Vocabulary 1
Vocabulary 2
Assessment Tools
Documenting & Observing
Using Technology for Assessment/Portfolios
Assessment & Methods of Assessment
Vocabulary 3
100

an attempt to explain the observed behavior and to give it meaning.

Interpretation 

100

 recorded evidence

documentation 

100

A disadvantage of using a checklist would be...

the lack of detailed information. Checklists lack the richness of the more descriptive narrative.  

100

the intentional act of carefully observing a child’s behavior in a particular setting

observation

100

Audio and video recordings can be used for what, when documenting children's learning?

children telling stories, acting out stories, or explaining their projects

100

These are all assessment tools

anecdotal records, checklists, participation charts, rating scales, samples of products, photographs, and audio-video recordings

100

a form of strength-based observation and documentation that a teacher records in a story format

learning story 

200

The simplest form of direct observation is a brief, factual narrative account of a specific incident

anecdotal record

200

systematic process that evaluates someone’s abilities, interests, strengths, and temperament

Assessment 

200

An anecdotal record should not include this

an interpretation of why something happened, nor imply that what happened was wrong, right, good, or bad

200

these assist you in comparing and noting changes in the growth and development of children

developmental milestones
200

A portfolio should be continually growing, documenting what?

evidence of a child’s continuous progress

200

As a teacher beginning a new year, you will need to do this. This will provide entry data and a baseline to use for each child.

an initial assessment

200

the order in which events happened

chronological 

300

form of summative assessment designed to determine the child’s achievement. A teacher administers this with specific instructions to the child and compares the score against state or national norms.

standardized test

300

characteristics and behaviors considered normal for children in specific age groups. Some educators refer to these as emerging competencies.

Developmental milestones

300

The assessment tool would you use to determine the degree to which a quality or trait was present.

Rating Scale

300

The reason teachers use informal assessments to collect data is because? 

These methods are easier to use and more appropriate for program planning.

300

These are at least 5 different things that you would put in a childs portfolio.

  • teacher observations and other records gathered through assessment;
  • samples of the children’s paintings, drawings, and writing samples;
  • photographs of developmental milestones, block-building constructions, science projects, and children engaged in activities;
  • developmental checklists, rating scales, interest scales, and anecdotal observations;
  • conference notes;
  • parents’ comments and completed questionnaires;
  • audio or video recordings of children speaking, singing, telling a story, and responding to questions; and
  • a list of the child’s favorite books, songs, and fingerplays.
300

 This is how often you should record data on each child, and why?  

Regularly, so you can see how each child is progressing.

300

the process of collecting artifacts. It is a powerful source of knowledge for teachers. It should show tangible evidence of progress. Products collected may include artwork, stories dictated or written, audio and video recordings, photographs, and records of conversations.

documentation 

400

more informal and embraces observations that occur during daily play-based activities and routines

authentic assessment

400

the process of reviewing the information and finding value in it.

Evaluation 

400

these can help determine children’s activity preferences during self-selected play

participation chart

400

What are ways to learn as much about the children as possible during your initial assessment?

Study the existing folders on each child. Review home background information forms. Read the notes from past parent conferences. If possible, visit each child’s home.

400

This is a digital portfolio collection to show their collection of assessment evidence. Teachers who prefer using these maintain a computer file on each child.

eportfolio 

400

 Assessment should include all of these developmental areas.

physical, social-emotional, linguistic, cognitive, and artistic

400

a tangible object a child creates that provides evidence of learning; it requires a date

artifact

500

formal, standardized methods educators use to measure a child’s learning against a benchmark

Summative assessments

500

ongoing gathering of information during daily play activities to find out what the children know and can do. This data is essential for improving instruction and supporting children’s learning

 Formative assessment

500

This assessment tool requires structuring. You may purchase commercially prepared ones, and some teachers working in childcare or early childhood centers structure their own.

Checklists

500

The purpose of a documentation board is to share what?

children’s accomplishments, field trips, and classroom celebrations

500

 In an infant program, these are ways to use the digital camera for documentation. 

to record self-feeding, playing peek-a-boo, sitting up, creeping, or walking.

500

Teachers who have excellent assessment skills will make what? 

make better decisions and plan an intentional curriculum.

500

records something specific, and early childhood professionals can use them to gather data quickly.

Rating scales

600

a collection of materials that documents a child’s strengths, abilities, and progress over time.

portfolio

600

record the presence or absence of specific behaviors. They are easy to use and are especially helpful when many different items require observation. They often include lists of specific behaviors to identify children’s skills and knowledge

Checklists

600

Anecdotal records can contain what 6 specific things?


600

This is what artifacts do

provide a rich picture by telling a story. They reveal what a child knows, areas of growth, strengths, and interests. Artifacts also can disclose a child’s feelings, thoughts, and skills. For example, a piece of artwork shows how the child thinks about the world.

600

These are reasons you should always consult parents, families, or teachers before video recording or photographing children.  

Many centers require written consent to be on file before staff can video record or photograph children for educational purposes. Some families do not want images taken of their children for privacy reasons.

600

The purpose of these instruments is to identify infants, toddlers, or preschool children with developmental delays. A focus may be on the developmental areas—gross-motor, fine-motor, language comprehension, and social-emotional growth. A teacher, doctor, social worker, or parent may administer the test.

commercial developmental screening instruments that early childhood programs can purchase.

600

used to gain information on specific aspects of children’s behavior

participation chart