ERIC Number: EJ1207895
Record Type: Journal
Publication Date: 2018
Pages: 5
Abstractor: As Provided
ISBN: N/A
ISSN: ISSN-0155-2147
EISSN: N/A
Graeme Withers and Margaret Gill, Assessing Text Response: The 1990 Pilot CAT: A Review for Teachers, Carlton: Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Board (VCAB)
Doecke, Brenton
English in Australia, v53 n3 p94-98 2018
The Assessment Issue of "English in Australia" has prompted Brenton Doecke to ask himself about significant moments in the history of subject English in Australia when truly innovative work was done in the area of assessing English. There are many examples to choose from, including Brian Johnston's "Assessing English: Helping Students to Reflect on Their Work" (1983/1987), which provided excellent support to teachers who were implementing process writing in their classrooms in the 1980s; Robert McGregor and Marion Meiers' "Telling the Whole Story: Assessing Achievement in English" (1991), which showed what teachers can learn through careful observation of students' language from day-to-day; and Brian Johnston and Stephen Dowdy's "Work Required: Teaching & Assessing in a Negotiated Curriculum" (1988), a book with a cross-disciplinary focus that was designed, as its subtitle suggests, to support teachers in a range of subject areas to implement forms of assessment that were congruent with the ideal of negotiating the curriculum with students. All these publications are signs of an extraordinarily rich period in Australian curriculum history, when English teachers were able to exercise their professional responsibility in developing and implementing forms of assessment that accorded with their sense of the richness of their subject area. The text that Brenton eventually chose for 'Perspectives from the Past' was Graeme Withers and Margaret Gill's, "Assessing Text Response: The 1990 Pilot CAT: A Review for Teachers". This text is anchored in attempts by educators in Victoria in the 1980s and 1990s to develop and implement a new senior school curriculum that was responsive to a diverse student cohort and which would serve as more than an instrument for tertiary selection. Its significance, however, extends beyond the Victorian scene, because of the way it conceptualises a form of assessment that was congruent with what literary scholars and educators had come to understand about how readers make meaning from literary texts.
Descriptors: English Instruction, Foreign Countries, Curriculum Guides, Teaching Guides, Curriculum Implementation, Reader Text Relationship, Student Diversity, Reader Response, English Teachers, Culturally Relevant Education, Reading Material Selection, Reading Comprehension, Student Evaluation, Writing (Composition), Cues, Performance Based Assessment, Secondary School Students
Australian Association for the Teaching of English. English House, 416 Magill Road, Kensington Gardens, SA 5068 Australia. Tel: +61-8-8332-2845; Fax: +61-8-8333-0394; e-mail: aate@aate.org.au; Web site: http://www.aate.org.au
Publication Type: Journal Articles; Reports - Evaluative
Education Level: Secondary Education
Audience: N/A
Language: English
Sponsor: N/A
Authoring Institution: N/A
Identifiers - Location: Australia
Grant or Contract Numbers: N/A