As individual institutions of education at all levels respond to the
call for greater accountability and assessment, those who teach
literacy face the challenging task of choosing what to measure and how
to measure it. Both defining literacy clearly and tying that
definition to strategies for assessment are two of many challenges
faced by educators, theorists, and members of the public who assume
responsibility for assessing literacy as well as developing and
improving literacy programs. In a pluralistic and democratic society
sensitive to multicultural variation, we need to find our way between
the competing needs for inclusiveness and for clear and useful
standards. Multiple definitions of literacy raise the issue of whether
there can be a standard or set of standards and if so, what they are
in an environment of multiple literacies. Indeed, the downside of the
defeat of older monolithic notions of literacy is the undermining or
at least the questioning of well-established methods of literacy
assessment. To some extent, the older methods of assessment have been
revised in the light of more expansive definitions of literacy. But
will this kind of revision be enough? How are the criteria for
judgment to be known and applied? Thus, this volume addresses the
problems of assessing literacy development in the context of multiple
and inclusive definitions. Each section consists of chapters that deal
with the issue of definitions per se, with standards in postsecondary
settings, with the K-12 situation, and with alternative, non-school
environments where literacy is critical to human functioning in a
democratic society.
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Essays on Assessment, Inclusion, Pedagogy and Civic Engagement
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781433142017
Publisert
2019
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Peter Lang
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter