How External Assessment Mediates Teaching, Learning and Assessment in Junior High School in Ghana
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Date
2014-12-01
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International Journal of Humanities Social Sciences and Education (IJHSSE)
Abstract
Abstract: External assessment is traditionally regarded as a neutral activity detached from teaching and
learning. Consequently the learning-inducing effect of this type of assessment receives little attention when
the tests are developed. This article reports the findings of a study of the importance attached to an external
assessment by 40 teachers and 120 students in their teaching and learning activities respectively.
Questionnaires and interviews were used to gather data on the perceived influence of the assessment and
the real life experiences of its role in the interaction between the teachers and their students in the
classroom. Statistical analyses show that the students have a significantly higher opinion of the learninginducing effect of the external assessment than the teachers and there are differences in the structure of the
factors that underlie their opinions. Analysis of the interviews confirms that both the teachers and students
attach a great deal of importance to the assessment as it influences teaching and learning activities in the
classroom. It was concluded that both the teachers and the students attach a great deal of importance to the
external assessment, suggesting that more attention needs to be paid to its hidden effect on education when
tests are developed for such assessments.
Description
Keywords
Hidden influence of external assessment, Role of external Assessment in teaching and learning, External assessment and classroom interactions, external assessment in action, assessment and quality of education.
Citation
Agbeti, A. (2014). How external assessment mediates teaching, learning and assessment in Junior high school in Ghana. International Journal of Humanities, Social Sciences and Education, 1(12), 115-125.
