Using
The Internet To Assess The
NJ
Core Curriculum Content Standards In Music
The accurate assessment of performance-based
skills has long been a topic of conversation between music educators. Now, with
the onset of testing the New Jersey Core Curriculum Content Standards in Music,
the ESPA, this topic has turned into a
genuine concern.
While there are many of music education that can easily be assessed with
standardized testing methods, there are many that simply cannot. While portfolio
assessment techniques provide an opportunity for accurate assessment of
performance-based skills, using them on a state-wide level would prove to be
logistically impossible.
Imagine sending
hundreds of tape recordings to the state from each school being tested. Simply
finding someone to listen to each recording would be a daunting task, much less
finding someone to grade them. If
the assessment of these performance-based skills is left to the local music educators,
how can there be a truly accurate rating of their music students compared to
other students from around the state? If the assessment is left to state
officials, what is the logistically feasible option for delivering each
student¹s performance? If
performance-based skills are to be assessed, what is the best way to do
it? Each of these
questions has no simple answer, adding fuel to the growing concerns
of music educators
across New Jersey.
One possible
solution to these concerns is the creation of a website where music educators
could not only submit student work for assessment, but could also receive
information about the standards, read through grading rubrics, listen to
examples of the various levels of proficiency, and receive instant feedback on some
of the student work submitted. The
internet is an untapped resource in the field of educational assessment.
The following is a
blueprint for a website that would assess each of the Core Curriculum Content
Standards in Music.
Home Page
After logging on to
the website, users would have the option of choosing the teacher pages,
student, or guest pages.
Teacher Pages
After selecting the
teacher option, users would have to input their user ID and a password. This
would enable the user to access specific information about their school, and
the results on previously submitted student work. The site would be able to
keep records for each school involved. After the teacher gains access, they
would have a number of options to choose from. These options would include:
€ Instructions on
using the site.
€ Reading the actual
standards, and how they relate specifically to music.
€ Reading a
comprehensive grading rubric which would outline how students would be graded
on each of the six standards.
€ Listening to
recorded examples of each of the proficiency levels in the performance-based
standards.
€ Reading examples
of each of the proficiency levels in those standards which require a written
response.
€ Relevant links to
other similar sites, including the N.J. Department of Education.
€ Reviewing the
results of their respective school¹s music students.
Aside from these
options, teachers would be able to review the actual assessment
activities that
their students would be taking.
Student Pages
After the student
has logged on to the site, they would be asked to submit some information about
themselves, including: name, grade, age, musical experience, and
school attended.
After completing this form, students would then be directed to their respective
grade level assessment activities. Upon completion of the activities for
Standard 1.1 and 1.5, students would receive instant feedback on their performance.
For Standards 1.2, 1.3, 1.4 and 1.6, students would be asked to submit their
work, with an assessment following within a certain amount of time (perhaps one
week). Students would also have the ability to listen to and read examples of
various proficiency levels, as
well as look at the
actual grading rubric used in assessing their work.
Guest Pages
This section would
allow interested educators to take a tour of the site, read through the
standards and rubrics, and look at some sample activities. Guests would not
have access to all of the activities, nor would they be able to view the results
of any specific school or student.
They would have the option of becoming a member, which would give them
this
access.
Activity Pages
Standard 1.1
This standard is
among one of two that can be assessed with standardized testing methods. For
example, in the sample ESPA questions distributed, 5th grade music students are
expected to be able to look at pictures of various musical instruments and group
them into their respective categories (woodwind, brass, strings and
percussion). This question is able transferable to an internet activity. Students would be shown various
instruments, and underneath each picture would be a list that the students
would select from. Once they have made all of their choices, they would submit
their answers
for immediate
feedback. Music symbols, terminology, note naming, rhythmic dictation, melodic
dictation, dynamics, form, and other music theory skills could be tested using
multiple choice forms that students would complete and submit. The programming
required to grade their responses is surprisingly easy. Adjustments in difficulty level would
be made for the different grade levels being tested.
Standard 1.2
The assessment of
this performance-based standard is one of the advantages of using the internet
as an assessment device. Most newer computers come equipped with built in
microphones. Although there are definite
recording quality issues with standard built in microphones, the convenience of
recording a short example of a student either singing or performing on an
instrument and sending the file as an email attachment balances it out. Some
educators might even have digital recording capabilities that would eliminate
the recording quality problem. Students would be asked to perform either a
given composition, or a composition of their choice. Students would submit their performance
via email. This performance
would then be evaluated by a qualified music educator, and a written assessment
would be sent to the teacher within a specified amount of time (perhaps one
week) to share with the student. Grading criteria would obviously vary between
grade levels. In the event that a
school did not have any computer recording capabilities, they could submit work
through the mail on audiotape.
Standard 1.3
Here, as in the
previous standard, the internet provides a convenient and accurate
way to assess
student work, more specifically, student composition. Students could submit their compositions in one of these
four ways: As a standard MIDI file
using a notational software program.
Scanning in the score and sending it via email. Recording a performance of the piece on
to the computer, and sending it as an attachment via email.
Faxing or sending
the score through the mail. As
with the previous standard, a qualified music educator would review the composition,
and send a written assessment to the teacher within a specified amount of time
(perhaps one week) to share with the student. Once again, grading criteria
would vary between grade levels.
Standard 1.4
In this activity,
students would be asked to listen to a recording chosen from a list of
important musical works from various periods in musical history, and from a
variety of styles. Although selections could be listened to on the website, it
will be suggested to listen to an actual recording of the piece. The list will
hope - fully be diverse enough to contain a composition that most educators
would have in their collection. Upon listening to the piece, students would be
asked to create a critique of the piece. Suggestions for what to include within
the critique would be made. Here, unlike in standardized testing situations,
the student could take their time in writing the critique, and upon completion,
send it via email. This email would be read by a qualified music educator and
an assessment would be sent to the teacher within a specified period of time,
as in the previous two activities.
Grading criteria would increase in difficulty as the grade level
increases.
Standard 1.5
This standard,
dealing with historical, social and cultural aspects of music is a little more
ambiguous than the others, and could be handled in two ways: a multiple choice
test, or an essay. Students would have the choice of which assessment technique
they preferred.
Students opting for
the multiple choice examination would be asked a number of questions dealing
with various aspects of music, including the role it has played in history,
other arts, social changes and world cultures. Students opting for the essay would be asked a question that
would have students draw these relationships on their own. Perhaps a statement
about music and it¹s relationship to these aspects of history and society would
be made, and the student would have to either support or contradict the
statement, backed up with relevant reasons. While the multiple choice portion would provide students
with instant feedback, the essay would again require a qualified music educator
to read the essay and provide a grade for the response.
Standard 1.6
While the wording of
this standard might suggest composition skills in music, the Framework
Curriculum suggests that this standard deals with creating a concert program,
or programming music on a radio station. Here again is a standard that would be
difficult to assess with traditional testing methods. In this activity, students would be given a list of musical
works with a brief description of each. Some of the works would be ones that
they will hopefully know, and some that they hopefully do not know. After
reading through the list, students would be asked to create a program given certain
conditions. One program might be for a Holiday or Winter Concert, another might
be for a Spring
Concert, another
might be for an evening of chamber music. Although it would be quite easy to
have students fill out a form for each scenario and submit their answers, their
reasoning for their choices would be lost. Instead, students would be given time
to think about their answers and their reasoning for them. Upon completion of
the various programming scenarios, students would submit their programs via email
for review and assessment by a qualified music educator.
Results Page
Each student and
teacher who become members of the website would have access to their results.
It is quite possible for a website to keep records for a user, just as many commercial
websites keep track of your buying history. Students and teachers would be able to complete activities
at their own pace and convenience, and would be able to read their results
either instantly, or within a short period of time. This is one of the distinct
advantages of an assessment website over the ESPA.
Conclusion
Teachers and
students will soon find out the method for assessing the standards in music. At
the time of this writing, the 5th Grade ESPAField Test had not yet been administered.
While there are many schools in the state that do not have the ability to assess
their students work over the internet, there are many that can. All you need for
each of these activities is a computer with a word processor, internet capabilities,
and a recording device. While
certainly not the only way to assess the standards, the internet provides
educators and
students with an opportunity for accurate assessment of every aspect of music,
especially performance-based skills.
Fantasy or Reality?
As part of my
doctoral work at Teachers College at Columbia University, my dissertation will
focus on the feasibility of the internet as an assessment device. Beginning this February, I will begin
running a field test of my internet site entitled: www.music
assessment.com. This site is specifically geared for assessing
the New Jersey Core
Curriculum Content
Standards in Music, and the activities laid out in the article will become a
reality. The purpose of the site
is to provide the music educators of New Jersey
with a device for
accurate assessment of their students work with regards to the standards. If you would like to become a part of the
field study, or help in the assessment of student work, please contact me at
the email address listed in the article header. I am looking for approximately 20
schools to participate in the study.