Question 7 – How can summative assessment (assessment of learning) enrich the learning  process?
	Summative assessment is a natural extension of the learning  process. Teachers make decisions about summative assessment strategies based on  an understanding of the nature of the learner outcomes. Tests may be  appropriate for some outcomes; performance assessments and critical challenges  are a natural choice for other outcomes that require demonstration and  application of skills and processes.  
	Howard Gardner states: 
	
	  “A good assessment instrument can  be a learning experience. But more to the point, it is extremely desirable to  have assessment occur in the context of students working on problems, projects  or products that genuinely engage them, hold their interest, and motivate them  to do well.” 
	    Gardner 1993, p.178 
     
	Students who use formative assessment to guide their  learning find that culminating assessments can be "occasions of pleasure"  (Gardner Disciplined Mind 132). This can be  especially true if teachers create rich engaging tasks that provide authentic  opportunities for students to solve problems.  Performance assessment tasks and critical challenges engage students and  provide them with the opportunity to demonstrate their learning in authentic  contexts. When students understand the learning goals and believe that success  is within reach, they will approach tests with confidence and enthusiasm.
     
                    	
    
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