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different between ." Measurement, assessment, and evaluation
Measurement, assessment, and evaluation mean very different things, and yet most of my students were unable to adequately explain the differences. So, in keeping with the ADPRIMA approach to explaining things in as straightforward and meaningful a way as possible, here are what I think are useful descriptions of these three fundamental terms. These are personal opinions, but they have worked for me for many years. They have operational utility, and therefore may also be useful for your purposes.
Measurement refers to the process by which the attributes or dimensions of some physical object are determined. One exception seems to be in the use of the word measure in determining the IQ of a person. The phrase, "this test measures IQ" is commonly used. Measuring such things as attitudes or preferences also applies. However, when we measure, we generally use some standard instrument to determine how big, tall, heavy, voluminous, hot, cold, fast, or straight something actually is. Standard instruments refer to instruments such as rulers, scales, thermometers, pressure gauges, etc.
Measurement, assessment, and evaluation mean very different things, and yet most of my students were unable to adequately explain the differences. So, in keeping with the ADPRIMA approach to explaining things in as straightforward and meaningful a way as possible, here are what I think are useful descriptions of these three fundamental terms. These are personal opinions, but they have worked for me for many years. They have operational utility, and therefore may also be useful for your purposes.
Measurement refers to the process by which the attributes or dimensions of some physical object are determined. One exception seems to be in the use of the word measure in determining the IQ of a person. The phrase, "this test measures IQ" is commonly used. Measuring such things as attitudes or preferences also applies. However, when we measure, we generally use some standard instrument to determine how big, tall, heavy, voluminous, hot, cold, fast, or straight something actually is. Standard instruments refer to instruments such as rulers, scales, thermometers, pressure gauges, etc.
We
measure to obtain information about what is. Such information may or may not be
useful, depending on the accuracy of the instruments we use, and our skill at
using them. There are few such instruments in the social sciences that approach
the validity and reliability of say a 12" ruler.
We measure how big a classroom is in terms of
square feet, we measure the temperature of the room by using a thermometer, and
we use Ohm meters to determine the voltage, amperage, and resistance in a
circuit. In all of these examples, we are not assessing anything; we are simply
collecting information relative to some established rule or standard.
Assessment is therefore quite different from measurement, and has uses that
suggest very different purposes. When used in a learning objective, the
definition provided on the ADPRIMA for the behavioral verb measure is: To apply
a standard scale or measuring device to an object, series of objects, events,
or conditions, according to practices accepted by those who are skilled in the
use of the device or scale.
Assessment is a process by which information is obtained relative to some known objective or goal. Assessment is a broad term that includes testing. A test is a special form of assessment.
Assessment is a process by which information is obtained relative to some known objective or goal. Assessment is a broad term that includes testing. A test is a special form of assessment.
Tests are assessments made under contrived
circumstances especially so that they may be administered. In other words, all
tests are assessments, but not all assessments are tests. We test at the end of
a lesson or unit. We assess progress at the end of a school year through
testing, and we assess verbal and quantitative skills through such instruments
as the SAT and GRE. Whether implicit or explicit, assessment is most usefully
connected to some goal or objective for which the assessment is designed. A
test or assessment yields information relative to an objective or goal. In that
sense, we test or assess to determine whether or not an objective or goal has been
obtained. Assessment of skill attainment is rather straightforward. Either the
skill exists at some acceptable level or it doesn’t.
Skills are readily demonstrable. Assessment of
understanding is much more difficult and complex. Skills can be practiced;
understandings cannot. We can assess a person’s knowledge in a variety of ways,
but there is always a leap, an inference that we make about what a person does
in relation to what it signifies about what he knows. In the section on this
site on behavioral verbs, to assess means To stipulate the conditions by which
the behavior specified in an objective may be ascertained. Such stipulations
are usually in the form of written descriptions.
Evaluation is perhaps the most complex and least understood of the terms. Inherent in the idea of evaluation is "value." When we evaluate, what we are doing is engaging in some process that is designed to provide information that will help us make a judgment about a given situation. Generally, any evaluation process requires information about the situation in question. A situation is an umbrella term that takes into account such ideas as objectives, goals, standards, procedures, and so on.
Evaluation is perhaps the most complex and least understood of the terms. Inherent in the idea of evaluation is "value." When we evaluate, what we are doing is engaging in some process that is designed to provide information that will help us make a judgment about a given situation. Generally, any evaluation process requires information about the situation in question. A situation is an umbrella term that takes into account such ideas as objectives, goals, standards, procedures, and so on.
When
we evaluate, we are saying that the process will yield information regarding the
worthiness, appropriateness, goodness, validity, legality, etc., of something
for which a reliable measurement or assessment has been made. For example, I
often ask my students if they wanted to determine the temperature of the
classroom they would need to get a thermometer and take several readings at
different spots, and perhaps average the readings. That is simple measuring.
The average temperature tells us nothing about whether or not it is appropriate
for learning. In order to do that, students would have to be polled in some
reliable and valid way.
That
polling process is what evaluation is all about. A classroom average
temperature of 75 degrees is simply information. It is the context of the
temperature for a particular purpose that provides the criteria for evaluation.
A temperature of 75 degrees may not be very good for some students, while for
others, it is ideal for learning.
We evaluate every day. Teachers, in
particular, are constantly evaluating students, and such evaluations are
usually done in the context of comparisons between what was intended (learning,
progress, behavior) and what was obtained. When used in a learning objective,
the definition provided on the ADPRIMA site for the behavioral verb evaluate
is: To classify objects, situations, people, conditions, etc., according to
defined criteria of quality. Indication of quality must be given in the defined
criteria of each class category. Evaluation differs from general classification
only in this respect.
To sum up, we measure distance, we assess learning, and we evaluate results in terms of some set of criteria. These three terms are certainly connected, but it is useful to think of them as separate but connected ideas and processes.
Here is a great link that offer different ideas about these three terms, with well-written explanations. Unfortunately, most information on the Internet concerning this topic amounts to little more than advertisements for services.
To sum up, we measure distance, we assess learning, and we evaluate results in terms of some set of criteria. These three terms are certainly connected, but it is useful to think of them as separate but connected ideas and processes.
Here is a great link that offer different ideas about these three terms, with well-written explanations. Unfortunately, most information on the Internet concerning this topic amounts to little more than advertisements for services.
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