Teaching 21st Century Skills Requires New Assessments
        A new report from the Brookings Institution finds technology will play an integral part of assessing the ability of students to grasp 21st century skills.
        
        
         
As schools invest more time teaching students critical  thinking skills, the need to invest in technology to enable measurement of  teaching methods will become increasingly important, according a  report from the Brookings Institution.  The report examines how 21st  century skills are becoming a central part of teaching in countries around the  world and how to address assessment needs.
"When the skills are complex, it is important to know the  process of how you came up with an answer especially when the skills output is  not easily defined," said Alvin Vista, a fellow for the Center of Universal Education  at Brookings. "The process of coming up with the creative output is more  important than the technology itself. Technology allows you capture other stuff  like processes. All of the background data can be captured using technology. It  gives the assessment investigators more data to work with."
These skills involve critical thinking, creativity, problem  solving, communication and socio-economic skills.  There are assessments already in existence  such as the SimScientists program,  which uses simulations to assess science learning.
"Because 21st century skills are comparatively more complex,  non-routine and dynamic, the measurement process needs to take into account  their application in real-life and non-familiar situations," the report noted.
Challenges can arise when it comes to assessment design owing  to how these skills are interrelated and complex.  Since the skills are also generic and  transferable, problems also arise when it comes to adding "domain-specific  knowledge." 
Validating the assessments can also prove difficult owing to  the various interpretations involved in the measurement process. "Establishing  construct validity — how well the assessment measures what it is intended to measure  — is challenging when working with complex constructs, with no clear  operational definitions of the skills.  A  related challenge is in establishing the set of standards which can be accepted  as evidence for whatever inferences we make related to the target construct,"  the report found.
Assessment can be used by teachers to solve several  problems:
  - Locate students along a learning progression and  identify gaps in achievement.
- Adapt instructional practices to individual  needs and information instructional improvement.
- Track and communicate student progress.
- Inform data-driven decision-making at  classroom and school levels.
The  full Brookings report can be found here.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    
 Sara Friedman is a reporter/producer for Campus Technology, THE Journal and STEAM Universe covering education policy and a wide range of other public-sector IT topics.
Sara Friedman is a reporter/producer for Campus Technology, THE Journal and STEAM Universe covering education policy and a wide range of other public-sector IT topics.
Friedman is a graduate of Ithaca College, where she studied journalism, politics and international communications.
Friedman can be contacted at [email protected] or follow her on Twitter @SaraEFriedman.
Click here for previous articles by Friedman.