Implementation of formative assessment practices in Maldivian primary classrooms
The assessment landscape in Maldivian schools is currently undergoing change. The new draft Maldivian National Curriculum (Education Development Centre, 2012a) and associated documents, aim to realign assessment, instruction and curriculum in schools to better optimise learning condi...
Main Authors: | , |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Universiti Pendidikan Sultan Idris
2015-12-01
|
Series: | Journal of Research, Policy & Practice of Teachers & Teacher Education |
Online Access: | https://ejournal.upsi.edu.my/index.php/JRPPTTE/article/view/200/145 |
id |
doaj-8de3ba8fdb2c41e6b26e617d01e21e38 |
---|---|
record_format |
Article |
spelling |
doaj-8de3ba8fdb2c41e6b26e617d01e21e382021-07-11T03:40:03ZengUniversiti Pendidikan Sultan IdrisJournal of Research, Policy & Practice of Teachers & Teacher Education2232-04582550-17712015-12-0152519Implementation of formative assessment practices in Maldivian primary classroomsMurray FastierNiuma MohamedThe assessment landscape in Maldivian schools is currently undergoing change. The new draft Maldivian National Curriculum (Education Development Centre, 2012a) and associated documents, aim to realign assessment, instruction and curriculum in schools to better optimise learning conditions. In terms of assessment a key future focus involves promoting the use of formative assessment in classroom practice. For Maldivian teachers who have traditionally placed emphasis on summative assessment, the transition towards developing a more balanced assessment approach is expected to be challenging. The issues this paper addresses are twofold. The first is to discover how Maldivian primary teachers are currently interpreting formative assessment and putting it into classroom practice. The second is to determine how these practices might act as indicators for identifying future teacher professional development needs. The intent is to provide insight into the complexity of implementing formative assessment at the primary school level within the education system of a developing nation. This paper compliments another focused on children‟s experiences of formative assessment in Maldivian classrooms (Mohamed, N., & Fastier, M. (2013).https://ejournal.upsi.edu.my/index.php/JRPPTTE/article/view/200/145 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Murray Fastier Niuma Mohamed |
spellingShingle |
Murray Fastier Niuma Mohamed Implementation of formative assessment practices in Maldivian primary classrooms Journal of Research, Policy & Practice of Teachers & Teacher Education |
author_facet |
Murray Fastier Niuma Mohamed |
author_sort |
Murray Fastier |
title |
Implementation of formative assessment practices in Maldivian primary classrooms |
title_short |
Implementation of formative assessment practices in Maldivian primary classrooms |
title_full |
Implementation of formative assessment practices in Maldivian primary classrooms |
title_fullStr |
Implementation of formative assessment practices in Maldivian primary classrooms |
title_full_unstemmed |
Implementation of formative assessment practices in Maldivian primary classrooms |
title_sort |
implementation of formative assessment practices in maldivian primary classrooms |
publisher |
Universiti Pendidikan Sultan Idris |
series |
Journal of Research, Policy & Practice of Teachers & Teacher Education |
issn |
2232-0458 2550-1771 |
publishDate |
2015-12-01 |
description |
The assessment landscape in Maldivian schools is currently undergoing change. The new draft Maldivian National Curriculum (Education Development Centre, 2012a) and associated documents, aim to realign assessment, instruction and curriculum in schools to better optimise learning conditions. In terms of assessment a key future focus involves promoting the use of formative assessment in classroom practice. For Maldivian teachers who have traditionally placed emphasis on summative assessment, the transition towards developing a more balanced assessment approach is expected to be challenging. The issues this paper addresses are twofold. The first is to discover how Maldivian primary teachers are currently interpreting formative assessment and putting it into classroom practice. The second is to determine how these practices might act as indicators for identifying future teacher professional development needs. The intent is to provide insight into the complexity of implementing formative assessment at the primary school level within the education system of a developing nation. This paper compliments another focused on children‟s experiences of formative assessment in Maldivian classrooms (Mohamed, N., & Fastier, M. (2013). |
url |
https://ejournal.upsi.edu.my/index.php/JRPPTTE/article/view/200/145 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT murrayfastier implementationofformativeassessmentpracticesinmaldivianprimaryclassrooms AT niumamohamed implementationofformativeassessmentpracticesinmaldivianprimaryclassrooms |
_version_ |
1721309614968930304 |