40 Alternative Assessments for LearningBy: Charity Preston
When people think of assessment, pencils and bubble sheets may be the first things that come to mind. Assessment does not always have to involve paper and pencil, but can instead be a project, an observation, or a task that shows a student has learned the material.
In the end, all we really want to know is that the skill was mastered, right? Why not make it fun and engaging for students as well?
Many teachers shy away from alternative assessments because they take extra time and effort to create and to grade. On the other hand, once the assessment guidelines and grading rubric are created, it can be filed away and used year after year.
The project card and rubric can be run on card stock (one on each side of the page), laminated, and hole punched with other alternative assessment ideas. Keep them all together in a binder or with an o-ring. Assessment just became a snap!
Here are 40 alternative assessment ideas to get you started! CLICK HERE for Charity's blogpost....
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