Universities have a growing diverse student population many with additional needs including disability, language concerns and personal or employment commitments, therefore they need to ensure teaching, learning and assessment is accessible and supported. From this end, UNTE had an interview with Dr. Eliana El-Khoury, Assistant Professor at Athabasca University in Canada specializing in open, digital and distance education to highlight inclusive assessment and demonstrate its role in transforming education and elevating education institutions into a higher level of excellence.
Question 1 : Qu’est-ce que l’évaluation inclusive, pourquoi est-elle importante et quel est son objectif ?
Dr. Eliana El-Khoury: A key underpinning principle is that inclusive assessment does not mean easier assessment, nor does it give students the opportunity to avoid specific tasks which are fundamental to development in their discipline. Inclusivity is about enhancing practice to offer students greater opportunity to develop both skills and disciplinary knowledge in a supported and challenging environment. We do not want assessment to be a tool to label students, but instead create space for quality feedback to experience equity or opportunity to demonstrate their achievement and succeed. Equally important is that an inclusive assessment system applies to all students unexceptionally including students with disabilities and that they apply to all types of assessments in assessment systems. As the world is becoming more inclusive, all our work and efforts are directed to adapt and employ relevant tools to fulfill the inclusion promises to leave no one behind by ensuring inclusive and equitable quality education and promoting lifelong learning opportunities.
Question 2 : Quels sont les principes d’évaluation dans un contexte inclusif ?
Dr. Eliana El-Khoury: According to (Nieminen, 2022), there are basically 5 core principles that defines an inclusive assessment in higher education namely;
- Rethinking individual assessment accommodations: it is important to develop nontraditional assessment models to foster accessibility for all students. This could be achieved by removing the cultural stigma, treating all students equally including those with visible/invisible disabilities.
- Anti-ableist work: Eliminate the stigma and discriminatory behavior against people with disabilities.
- Celebration of human diversity: (including religious, emotional, cultural backgrounds, traditions) which helps students feel confident, accepted, and understanding of the world around them.
- Student Partnership: in which students should be seen as partners while designing both assessment accommodations and inclusive assessment design.
- Interdependence: provides insight into the culture of inclusive classrooms and communicates that disabled and able-bodied persons can learn from one another to create a better community.
Question 3 : Comment pourriez-vous établir des pratiques d’évaluation inclusives ?
Dr. Eliana El-Khoury: A good start is to guide the design of learning experiences to proactively meet the needs of all learners, however in practice there are more to be done to effectively achieve UDL in educational institutions.
Inclusive assessment approach presents an example of good and bad assessments, creates practice opportunities, gives multiple means of course’s representation and students engagement with the content, improves classroom planning techniques, provides students with flexible ways to demonstrate their knowledge and understanding without scaffolding them to submit many assignments, uses constructive alignment to link all learning activities to course outcomes.
Additionally, inclusive assessment allows students to demonstrate their understanding through expression and apprenticeship, defines learning preferences general strengths and interests and areas of need are considered for all students including students with disabilities, offers authentic opportunities for assessment as well as fosters trust, transparency, compassion, belonging and positive relationships between teachers and learners. Instructors should aim to create responsible students to enjoy the course and to feel included. This is done, in part, to maximize student engagement and ultimately student learning.
Question 4 : Comment la technologie peut-elle aider les enseignants à concevoir une évaluation inclusive ?
Technology plays a significant role in imagining and redefining assessment in a variety of ways. These tools can provide unobtrusive measurements for learners and facilitate the development of an inclusive assessment that shares many of the principles of good assessment design. Teachers should take into consideration the following;
- Align assessments' criteria to learning objectives: Well-designed assessments should give an indication of the standards of students’ expected performance associated with each learning objective.
- Plan learning activities: Teachers should plan learning activities in a constructive manner to enable students to develop the skills, knowledge and understandings described in the intended learning outcomes and measured by assessment. Many of these learning activities can be planned online or can be flexible to allow students a greater opportunity for engagement. In addition, technology allows instructors to have a record of students’ achievement, engagement, and areas of improvement.
- Ensure the assessment rubric is clear: Teachers should have a clear idea of what their students should achieve and the essential features and skills to measure that achievement. Expectations should be stated explicitly in the learning objectives and grading rubrics. Rubrics are an easy way for teachers to communicate the expectations of each assessment.
- Ensure the assessment instructions and feedback are clear and student-oriented [1]: Instructions should be understandable to and directed at the students. Feedback needs to be aligned to the assessed learning objective, informing the students of the extent to which they achieved it and how to improve. In giving feedback, teachers should consider showing practical examples of how a ‘good’ answer could be presented, or pointing students to resources that help them better understand the assessment requirements. Technology allows instructors to provide accessible instructions, for examples in the forms of videos of screen casting. Technology also allows instructors to provide more meaningful feedback such as video or voice feedback.
- Clarify the purpose of assessment: Assessment can serve dual purposes: Assessment can promote student learning or provide evidence for accountability requirements through an evaluation of strengths and weaknesses. The overarching goal is for students to experience a direct, positive benefit from their participation in assessment activities.[2].
- Give students scaffolding opportunities: In a scaffolded learning environment, students are free to ask questions, provide feedback and support their peers in learning new material. When teachers incorporate scaffolding in the classroom, they become more of a mentor and facilitator of knowledge rather than the dominant content expert.
- Break up a big high-stakes exam into small tests: Students undergo tremendous stress to do well on an exam that accounts for a third or a half of their grade. Instead, teachers should reduce that pressure and thus the urge to cheat by giving them a series of tests every two weekly that equal the weight of the high-stakes exam.
- Evaluate assessment practices: Teachers should evaluate results from assessment activity to address students’ reliability, validity, and utility. Poor student performance can reflect limited learning or an ill-designed assessment process.
- Flexibility: Flexibility can further motivate students and engage them in the learning process by giving them some control over their learning. For example, allowing students to choose their own deadlines from a set of options or within a set of criteria; some students need support on specific subject, some others need specific resources to improve their learning[3].
- Build students’ agency[4]: Teachers should provide services for students with disability such as rubrics to facilitate their work. Build a teachers-students partnership, recognize learners as active participants in their own learning and engages them in the in the design of their experiences and the realization of their learning outcomes in ways appropriate for their developmental level.
Question 5 : les politiques nationales sur l’éducation inclusive et les pratiques d’évaluation montrent dans quelle mesure les enfants handicapés sont inclus dans les évaluations. Selon vous, l’évaluation inclusive est-elle mise en œuvre dans les établissements d’enseignement formel et non formel et dans quelle mesure ?
Dr. Eliana El-Khoury: The development of inclusive education policies affirming explicit commitment to educating students with disabilities alongside their colleagues is the bedrock for high quality and equitable society, however, the concept of inclusive education in schools and higher education institutions is still being weakly and inconsistently implemented due to several barriers in the areas of empowerment, instruction, technology, information, attitudes, leadership, awareness about cultural inclusion, accessibility, organization, operation and implementation problems, inappropriate curriculum, financial impediments and regulatory barriers.
Conclusion
In the times of digitalization, the value of higher education is measured by whether it is successful in promoting the learning and inclusion of students from diverse backgrounds in compliance with UN's Sustainable development Goals (SDGs). If higher education truly aims to create an environment that values diversity, promotes an inclusive culture, it is mandatory to rethink assessment to simply align with the goal of inclusivity given its fundamental role for teaching and learning. Our responsibility is to work together so that students with disabilities and able-bodied persons receive the resources they need to thrive.[5].
[1] Practical-recommendations-for-making-feedback-more-effective.pdf (imperial.ac.uk)
[2] Transparent Assignment Design | Office of Assessment for Curricular Effectiveness | Washington State University (wsu.edu) https://ace.wsu.edu/assignment-design/transparent-assignment-design/
TILT Higher Ed Examples and Resources. Transparent Assignment Design | Center for Advancing Teaching and Learning Through Research (northeastern.edu) https://tilthighered.com/tiltexamplesandresources
[3] MARCH 2022 | TIP #3 – USE FLEXIBLE ASSESSMENT TO ENGAGE AND MOTIVATE LEARNERS, https://www.stlhe.ca/teaching-tip-tuesday/tip-3-use-flexible-assessment-to-engage-and-motivate-learners/
[4] Learner agency in the assessment process: does it work? | SharingPYP Blog (ibo.org) https://blogs.ibo.org/sharingpyp/2019/12/03/learner-agency-in-the-assessment-process-does-it-work/
[5] Nieminen, J. H. (2022). Assessment for Inclusion: rethinking inclusive assessment in higher education. Teaching in Higher Education, 1-19.
Universities have a growing diverse student population many with additional needs including disability, language concerns and personal or employment commitments, therefore they need to ensure teaching, learning and assessment is accessible and supported. From this end, UNTE had an interview with Dr. Eliana El-Khoury, Assistant Professor at Athabasca University in Canada specializing in open, digital and distance education to highlight inclusive assessment and demonstrate its role in transforming education and elevating education institutions into a higher level of excellence.
Question 1: What is inclusive assessment, why is it important and what is its purpose?
Dr. Eliana El-Khoury: A key underpinning principle is that inclusive assessment does not mean easier assessment, nor does it give students the opportunity to avoid specific tasks which are fundamental to development in their discipline. Inclusivity is about enhancing practice to offer students greater opportunity to develop both skills and disciplinary knowledge in a supported and challenging environment. We do not want assessment to be a tool to label students, but instead create space for quality feedback to experience equity or opportunity to demonstrate their achievement and succeed. Equally important is that an inclusive assessment system applies to all students unexceptionally including students with disabilities and that they apply to all types of assessments in assessment systems. As the world is becoming more inclusive, all our work and efforts are directed to adapt and employ relevant tools to fulfill the inclusion promises to leave no one behind by ensuring inclusive and equitable quality education and promoting lifelong learning opportunities.
Question 2: What are the principles of assessment in an inclusive context?
Dr. Eliana El-Khoury: According to (Nieminen, 2022), there are basically 5 core principles that defines an inclusive assessment in higher education namely;
- Rethinking individual assessment accommodations: it is important to develop nontraditional assessment models to foster accessibility for all students. This could be achieved by removing the cultural stigma, treating all students equally including those with visible/invisible disabilities.
- Anti-ableist work: Eliminate the stigma and discriminatory behavior against people with disabilities.
- Celebration of human diversity: (including religious, emotional, cultural backgrounds, traditions) which helps students feel confident, accepted, and understanding of the world around them.
- Student Partnership: in which students should be seen as partners while designing both assessment accommodations and inclusive assessment design.
- Interdependence: provides insight into the culture of inclusive classrooms and communicates that disabled and able-bodied persons can learn from one another to create a better community.
Question 3: How could you demonstrate inclusive assessment practices?
Dr. Eliana El-Khoury: A good start is to guide the design of learning experiences to proactively meet the needs of all learners, however in practice there are more to be done to effectively achieve UDL in educational institutions.
Inclusive assessment approach presents an example of good and bad assessments, creates practice opportunities, gives multiple means of course’s representation and students engagement with the content, improves classroom planning techniques, provides students with flexible ways to demonstrate their knowledge and understanding without scaffolding them to submit many assignments, uses constructive alignment to link all learning activities to course outcomes.
Additionally, inclusive assessment allows students to demonstrate their understanding through expression and apprenticeship, defines learning preferences general strengths and interests and areas of need are considered for all students including students with disabilities, offers authentic opportunities for assessment as well as fosters trust, transparency, compassion, belonging and positive relationships between teachers and learners. Instructors should aim to create responsible students to enjoy the course and to feel included. This is done, in part, to maximize student engagement and ultimately student learning.
Question 4: How technology can assist teachers in designing inclusive assessment?
Technology plays a significant role in imagining and redefining assessment in a variety of ways. These tools can provide unobtrusive measurements for learners and facilitate the development of an inclusive assessment that shares many of the principles of good assessment design. Teachers should take into consideration the following;
- Align assessments’ criteria to learning objectives: Well-designed assessments should give an indication of the standards of students’ expected performance associated with each learning objective.
- Plan learning activities: Teachers should plan learning activities in a constructive manner to enable students to develop the skills, knowledge and understandings described in the intended learning outcomes and measured by assessment. Many of these learning activities can be planned online or can be flexible to allow students a greater opportunity for engagement. In addition, technology allows instructors to have a record of students’ achievement, engagement, and areas of improvement.
- Ensure the assessment rubric is clear: Teachers should have a clear idea of what their students should achieve and the essential features and skills to measure that achievement. Expectations should be stated explicitly in the learning objectives and grading rubrics. Rubrics are an easy way for teachers to communicate the expectations of each assessment.
- Ensure the assessment instructions and feedback are clear and student-oriented [1]: Instructions should be understandable to and directed at the students. Feedback needs to be aligned to the assessed learning objective, informing the students of the extent to which they achieved it and how to improve. In giving feedback, teachers should consider showing practical examples of how a ‘good’ answer could be presented, or pointing students to resources that help them better understand the assessment requirements. Technology allows instructors to provide accessible instructions, for examples in the forms of videos of screen casting. Technology also allows instructors to provide more meaningful feedback such as video or voice feedback.
- Clarify the purpose of assessment: Assessment can serve dual purposes: Assessment can promote student learning or provide evidence for accountability requirements through an evaluation of strengths and weaknesses. The overarching goal is for students to experience a direct, positive benefit from their participation in assessment activities.
- Give students scaffolding opportunities: In a scaffolded learning environment, students are free to ask questions, provide feedback and support their peers in learning new material. When teachers incorporate scaffolding in the classroom, they become more of a mentor and facilitator of knowledge rather than the dominant content expert.
- Break up a big high-stakes exam into small tests: Students undergo tremendous stress to do well on an exam that accounts for a third or a half of their grade. Instead, teachers should reduce that pressure and thus the urge to cheat by giving them a series of tests every two weekly that equal the weight of the high-stakes exam.
- Evaluate assessment practices: Teachers should evaluate results from assessment activity to address students’ reliability, validity, and utility. Poor student performance can reflect limited learning or an ill-designed assessment process.
- Flexibility: Flexibility can further motivate students and engage them in the learning process by giving them some control over their learning. For example, allowing students to choose their own deadlines from a set of options or within a set of criteria; some students need support on specific subject, some others need specific resources to improve their learning[3].
- Build students’ agency[4]: Teachers should provide services for students with disability such as rubrics to facilitate their work. Build a teachers-students partnership, recognize learners as active participants in their own learning and engages them in the in the design of their experiences and the realization of their learning outcomes in ways appropriate for their developmental level.
Question 5: National-level policies on inclusive education and assessment practices determine to what extent children with disabilities are included in assessments. In your opinion is inclusive assessment being implemented in formal and non-formal educational institutions and to what extent?
Dr. Eliana El-Khoury: The development of inclusive education policies affirming explicit commitment to educating students with disabilities alongside their colleagues is the bedrock for high quality and equitable society, however, the concept of inclusive education in schools and higher education institutions is still being weakly and inconsistently implemented due to several barriers in the areas of empowerment, instruction, technology, information, attitudes, leadership, awareness about cultural inclusion, accessibility, organization, operation and implementation problems, inappropriate curriculum, financial impediments and regulatory barriers.
Conclusion
In the times of digitalization, the value of higher education is measured by whether it is successful in promoting the learning and inclusion of students from diverse backgrounds in compliance with UN’s Sustainable development Goals (SDGs). If higher education truly aims to create an environment that values diversity, promotes an inclusive culture, it is mandatory to rethink assessment to simply align with the goal of inclusivity given its fundamental role for teaching and learning. Our responsibility is to work together so that students with disabilities and able-bodied persons receive the resources they need to thrive.
[1] Practical-recommendations-for-making-feedback-more-effective.pdf (imperial.ac.uk)
[2] Transparent Assignment Design | Office of Assessment for Curricular Effectiveness | Washington State University (wsu.edu) https://ace.wsu.edu/assignment-design/transparent-assignment-design/
TILT Higher Ed Examples and Resources. Transparent Assignment Design | Center for Advancing Teaching and Learning Through Research (northeastern.edu) https://tilthighered.com/tiltexamplesandresources
[3] MARCH 2022 | TIP #3 – USE FLEXIBLE ASSESSMENT TO ENGAGE AND MOTIVATE LEARNERS, https://www.stlhe.ca/teaching-tip-tuesday/tip-3-use-flexible-assessment-to-engage-and-motivate-learners/
[4] Learner agency in the assessment process: does it work? | SharingPYP Blog (ibo.org) https://blogs.ibo.org/sharingpyp/2019/12/03/learner-agency-in-the-assessment-process-does-it-work/
[5] Nieminen, J. H. (2022). Assessment for Inclusion: rethinking inclusive assessment in higher education. Teaching in Higher Education, 1-19.