This is the fifth piece in a blog series on learning progressions.
Learning progressions are essential tools for understanding students’ progress in their learning. In the classroom, learning progressions enable teachers to identify where students are at in their learning and convert student assessment results into meaningful descriptions of their learning progress. This understanding is essential for informing next steps in teaching and learning, to ensure that every student is making progress, whatever their ability.
In Australia, the value of learning progressions as a tool for improving teaching and learning has been endorsed in a recent major report, Through Growth to Achievement: Report of the Review to Achieve Educational Excellence in Australian Schools. One of the report’s key recommendations is the adoption of learning progressions in Australian classrooms, along with real-time monitoring of student progress. If implemented effectively, this will represent a major step forward in enabling Australian teachers to respond to the diverse range of abilities of students in their classes, and thus help them to ensure that all students are progressing in their learning, irrespective of their starting points.
Another advantage of learning progressions is their ability to bring together multiple forms of assessment. Effective education systems use multiple forms of assessment, including teacher judgments and standardized tests. Each of these assessments should be informed by a clear understanding of how students’ learning develops in the relevant domain. Learning progressions provide a clear conceptual framework with which to interpret results from multiple methods of assessment. They also extend understandings of student learning progress beyond the constraints of year-level curriculum or assessment, which is essential when classrooms may contain students whose learning is far above or below year-level standards.
From the classroom to the global assessment community
Just as learning progressions can be used in classrooms to understand the learning progress of diverse students, they could also be used by the international assessment community to understand the progress of learners in diverse countries and reach consistent understandings of that progress across international borders.
The Australian Council for Educational Research Centre for Global Education Monitoring (ACER-GEM) is working to develop a global set of learning progressions for use in reporting against Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 4: Quality Education. This complements the substantial program of work led by the UNESCO Institute for Statistics (UIS) and the Global Alliance to Monitor Learning (GAML), to develop strategies for monitoring learning against SDG 4. This program of work includes sophisticated statistical strategies for comparing results from different countries using different assessment programs, as well as conceptual strategies to create shared understandings of reading and mathematics—two of the SDG 4 learning domains. ACER-GEM’s work on learning progressions will help bridge the gap between statistical and conceptual approaches, enabling learning assessment data to be translated into meaningful descriptions of student learning.
Draft Learning Progressions
ACER-GEM has created draft learning progressions in reading and mathematics. The draft progressions comprize numerical scales and descriptions of learning progress, from foundational to more advanced levels. For example, the reading progression describes how reading develops from the capacity to extract meaning from print, or the basic ability to identify sounds in spoken language, through to sophisticated levels of comprehension, such as the interpretation of meaning and reflecting on the form or content of a text. At each level, the learning progressions provide an overall skill description (for the relevant domain and for its composite strands), illustrative examples of how skills and knowledge might be operationalized in assessment, and additional commentary to aid understanding.
The draft learning progressions are based on analysis of test items, data and assessment frameworks from a wide range of national and cross-national assessments, as well as conceptual analysis of the relevant domains. Further development of the Learning Progressions will require extensive consultation with the international education community, including diverse education stakeholders from the widest possible range of countries. Rigorous empirical work is also required, both to validate the draft scales and to develop processes for countries to use them to provide meaningful data for SDG 4 reporting. Achieving this ambitious program of research will require all stakeholders to contribute their knowledge, experience, and resources to creating the learning progressions, as a shared global good.
The skills described in the learning progressions can only be demonstrated if children and young people are given opportunities to learn. Beyond their use in global reporting, Learning Progressions also have a valuable role to play in deepening understandings of learning and guiding system improvement. Just as teachers and students can use learning progressions to understand their progress and plan their next steps, the goal is for all countries to use the global learning progressions to plan next steps in improving teaching and learning.
Commentary
The role of learning progressions in global scales
May 29, 2018