommend that you read:

u/Thep0is0n · 2 pointsr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

Well I'm going into my first year of teaching and at the moment I'm on teacher practice. [This book] (http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/1441138412/ref=wl_it_dp_o_pC_nS_ttl?_encoding=UTF8&colid=10YEMQ9U9SS0E&coliid=I3N8QH7DNAGGMG) would help me SO MUCH.
Mike Mike Mike Mike Mike Mike
I hope your shift isn't too bad!

u/RhinestoneTaco · 2 pointsr/Journalism

> It also has a tinge of contempt for political reporters--which is fair sometimes.

I have a significant amount of contempt for institutionalized White House reporters, and really a lot of the folks covering national politics in DC. It's a broken system that values maintaining access more than relaying the truth to the audience. It values balance and a false sense of festishized "objectivity" over the weight of facts and evidence.

There's three books I can recommend for a deeper level of criticism. One is Robert McChesney's "Our Unfree Press" which has an entire chapter on the brokenness of White House-based political reporting. It's a little more challenging of a read, as it is coming at the journalistic process from a heavy cultural/critical approach.

The other two are the two books I use when I teach our News Literacy course, which is a course all about teaching journalism students and non-journalism students alike how to be the best, most responsible, most critical consumers of news they can be. One is McManus's "Detecting Bull," and the other is Kovach and Rosenstiel's "Blur: How to know what's true in the age of information overload."

The former is a little more fun of a read, but it's also from 2012, so a lot of the examples are getting aged out.

u/taronosaurus · 1 pointr/Teachers

Check out Hacking Assessment. That title along with a lot of other research I have been doing has convinced me that grades are an ineffective and dated way of measuring student success. It was a big eye-opener for me, and I have done the best I can to implement a grade-less framework in my own classroom. Has it been perfect this year? No. But I do believe that I am on to something wonderful.

u/studentsofhistory · 1 pointr/historyteachers

Congrats on getting hired!!! I'd recommend a mix of PD/teaching books and content. When you get bored of one switch to the other. Both are equally important (unless you feel stronger in one area than the other).

For PD, I'd recommend: Teach Like a Pirate, Blended, The Wild Card, and the classic Essential 55. Another one on grading is Fair Isn't Always Equal - this one really changed how I thought about grading in my classes.

As far as content, you have a couple ways to go - review an overview of history like Lies My Teacher Told Me, the classic People's History, or Teaching What Really Happened, or you can go with a really good book on a specific event or time period to make that unit really pop in the classroom. The Ron Chernow books on Hamilton, Washington, or Grant would be great (but long). I loved Undaunted Courage about Lewis & Clark and turned that into a really great lesson.

Have a great summer and best of luck next year!!

u/Snedeker · 1 pointr/puzzles

I looked up this book on Amazon, and the main complaint was that there were a lot of typos.

Maybe the puzzle isn't correct. If anyone has Kindle Unlimited, maybe they can check out the answer.

u/Dwaeji1 · 1 pointr/Teachers

Would you recommend Embedded Formative Assessment or the follow up Embedded Formative Assesment: Practical Techniques for the K-12 classroom?

https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/1941112293/ref=pd_aw_sim_14_1?ie=UTF8&psc=1&refRID=B94VD7VF7NTW2553JN94

u/altoid_trapezoid · 1 pointr/scibowl
u/bystandling · 1 pointr/Teachers

Did you ever take a class in measurement and evaluation? If you'd like a solid resource to refer back to, this has been a pretty decent book so far and covers a lot of the things the others are talking about. You could probably find an earlier version for a hell of a lot cheaper, but so far (in my class) it's been pretty useful and not a stupid fluff-text. It talks about the purpose and use of different types of questions, stuff to avoid, etc. It has a whole chapter on selected-response questions, and another on constructed-response questions, and focuses on how to make assessments both valid and reliable.

u/BluescreenOfDeath · 1 pointr/AskReddit

They can be good indicators, but they shouldn't be the metric upon which your graduation is based.



When my wife was studying to be a teacher, she read two books about standardized testing, and one of them posed a very interesting question:

Consider, for a moment, what would happen if 100% of the students in a given district passed a standardized test. Would the school board say "Damn, we have some good teachers!"?

Nope. They'd say that the tests are too easy. So from the word "Go!" the tests are designed so that some people will fail them.

The books she read were:

Making the Grades (http://www.amazon.com/Making-Grades-Misadventures-Standardized-Industry/dp/098170915X)

What Happened to Recess and Why Are Our Children Struggling in Kindergarten? (http://www.amazon.com/Happened-Recess-Children-Struggling-Kindergarten/dp/0071383263)

The first deals with standardized testing from the grader's perspective, and the second from the teachers perspective (which is where the above bit came from).

u/HurtAndVirtue · 1 pointr/todayilearned

Click new/used. http://www.amazon.com/gp/offer-listing/0807032670/ref=olp_tab_used?ie=UTF8&condition=used

I was referring to this first copy for 87 cents from a library There's 2 others for the same price and then 5 more for just over $2. The cheapest like new is $8, cheapest new is $10. Also available in digital I'm sure you could shop around or use a promo code somewhere and get it free.

$0.87.

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    Yankee Clipper Books

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u/donanobis · 1 pointr/Teachers

What book are you using to study? A professor at my school wrote this: http://www.amazon.com/Ready-Revised-RICA-Preparation-Californias/dp/0137008686

I found it really helpful. Our reading classes were structured around it and I passed the RICA no problem.

u/lskdjflsdk · 1 pointr/Teachers

STUDY THIS BOOK:
http://www.amazon.com/Ready-Revised-RICA-Preparation-Californias/dp/0137008686

Zarrillo.

SERIOUSLY.

Don't mess with quizlet- I found most of the questions/answers to be inaccurate.

Focus on case study examples.

u/TeacherQuestion10000 · 1 pointr/Teachers

The main reason I'm interested in the MS credential is to teach middle school core. I already have the book by Zarillo and I've used Teacherstestprep which has helped me in the past.

u/JohnnyCwtb · 0 pointsr/education

sigh I'm not going to post my works cited pages for you, but most of my information on this topic came from this book: http://www.amazon.com/Getting-Teacher-Evaluation-Right-Effectiveness/dp/0807754463

u/iprobablyneedahobby · 0 pointsr/canada
u/MayoMark · 0 pointsr/matheducation

Consider what you mean by "the effectiveness of a multiple choice test". The educator is collecting evidence to support a claim about the understanding and skills of the student. A multiple choice test where answers could be potentially plugged in to solve the problem does not fully support the claim that the student has mastered a method for solving the problem without being given potential solutions. Professional judgement is required for interpretation.


In the classroom, a student's reasoning and skills should be evaluated in a variety of ways. For example, constructed response questions that require the student to explain each step in solving an equation or a project that requires a student to use their mathematical skills in a real life context could be used. These types of assessments are also imperfect because there is a degree of interpretation when assigning a grade.


All assessments have error, they are never perfect measures of a trait or skill.


Can a multiple choice question be written that accounts for your concern, yet evaluates whether a student has mastered this particular topic? Yes, the test could ask to solve two equations, and then have the students select the sum of the two solutions. Plugging in the answers would not help them solve that compound problem. However, this question is not perfect either because we are now evaluating whether they know what the word 'sum' means. This question also requires the student to be correct twice in a row, which could increase assessment error.


However, that is okay because, as I said above, all assessments have error, they are never perfect measures of a trait or skill.


Another factor to consider is that familiarity with multiple choice questions can be beneficial because that is the format of many standardized tests. Doing well on standardized is clearly not the end goal of education, but it is a reality.


Source: I flipped around in my Classroom Assessment textbook before writing this post: http://www.amazon.com/Classroom-Assessment-Principles-Standards-Based-Instruction/dp/0133119424