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Teachers developing assessment for learning: impact on student achievement 

Authors: Dylan Wiliam a;  Clare Lee b;  Christine Harrison c; Paul Black c
Affiliations:   a Educational Testing Service, NJ, USA
b Warwickshire County Council, UK
c King's College, London, UK
DOI: 10.1080/0969594042000208994
Publication Frequency: 3 issues per year
Published in: journal Assessment in Education: Principles, Policy & Practice, Volume 11, Issue 1 March 2004 , pages 49 - 65
Subject: Assessment;
Number of References: 21
Formats available: HTML (English) : PDF (English)
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Abstract

While it is generally acknowledged that increased use of formative assessment (or assessment for learning) leads to higher quality learning, it is often claimed that the pressure in schools to improve the results achieved by students in externally-set tests and examinations precludes its use. This paper reports on the achievement of secondary school students who worked in classrooms where teachers made time to develop formative assessment strategies. A total of 24 teachers (2 science and 2 mathematics teachers, in each of six schools in two LEAs) were supported over a six-month period in exploring and planning their approach to formative assessment, and then, beginning in September 1999, the teachers put these plans into action with selected classes. In order to compute effect sizes, a measure of prior attainment and at least one comparison group was established for each class (typically either an equivalent class taught in the previous year by the same teacher, or a parallel class taught by another teacher). The mean effect size in favour of the intervention was 0.32.
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