About writing your own assessment tools

In this course, you'll learn how to write three simple kinds of assessment tools: Tasks, Observation checklists, and Interview questionnaires.

What are assessment tools?

Assessment tools are simply ways of asking students to produce specific evidence in concrete situations that can be used for assessment. They include:
  •   Instructions to the student on what to do.
  •   Instructions to the assessor on what to do, if it is not obvious in the instructions to the student, and,
  •   A form to record the assessment.

When might you need to write your own?

In some unusual cases, you might be unable to use the existing assessment tools. For example, a written journal was not very helpful for a group of deaf students, so local staff devised a system of interviews that worked much better and still addressed all the same competencies.

 

Other different kinds of simple assessment tools include:

 

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What are assessment modes?

Assessment modes are ways of gathering evidence of the student's skills. Exams aren't the only way, and sometimes they're totally inappropriate.

In most cases, you can call them "assessment tasks," that is, tasks that students will do to be assessed on.

The assessment mode is sometimes decided and written down beforehand; this often happens if the assessment mode is integral to the skill. Here are two examples:

In many cases, all you will be given is the standards and criteria. You must take responsibility to choose a suitable assessment mode when you plan the assessment. By being more creative, you might be able to make your assessments much more valid, and you may be able to give the student a choice of assessment modes.

Remember:

The skill to be learned must match

The way it is taught,

The way it is practiced,

and

The way it is assessed

 

Some kinds of assessment modes

To assess a skill of any kind, the assessor normally needs to define a kind of activity. The kind of activity is called a mode of assessment. There are many, many different kinds:

 

Hints and recommendations

  1. We strongly recommend tools that can be re-used without change. (Consider the traditional alternative; many lecturers need to write completely new examination questions every time they assess students.) You will easily be able to write reusable tools if you:
  2.  
  3. If the task is an ongoing responsibility with no beginning and end, you can specify a long enough period of time for workplace assessment.
  4.  
  5. If the task has a start and end, you can specify how many times the student must perform the task:  
  6. Check that tools are clear enough for the student and assessor to know what they are expected to do.
  7.  
  8. Use simple workplace language, not TrainingSpeak or bureaurcratic gobbledygook.
  9.  
  10. Lay them out on the page so that they are easy to read.
  11.  
  12. Check that tools match the competency standards.
  13.  
  14. For interviews, tell assessors:

When students have extreme stress.

Click here to see how to transform units into assessment tools.

Click here for ideas on assessing required knowledge. (Link opens new window.)

Tip 1Use workplace forms as assessment tools. | Tip 2When your assessment tools are designed for a specific context, you might find that you need another set to assess students in another different context. | Tip 3When your assessment tools are designed for a specific context, they often don't work for RPL students coming from very different contexts. Big hint: Go back to the original training package units.

Tip 4Integrate a cluster of units into a meaningful project. Students learn better and find the whole process more satisfying. | Tip 5Practitioners often don’t like unnecessary writing and generally do better in oral interviews. Besides, if they don’t get a point the first time, you can talk them round in a circle and let them have another go. Some very capable people don’t always get it right the first time around. | Tip 6You can use discussion groups for assessments, as long as the group is small enough for you to observe what each student says.

 

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Tasks

A task tells students to do something. It should contain enough instructions for students to know exactly what you expect of them, and should be the natural thing to do when performing the skill. For example, if the skill is to replace a flat tyre, the task should be to replace a flat tyre.

Tasks can cover performance criteria in three ways:

  1. The task instructions can contain the assessment criteria, so that students who do the whole task well according to the instructions can be assessed as performing satisfactorily.
  2. In other cases, the textbook explains the details of what is required. The assessment tools at the end of this book take this approach.
  3. You can list the requirements on the same page.

 

The advantages

First, you can easily ask for more than one kind of evidence. For example, you can:

Second, the instructions to the student also tell the instructor what is required, so you don’t usually need to write a separate set of instructions to the assessor.

Third, if the task (or a series of tasks) collects all required evidence for a unit, you can record "Competent" or "Not yet competent" for that unit. (If you collect only some evidence for a unit, you can record "Satisfactory" or "Unsatisfactory" for the task.)

Fourth, reporting is easy because most of the documentation is already done in the task description. You can use a fairly standard form to report the assessment. Besides, it can be quite brief, so it’s easy to report multiple units on one form. The form should contain at least:

 

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Observation checklists

Many assessors use use a checklist to check off all essential aspects based on their observations. See this example.

An observation checklist is a form that contains at least:

Many checklists only ask for one kind of evidence, so they are often inadequate to gather all evidence for a unit. However, you can add instructions about seeing relevant paperwork and asking questions.

Tip 1As much as possible, try to get the whole form on onto one piece of paper. | Tip 2Add more columns if you have to do make multiple observations. This is better than using more forms. | Tip 3 You can sometimes copy performance criteria from the units into your form, but they normally need to be edited into plain language.

 

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Interview questionnaire

An interview questionnaire is quite similar to an observation checklist. An interview questionnaire is a form that contains at least:

Sometimes it is also good to have a list of model answers, but you can only do so if all students must give the same answers. Besides, you will find that some students will give excellent answers that aren't what you expected.

The simplest way to write an interview questionnaire is to go though the list of requirements and turn them into questions. The trick is to make them clear and concrete, not "Explain everything in the universe." You can split up complicated questions into simple questions, ask people to explain the steps, or ask them how they would do or respond to something.

Tip 1When you plan a qualification, start by writing a job description of what you want your graduates to be able to do. It will make the course look much more practical to your students. | Tip 2When you write a set of questions to test required knowledge, offer it as either an interview or an assignment. | Tip 3When the list of knowledge items is quite detailed, you can replace one item with one question. But when a knowledge item only specifies a broad area of knowledge, you will normally need a series of questions to cover it. | Tip 4Knowledge is sometimes adequately demonstrated by doing the assessment task.

 

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Simple mapping

The idea of mapping is to show how your assessment tools address the requirements of the unit.

There are several simple ways to do mapping:

 

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Trial your assessment tools

You cannot anticipate all the interpretations of your assessment tools that assessors and students might make. Trial your draft assessment tools to check that the content is right and they suit your group of students. Record outcomes and make any necessary corrections and improvements.

1. Decide how you will trial your assessment tools. You can simply get a colleague to check your assessment tools, such as another staff member or an industry person. You might need to trial the assessment tools with a sample group of people similar to your students to know how well they work.

2. Analyse feedback. In the feedback, people might say:

3. Fix anything wrong before use. If you have to make significant changes, then you should test it again.

4. File them properly. When you've finished, file a copy and make backups of the soft copies.

Tip 1Align your assessment goals with the business goals of the student’s employer. Everybody wins. | Tip 2I like to write each unit’s set of assessments to be a standalone statement. | Tip 3You can sometimes write an assessment activity that is equally relevant to multiple units. So students only have to do it once.

 

Luke, Amanda, Simon and Kate

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