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"I remember the first time that a grading rubric was attached to a piece of my writing. . . . Suddenly all the joy was taken away. I was writing for a grade-I was no longer exploring for me. I want to get that back. Will I ever get that back?"-Claire, a student
Enough has been written about academic assessment to fill a library, but when you think about it, the whole enterprise really amounts to a straightforward twostep dance. We need to collect information about how students are doing, then share that information (along with our judgments, perhaps) with the students and their parents. Gather and report - that's pretty much it.
You say the devil is in the details? Maybe so, but I'd argue that too much attention to the particulars of implementation may be distracting us from the bigger picture - or at least from a pair of remarkable conclusions that emerge from the best theory, practice, and research on the subject: Collecting information doesn't require tests, and sharing that information doesn't require grades. In fact, students would be a lot better off without either of these relics from a less enlightened age.
Why tests are not a particularly useful way to assess student learning, and what thoughtful educators do instead, are questions that must wait. Here, our task is to take a hard look at the second practice, the use of letters or numbers as evaluative summaries of how well students have done.
The Effects of Grading
Most of the criticisms of grading you'll hear today were laid out forcefully and eloquently from four to eight decades ago, and the early essays make for eye-opening reading. They remind us how long it's been clear there's something wrong with what we're doing as well as how little progress we've made in acting on that realization.
In the 1980s and '90s, educational psychologists systematically studied the effects of grades. As I've reported elsewhere (Kohn, 1999a, 1999b, 1999c), when students from elementary school to college who are led to focus on grades are compared with those who aren't, the results support three robust conclusions:
* Grades tend to diminish students' interest in whatever they're learning. A "grading orientation" and a "learning orientation" have been...