The impact of an assessment policy upon teachers’ self-reported assessment beliefs and practices: A quasi-experimental study of Indian teachers in private schools
ARTICLE
Gavin T.L. Brown, The University of Auckland, New Zealand ; Harish Chaudhry, Indian Institute of Technology Delhi, India ; Ratna Dhamija, Australian Council for Educational Research (India), India
International Journal of Educational Research Volume 71, Number 1, ISSN 0883-0355 Publisher: Elsevier Ltd
Abstract
India has engaged in a policy reform seeking to increase the formative use of assessment in the hope of reducing negative effects of public examinations on students. The 2005 Curriculum Framework has been implemented within the context of significant privatization of schooling around the country. This study examined the beliefs of teachers about the purpose of assessment because they are the main agents of the policy reform. A large-scale survey of secondary school teachers predominantly in private schools asked them to indicate how much they agreed with multiple purposes concerning either internally determined school-based assessments (n=812) or externally mandated public examinations (n=883) and how they practiced assessment. Structural equation modeling identified a well-fitting model in which there were eight statistically significant paths from Beliefs to Practices and which was strictly equivalent between conditions. While teachers in both conditions endorsed most strongly the improvement purpose, there were statistically significant differences in mean score between conditions for three of the purposes and for one practice. While differences accounted for just 3% of variance in factor means, they were in the hypothesized direction in which internal school-based assessment generated more endorsement of the improvement purpose and diagnostic practice. Greater use of diagnostic practices (an ambition of the Indian Curriculum Framework) depends, in part, on teachers believing in the positive role of internal, school-based assessment and emphasis on educational improvement as the legitimate purpose of assessment is to be encouraged.
Citation
Brown, G.T.L., Chaudhry, H. & Dhamija, R. (2015). The impact of an assessment policy upon teachers’ self-reported assessment beliefs and practices: A quasi-experimental study of Indian teachers in private schools. International Journal of Educational Research, 71(1), 50-64. Elsevier Ltd. Retrieved August 15, 2024 from https://www.learntechlib.org/p/203586/.
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