I believe that young children holistic should be assessed because the ongoing research program in which instruments are developed to assess development through standardized situations, cover a wide array: (1) emotional health, (2) exploratory drive, (3) understanding of the physical world, (4) social competence, (5) communication and expression, (6) creativity, (7) musical perception, (8) self-organization and entrepreneurs (Bennett, J., & Leonarduzzi, S., 2004). All these area play a vital role in early childhood development because they will help young children to grow up to be adults who are self-confident and mentally healthy, curious and exploratory, expressive and communicative, imaginative and creative, well organized and entrepreneurial (Bennett, J., & Leonarduzzi, S., 2004). These areas will help children with developing intuitions about the social and physical world and feeling belonging and connections to the world around them.
European Assessment
Waldorf, Montessori, and Reggio Emilia are three progressive approaches to early childhood education that appear to be growing in influence in North America and to have many points in common (ECRP, 2004). In all three approaches, children are assessed by means other than traditional tests and grades. Instead, parents receive extensive descriptive information about their children's daily life and progress and share in culminating productions or performances (ECRP, 2004). Portfolios or other products of children's individual and group work may be displayed and sent home at key intervals and transitions (ECRP, 2004). Yet as the three approaches increasingly interact with the world of public school education, dialogue is leading to greater focus on authentic and valid ways of conducting assessment and evaluation (ECRP, 2004). The American Montessori Association issued a position paper on "Learning and Assessment" that recommends that assessment procedures in American classrooms move toward formats (such as portfolios, presentations, multimedia projects) that more authentically gauge children's ability to interrelate ideas, think critically, and use information meaningfully (ECRP, 2004).
I believe that although we try to measure and assess our children, we still provide our parents with crucial information about their children’s progression and performances. Well at least I do with my parents. I send news letter home every week to inform my parents on how their children are doing in the classroom. I also let them know what we are working on for the week and how they can extend it at home. Although, I send news letters home every week, I also talk to my parents every day when they drop their children off for school. So, I am communicating daily and weekly with my parents. I do think our children should be assessed, but I don’t want it to affect the children in a way where high test scores matter most, and in which they will be pressured to produce these scores.
References:
Bennett, J., & Leonarduzzi, S. (2004). Starting Strong Curriculum and Pedagogies in Early Childhood Education and Care: Five Curriculum Outlines. Retrieved October 17, 2011, from http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/23/36/31672150.pdf
Edwards, C. P. (2002). Three Approaches from Europe: Waldorf, Montessori, and Reggio Emilia. European Psychologist, 4(1), 1524-5039. Retrieved October 17, 2011, from http://ecrp.uiuc.edu/v4n1/edwards.html
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