Parvin Peivandi , IB reflection, Dec 3rd, 2014
This IB seminar was about reporting in the IB, internal assessment and external assessment. The new assessment system that is employed in IB is cumulative and students have the whole year to continue working on meeting the same objectives. Also no averages are taken. I learned a lot about the things that IB teachers should avoid in the assessment: Teachers should avoid grading based on the proportion of scores for class work, homework and test. Teachers should not averaging summative performance score over the year and teachers should not determine the final grade by looking at one single piece.
All these criteria got me reflecting on my own education, old, traditional schooling which still exist in many educational system. In the old educational systems without all these assessment sheets, rubrics and disciplines, there was no respect for the students’ rights and grades are mostly affected by the personal preferences and judgments of the teachers. Students do not have chance to show their progress and be assessed over the year and any fail is counted in their final grade. There is no need to say how much frustration the old traditional system would bring for the students and how it can influence the students’ motivation for learning and growth. In comparison, the IB education lets the student to achieve the educational objectives and goals over the year and feel responsible always to correct their mistakes and progress. IB education motivates the students to learn and think profoundly rather than performing just for the time of final exams.