Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
11032924 | Teaching and Teacher Education | 2018 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Teachers' judgments about students' knowledge and skills can be global or specific depending on the diagnostic situation during teaching. We test the relationship between these judgments, their accuracy, and whether global judgment (GJ) accuracy can be measured by aggregating specific judgments (SJ). Judgments of 52 primary school teachers about their students' achievement in a standardized mathematics test were assessed. SJs and GJs correlated high. However, SJs were slightly more accurate than GJs. Additionally, teachers' GJ accuracy is not similar to the accuracy of aggregated SJs. We conclude that teachers use different judgment strategies for GJs and SJs.
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Authors
Karina Karst, Stefanie Dotzel, Oliver Dickhäuser,