Question 5 – How does formative assessment (assessment for learning) nurture critically  thoughtful students and prepare them for success? 
	In a constructivist and inquiry-based curriculum, students  need a safe environment in which to learn. Assessment experiences that consider  multiple plausible or warranted answers provide opportunities for students to  think critically about the content, values and processes of the program of studies.  Assessment for learning is based on  the premise that students have permission to take learning risks. It  acknowledges that students require: 
	
	  - clear learning goals 
 
	  - appropriate scaffolding
 
	  - ongoing specific and descriptive feedback  throughout the learning process 
 
	  - opportunities to reflect on their work 
 
	  - opportunities to improve their work through  revision, editing and polishing.
 
     
	During assessment for learning, teachers provide feedback and guidance but do not grade students on  the process of learning. Summative assessments follow in due course once  students have had sufficient opportunity to learn and explore the new skill or  concept.  
	Carefully constructed tools for providing specific and  descriptive feedback from teachers and peers provide data that students use to improve their learning.  Students have opportunities to think critically about their performance to  date, compare their own performance to the standard, and set goals for  improvement of their work-in-progress. 
	Rick Stiggins has identified three practices which will lead  to gains in student achievement: 
	
	  - improving the quality of classroom assessments; i.e., to  create a solid link between the assessment task and the learner outcomes, 
 
	  - increasing the frequency of descriptive feedback,  and  
 
	  - involving students deeply in the assessment process.
 
	    To the extent that these practices (i.e., quality of  assessments, frequency of descriptive feedback, and student involvement in the  assessment process) permeate a learning environment, impressive gains in  student achievement are possible (Stiggins 2001; 2006). These practices could  be considered criteria that teachers and leaders use to evaluate the  effectiveness of the assessment program in their classrooms and school. 
	 	
	Although they serve  different purposes, assessment for learning and assessment of learning  are related. At the beginning of the planning process, teachers consider the  summative assessment tasks, and then work backwards to ensure that instruction  and formative assessment opportunities are  appropriately placed. The Alberta Assessment Consortium Grade 3 performance  assessment task, Making a Difference, models a sequence of instruction and formative  assessment designed to support students toward successful completion of the  task. Formative assessment tools guide students through peer feedback and  self-reflection processes.                       |