I remember becoming sensitive to problems with congruence between what was taught, and what was on the test as far back as junior high school. In some ways, it may have even motivated me to become a teacher myself. In certain classes, the teachers would teach various content from certain chapters and lectures, and then mix a few questions into the chapter test from a completely different chapter. The unfairness of this certainly caught my attention. Nevertheless, I believe that congruence can be lacking not only in a misalignment of learning outcomes versus assessment, but can also be an issue in other ways. For me, a lack of congruence in instruction was the most frustrating part about attending university to become a teacher. I can remember a science teaching methods course very clearly. The course was supposed to be a practical methods course, where we were to learn various ways of structuring our science lessons in teaching science to elementary-aged students. All the classes were in-person, in a typical university classroom. To my dismay, the professor simply lectured us about various ways of organizing and presenting lessons to students. I remember wondering why the professor did not see that she was missing an opportunity to teach teaching methods by modelling those teaching methods herself and involving us as “students”. This has stuck with me, and I believe that congruence can also be important with how a teacher personally models the attributes they are claiming to be important.
September 20, 2023
EDDL 5111 Blog Post #2: Congruence
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gjohnson
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hwinsnes
September 21, 2023 — 3:20 pm
Hello Geoff
I completely understand! I was in a grade team, and we were developing a final exam for grade 7 LA and SS. We all sat at the table to review the past exam and determine what would stay, change, or go. The exam had 200 multiple-choice questions, and many had terms and ideas above the grade 7 curriculum, but the teacher who supported these ideas was insistent they stayed. When I asked them why, they said it stops students from getting 100%. How absurd to purposefully put in questions to ensure your grades are lower. My students wrote this exam and were confronted with questions they had never seen before, and when they asked me why, I found I had no good response. Don’t even get me started on the reasoning behind some teachers and the construction of a multiple-choice exam! We need to be congruent in our teaching and assessment models for teachers to assess learning and for students to show understanding. After all, isn’t that our purpose – to see what they learned?
glammie
September 26, 2023 — 3:34 pm
Hi Geoff,
I have also struggled with congruence between what was taught and what was assessed. I have often sat exams and wondered if I had missed significant segments of lessons as there were questions on the exam that the content for such did not appear in the instructions. I am working intentionally so as not to create such issues for my students.