İlköğretim Matematik Öğretmenliği Koleksiyonu

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11779/1932

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  • Book Part
    Technology in Assessment
    (Routledge, 2025) Birgili, Bengi; Chue, Kah Loong
    Globally, the evolution of technological trends has inspired the creation of technology-oriented assessments. As these assessments become more ubiquitous in schools, adopting new approaches is vital to ensure that education stays relevant and beneficial to students. Thus, the overall aim of this chapter is to illustrate how assessment processes and tools can be incorporated into future learning-oriented systems, with a particular emphasis on assessment as learning. This chapter will first introduce trajectories in technology-based assessment and highlight current trends in Artificial Intelligence. Second, changes in instructional and assessment approaches will be discussed. As developing metacognitive knowledge and skills is a central aim of assessment as learning, a discussion of metacognition will follow. Third, some recommendations in classroom assessment practices that teachers can undertake will be proposed. Finally, the chapter will conclude with some thoughts on the future intersections between technology and assessment.
  • Article
    Citation - Scopus: 3
    Assessing Mathematical Higher-Order Thinking Skills: an Analysis of Turkish University Entrance Examinations
    (Routledge, 2023) Aydın, Utkun; Birgili, Bengi
    Internationally, mathematics education reform has been directed toward characterizing educational goals that go beyond topic/content/skill descriptions and develop students’ problem solving. The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy and MATH (Mathematical Assessment Task Hierarchy) Taxonomy characterize such goals. University entrance examinations have been seen as one way of accomplishing these goals and influence learning, teaching, and assessment in mathematics. The present study analyzed mathematics items (N = 1077) in Turkish university entrance examinations in 1998-2013 and objectives (N = 621) in mathematics curricula in 2005, 2011, and 2013 to determine the extent to which they represent the dimensions/categories of these taxonomies and the degree to which items are aligned with objectives in terms of reflecting the dimensions/categories of these taxonomies. The findings reveal that the items demand, to a large extent, automated computational skills; this is also evident in the relevant mathematics curricula. Implications for practice are discussed and could play a role in reforming assessment. © 2023 The Author(s). Published with license by Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.