Back to Search Start Over

Evaluating the alignment among curriculum, instruction, and assessments: Implications and applications for research and practice

Authors :
Bradley C. Niebling
Andrew T. Roach
Alexander Kurz
Source :
Psychology in the Schools. 45:158-176
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
Wiley, 2008.

Abstract

Alignment has been defined as the extent to which curricular expectations and assessments are in agreement and work together to provide guidance for educators’ efforts to facilitate students’ progress toward desire academic outcomes. The Council of Chief State School Officers has identified three preferred models as frameworks for evaluating alignment: Webb’s alignment model, the Surveys of Enacted Curriculum model, and the Achieve model. Each model consists of a series of indices that summarize or describe the general match or coherence between state standards, largescale assessments, and, in some cases, classroom instruction. This article provides an overview of these frameworks for evaluating alignment and their applications in educational practice and the research literature. After providing an introduction to the use of alignment to evaluate large-scale accountabilitysystems,thearticlepresentspotentialextensionsofalignmentforusewithvulnerable populations(e.g.,studentswithdisabilities,preschoolers),individualstudents,andclassroomteachers. These proposed applications can provide information for facilitating efforts to improve teachers’ classroom instruction and students’ educational achievement. C ! 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Details

ISSN :
15206807 and 00333085
Volume :
45
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Psychology in the Schools
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........6a7f9179b137ed4174d7bf0e5f4c39b5