assessment in the affective domain

63
Assessment in the Affective Domain

Upload: machine-shop-ni-don-bosco

Post on 12-Jan-2017

601 views

Category:

Education


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Assessment in the Affective Domain

Page 2: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Affective Domain

The affective domain is one of three domains in Bloom's Taxonomy, with the other two being the cognitive and psychomotor(Bloom, et al., 1956).

Page 3: Assessment in the Affective Domain

• The affective domain (Krathwohl, Bloom, Masia, 1973) includes the manner in which we deal with things emotionally such as feelings, values, appreciation, enthusiasms, motivations, and attitudes.

Page 4: Assessment in the Affective Domain

• Affective learning is demonstrated by behaviors indicating attitudes of awareness, interest, attention, concern, and responsibility, ability to listen and respond in interactions with others,

Page 5: Assessment in the Affective Domain

and ability to demonstrate those attitudinal characteristics or values which are appropriate to the test situation and the field of study

Page 6: Assessment in the Affective Domain

The affective domain is a part of a system that was published in 1965 for :

Identifying Understanding Addressing on how people learn.

Page 7: Assessment in the Affective Domain

• We shall concern with the second of these domains which is the affective domain.

Page 8: Assessment in the Affective Domain

The Affective domain describes learning objectives that emphasize a feeling tone, an emotion, or a degree of acceptance or rejection.

Page 9: Assessment in the Affective Domain

The taxonomy in the affective domain

Page 10: Assessment in the Affective Domain
Page 11: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Receiving

It is being aware of or sensitive to the existence of certain ideas, material, or phenomena and being willing to tolerate them. (To differentiate, To accept, To listen(for), To respond to)

Page 12: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Responding

Is committed in some small measure to the ideas, materials, or phenomena involved by actively responding to them.

(To comply with, To follow, To commend, To volunteer, To spend leisure time in, To acclaim)

Page 13: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Valuing

Is willing to be perceived by others as attaching importance to certain ideas, materials, or phenomenon.

(To increased measured proficiency, To relinquished, To subsidize, To support, To debate)

Page 14: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Organization

Is relating the value to those already held and bring it into a harmonious and internally consistent philosophy.

(To discuss, To theorize, To formulate, To balance, To examine)

Page 15: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Characterization

By value or value set is to act consistently in accordance with the values he or she has internalized.

(To resist, To manage, To resolve)

Page 16: Assessment in the Affective Domain

It is, admittedly, a far more difficult domain to objectively analyze and assess since affective objectives vary from simple attention to selected phenomena to complex but internally consistent qualities of character and conscience.

Page 17: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Noticed that it is far more difficult to state an objective in the affective domain because they often refer to the feelings and internal processes of the mind and body that cannot be tested and measured using traditional methods.

Page 18: Assessment in the Affective Domain

• As teachers, we are also interested in students’ attitudes towards learning topics such as science, math and etc.

Page 19: Assessment in the Affective Domain

We want to find teaching methods that encourage students and draw them in. Affective topics in educational literature include attitudes, motivation, communication styles, learning styles, use of technology in the classroom and non verbal communications.

Page 20: Assessment in the Affective Domain

As teachers, we need to be careful about our actions that may negatively impact on students’ attitudes which go straight into the affective domain.

Page 21: Assessment in the Affective Domain

For instance, facial expression that reveal sarcasm(Harsh) , body movements that betray distrust and dislike, should all be avoided.

Page 22: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Affective Learning Competencies

Instructional objectives are specific, measurable, observable student behaviors.

Page 23: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Objectives are the foundation upon which you can build lessons and assessments that you can prove meet your overall lesson goals.

Page 24: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Think of objectives as tools you use to make sure you reach your goals. They are the arrows you shoot towards your target.

Page 25: Assessment in the Affective Domain

The purpose of the objectives is to ensure that learning is focused clearly enough that both students and teacher know what is going on, and so learning can be objectively measured.

Page 26: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Behavioral Verbs Appropriate for the Affective Domain

Receiving :• Accept• Attend• Develop• Recognize

Page 27: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Responding :• Complete• Comply• Cooperate• Obey• Respond

Page 28: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Valuing :• Accept• Defend• Devote• Pursue• Seek

Page 29: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Organization:• Codify• Display• Order• Organize• Systematize

Page 30: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Characterization :• Internalize• Verify

Page 31: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Attitudes

Are defined as a mental predisposition to act that is expressed by evaluating a particular entity with some degree of favor and disfavor.

Page 32: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Attitudes are also attached to mental categories.

Mental orientations towards concepts are generally referred to as values.

Page 33: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Attitudes are compromised of 4 components:

Page 34: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Cognitions

Are our beliefs, Theories, Expectancies, Cause and Effect beliefs, and Perceptions relative to the focal object.

Page 35: Assessment in the Affective Domain

This concept is not the same as “Feelings” but just a statement of beliefs and expectations which vary from one individual context to the next.

Page 36: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Affect

The affective component refers to our feeling with respect to the focal object such as fear, liking, or anger.

Page 37: Assessment in the Affective Domain

For instance, the color “Blue” evokes different feelings for different individuals: some like the color blue but others not. Some associate the color blue with “loneliness” while others associate it with “calm and peace”.

Page 38: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Behavioral Intentions

Behavioral intentions are our goals, aspirations, and our expected response to the attitude object.

Page 39: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Evaluation

Are often considered the central component of attitudes. Evaluations consist of the imputations of some degree of goodness and badness to an attitude toward an object.

Page 40: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Why study attitudes?

Because it can influence the way we act and think in the social communities we belong.

Page 41: Assessment in the Affective Domain

For example: When your mathematics classes are recited, students with negative attitude towards mathematics tend to play less attention and occupy their minds with something else.

Page 42: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Motivation

Is a reason or set of reasons for engaging in a particular behavior intrinsically or extrinsically.

Page 43: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Intrinsic motivation

Occurs when a people are internally motivated to do something because it either brings them pleasure, they think it is important.

Page 44: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Extrinsic motivation

Comes into play when a student is compelled to do something or act a certain a way because of factors external to him or her.

Page 45: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Self-efficacy

Is an impression that one is capable of performing in a manner or attaining goals.

It is a belief that one has the capabilities to execute the courses of actions required to manage prospective situations.

Page 46: Assessment in the Affective Domain

It is important to understand the distinction between self esteem and self efficacy.

Self esteem relates to a one person’s sense of self worth, whereas self efficacy relate’s to a person’s sense of

Page 47: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Development of Assessment Tools

Page 48: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Assessment tools in the affective domain, in particular, those which are used to assess attitudes, interests, motivations, and self-efficacy.

Page 49: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Self report

It is the most common measurement tool in the affective domain.

It essentially requires an individual to provide an account of his/her attitude or feelings toward a concept or idea or people.

Page 50: Assessment in the Affective Domain
Page 51: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Rating Scales

Is a set of categories designed to elicit information about a quantitative attribute in social science

Common examples are the likert scale and 1-10 scales for which a person selects the number which is considered to reflect the perceived quality of a product.

Page 52: Assessment in the Affective Domain
Page 53: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Semantic Differential Scales

The Semantic Differential (SD) tries to assess an individual’s reaction to specific words, ideas or concepts in terms of ratings on bipolar scales defined with contrasting adjectives at each end.

Page 54: Assessment in the Affective Domain
Page 55: Assessment in the Affective Domain
Page 56: Assessment in the Affective Domain

The SD has been used as a measure in a wide variety of projects.

Osgood., et al., (1957) report exploratory studies in which the SD was used to assess attitude.

Page 57: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Thurstone Scale

Louis Thurstone is considered the “The father of attitude measurement”.

He address the issue on how favorable an individual is with regard to a given issue.

He developed an attitude continuum to determine the position of favorability on the issue.

Page 58: Assessment in the Affective Domain
Page 59: Assessment in the Affective Domain

In 1944, Guttman suggested that the attitude should be measured by multidimensional scales, as opposed to unidimensional scales such as those developed by thurstone and likert.

Page 60: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Guttman pointed out that there should be a mulitdimentional view of the attitude construct.

He developed the Guttman scaling

Page 61: Assessment in the Affective Domain
Page 62: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Checklists

The most common and perhaps the easiest instrument in the affective domain is to construct the checklist.

Page 63: Assessment in the Affective Domain

Steps in the construction of checklist

Enumerate all the attributes and characteristics you wish to observe.

Arrange these attributes as a “shopping list” of characteristics

Ask the students to mark those attributes which are present and leave blank those which are not