Research Article

“My assessment didn’t seem real”: The Influence of Field Experiences on Preservice Teachers’ Agency and Assessment Literacy

Volume: 6 Number: 2 November 24, 2015
EN

“My assessment didn’t seem real”: The Influence of Field Experiences on Preservice Teachers’ Agency and Assessment Literacy

Abstract

To date, there is little or no research that specifically examines assessment literacy in social studies education, or the relationship between preservice teachers assessment literacy and their thinking about their own agency. This article focuses on three preservice social studies teachers who demonstrated a high degree of assessment literacy in their lesson plans, by developing assessments that supported their purpose for teaching social studies and their instructional decisions. The preservice teachers’ thinking about their assessment decisions in their field experience classrooms was examined through artifacts, interviews, and reflections. The preservice teachers’ thinking demonstrated that their assessment literacy was distinct based upon their views of the teaching profession. The findings from this case study highlight the ways that the authoritative discourses of assessment can influence the agency of preservice teachers. The discussion of findings highlights several implications for social studies teacher education.

Keywords

References

  1. contextual and reflexive in relation to the students. Therefore, practice in field experiences
  2. should not be seen as generalizable to other contexts, because they are “articulating and
  3. negotiating classroom and cultural knowledges” with the specific learners of their classroom, “in
  4. the initiation, development and practice of assessment to achieve the learning goals of students”
  5. (Willis, Adie, & Klenowski, 2013, p. 242).
  6. Anderson, D. L., Mathys, H., & Mills, A. (2014). Pre-service teachers’ assessment of 7th-grade students’ social studies learning. Journal of Curriculum and Teaching, 3(1).
  7. Apple, M. W. (1992). The text and cultural politics. Educational Researcher, 21(7), 4-11.
  8. Archer, M. (1995). Realist social theory: The morphogenetic approach. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.

Details

Primary Language

English

Subjects

-

Journal Section

Research Article

Publication Date

November 24, 2015

Submission Date

March 6, 2015

Acceptance Date

-

Published in Issue

Year 2015 Volume: 6 Number: 2

APA
Clark, J. S. (2015). “My assessment didn’t seem real”: The Influence of Field Experiences on Preservice Teachers’ Agency and Assessment Literacy. Journal of Social Studies Education Research, 6(2), 91-111. https://doi.org/10.17499/jsser.91829
AMA
1.Clark JS. “My assessment didn’t seem real”: The Influence of Field Experiences on Preservice Teachers’ Agency and Assessment Literacy. JSSER. 2015;6(2):91-111. doi:10.17499/jsser.91829
Chicago
Clark, J. Spencer. 2015. “‘My Assessment Didn’t Seem Real’: The Influence of Field Experiences on Preservice Teachers’ Agency and Assessment Literacy”. Journal of Social Studies Education Research 6 (2): 91-111. https://doi.org/10.17499/jsser.91829.
EndNote
Clark JS (November 1, 2015) “My assessment didn’t seem real”: The Influence of Field Experiences on Preservice Teachers’ Agency and Assessment Literacy. Journal of Social Studies Education Research 6 2 91–111.
IEEE
[1]J. S. Clark, “‘My assessment didn’t seem real’: The Influence of Field Experiences on Preservice Teachers’ Agency and Assessment Literacy”, JSSER, vol. 6, no. 2, pp. 91–111, Nov. 2015, doi: 10.17499/jsser.91829.
ISNAD
Clark, J. Spencer. “‘My Assessment Didn’t Seem Real’: The Influence of Field Experiences on Preservice Teachers’ Agency and Assessment Literacy”. Journal of Social Studies Education Research 6/2 (November 1, 2015): 91-111. https://doi.org/10.17499/jsser.91829.
JAMA
1.Clark JS. “My assessment didn’t seem real”: The Influence of Field Experiences on Preservice Teachers’ Agency and Assessment Literacy. JSSER. 2015;6:91–111.
MLA
Clark, J. Spencer. “‘My Assessment Didn’t Seem Real’: The Influence of Field Experiences on Preservice Teachers’ Agency and Assessment Literacy”. Journal of Social Studies Education Research, vol. 6, no. 2, Nov. 2015, pp. 91-111, doi:10.17499/jsser.91829.
Vancouver
1.J. Spencer Clark. “My assessment didn’t seem real”: The Influence of Field Experiences on Preservice Teachers’ Agency and Assessment Literacy. JSSER. 2015 Nov. 1;6(2):91-111. doi:10.17499/jsser.91829

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