Products>Educational Assessment on Trial: Key Debates in Educational Policy

Educational Assessment on Trial: Key Debates in Educational Policy

Ebook

Ebooks are designed for reading and have few connections to your library.

$33.25

Overview

What purpose does educational assessment serve? Are the same instruments suitable for different purposes? How much trust can we place upon the outcomes of educational assessment?

The subject of educational assessment is much discussed and much misunderstood. Policymakers assert its importance to quality in education and its essential role in ensuring accountability for public education, and the results of educational assessment are thought to be of such vital interest to society that they are often made public knowledge.

This approachable text explores the philosophical issues underlying these debates and how they impact on public educational policy. Two leading educators well-known for their work on educational assessment offer different perspectives on the value of exams and tests for a flourishing system of education, while the editor, Gerard Lum, comments on the strengths and weaknesses of the arguments.

In an accessible introduction to the issues, two leading experts on educational assessment debate the value of exams and tests within education.

Addresses the fundamentals of a familiar and common debate, often ignored by policy makers and empirical researchers alike
Clear and hard hitting analytical approach, written with style and approachability
Applies analysis to important policy applications such as school tests and inspections

Notes on Contributors
Series Editor’s Preface
Introduction, Gerard Lum
Part I: Assessment and Accountability, Andrew Davis
Part II: The Nature and Purpose of Educational Assessment - A Response to Andrew Davis, Christopher Winch
Afterword: Can the Two Positions Be Reconciled?, Gerard Lum
Bibliography
Index

This book represents the philosophy of education at its best - it takes the practical issue of assessment and probes underlying matters, such as the transfer of learning and the nature of knowledge. The three contributors demonstrate great skill in presenting their arguments and I would recommend it to anyone who wants to understand the implications of educational assessment. The arguments are sustained right up to the last page and, with careful reading, will be of great benefit to anyone who takes the trouble to take this book seriously.

A lucid and enlightened debate engaging both sides of the assessment ’divide’. The arguments here serve to actually strengthen the thinking concerning this pressing educational issue – it is what good policy making, sound professional practice and our children need and surely deserve.

Andrew Davis is Honorary Research Fellow in the School of Education at Durham University, UK.

Christopher Winch is Professor of Educational Philosophy and Policy at King's College London, UK.

Gerard Lum is Lecturer in Philosophy and Education Management at King's College London, UK.

Reviews

0 ratings

Sign in with your Logos account

    $33.25