Puzzle piece representing assessment illuding to it is one part of the standards-based system support student achievement of academic standards.  DDESS Assessments

Assessments play a vital role in education by influencing the instructional decisions made by students, teachers, school and district administrators, and policy makers.  No one form of assessment can provide all the information needed for each type of user.  Therefore the DDESS assessment system focuses on maximizing student success by using a balance of:

Comparison of Assessments OF and FOR Learning

Each type of assessment has a valid role in education today.  The following table provides a brief comparison of the two assessment types.
  Assessment OF Learning Assessment FOR Learning
Time frame of assessment. Set point in time after instruction has occurred During instruction to guide the direction of instruction to meet student needs.
Reason(s) for assessment. Assign grades, evaluate students for special programs, compliance with 20 USC 92 4 and DoDEA Regulation 2000.6 (pdf), evaluate system-wide progress toward the goals of the DoDEA Community Strategic Plan. Promote increases in achievement to help students meet more standards; support ongoing student growth; increase the quality of student work and depth of knowledge.
Users of the information Policy makers, program planners, administrators, teachers, students, parents. Students, teachers, parents.
Examples Standardized tests, end of course exams, unit tests, finals Rubrics, teacher observation, student self-assessment, descriptive feedback to and from students

Use of Assessment Data

The effective use of assessments can check for as well as benefit student learning by giving teachers and parents the most accurate information possible on the performance of their student(s) so they can help them to succeed.

Assessments provide information necessary to help every student:

A Note About No Child Left Behind.

DoDEA schools are funded entirely by the U.S. Department of Defense. Therefore, the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) Act, while a valuable educational initiative, is not applicable to DoDEA schools.  The DoDEA CSP provides the strategic direction for all DoDEA schools. 

Although our schools are not bound to the NCLB law, we are committed to embracing the spirit of NCLB.  In fact there are many similarities between the pillars of NCLB and the goals of the DoDEA CSP.

Curriculum, assessment, instruction, and environment are the suporting parts in helping students meet the DoDEA academic standards.

Related Links

4 Keys to Success for ALL Students

  • Curriculum:  Specifies the program devised by DoDEA used to prepare students to meet content standards.
  • Instruction: Methods and strategies used to teach the curriculum.
  • Assessment:  Monitor student achievement and evaluate progress toward goals.  
  • Environment: The physical surroundings, allotted time, and climate in which instruction takes place.

More on Assessments (Non-DoDEA/DDESS Websites)

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