TY - BOOK AU - Brookhart,Susan M TI - How to assess higher-order thinking skills in your classroom SN - 9781416610489 AV - LB1590.B872.H698 2010 PY - 2010/// CY - Alexandria, Virginia PB - American SamoaCD KW - Thought and thinking KW - Study and teaching (Secondary) KW - Critical thinking KW - Cognition in children N1 - 2; General principles for assessing higher-order thinking --; Assessing analysis, evaluation, and creation --; Assessing logic and reasoning --; Assessing judgment --; Assessing problem solving --; Assessing creativity and creative thinking; 2 N2 - Educators know it's important to get students to engage in "higher-order thinking." But what does higher-order thinking actually look like? And how can K 12 classroom teachers assess it across the disciplines? Author, consultant, and former classroom teacher Susan M. Brookhart answers these questions and more in this straightforward, practical guide to assessment that can help teachers determine if students are actually displaying the kind of complex thinking that current content standards emphasize. Brookhart begins by laying out principles for assessment in general and for assessment of higher-order thinking in particular. She then defines and describes aspects of higher-order thinking according to the categories established in leading taxonomies, giving specific guidance on how to assess students in the following areas: analysis, evaluation, and creation; logic and reasoning; judgment; problem solving; and creativity and creative thinking. Examples drawn from the National Assessment of Educational Progress and from actual classroom teachers include multiple-choice items, constructed-response (essay) items, and performance assessment tasks. Readers will learn how to use formative assessment to improve student work and then use summative assessment for grading or scoring. Aimed at elementary, middle, and high school teachers in all subject areas, How to Assess Higher-Order Thinking Skills in Your Classroom provides essential background, sound advice, and thoughtful insight into an area of increasing importance for the success of students in the classroom--and in life ER -