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Introductory Note to the Reader I wrote this post as both a
teacher educator and a curriculum developer, currently reflecting on my
professional practice after participating in a faculty development course on
evaluation through Calidad Docente
at Universidad Latina. This course
led me to rethink how we approach evaluation in the English Language Teaching
(ELT) classroom, not only as a way to measure learning, but more importantly,
as a process to support it. In what follows, I explore
the difference between evaluation of learning and evaluation for learning, with a focus on formative assessment, student
agency, and how meaningful feedback
can transform the classroom into a space for authentic growth. This
reflection stems from a deep belief that grammar and vocabulary are not end
goals but tools to support real communication, and that our assessments
should mirror that purpose. |
From Control to Understanding:
Rethinking Evaluation in ELT Classrooms
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Abstract This reflective essay explores the shift from
traditional evaluation models based on control and final grading toward
formative assessment practices that foster understanding and student growth.
Grounded in insights from Unidad
Didáctica 1 and supported by ELT research, the piece advocates for
feedback-rich environments where learners co-construct knowledge and teachers
act as facilitators. Written from the perspective of a teacher educator and
curriculum developer, the essay emerges from personal reflection after
completing a faculty development course on evaluation through Calidad Docente
at Universidad Latina. Key themes include evaluation for learning, formative
assessment, and the development of student agency through feedback. |
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Resumen Este ensayo reflexivo examina el paso de
modelos tradicionales de evaluación centrados en el control y la calificación
final hacia prácticas formativas que promuevan la comprensión y el
crecimiento del estudiante. Basado en ideas de la Unidad Didáctica 1 y respaldado por investigaciones en enseñanza
del inglés, el texto aboga por entornos donde el feedback sea constante, los
estudiantes construyan el conocimiento en conjunto y los docentes actúen como
facilitadores. Escrito desde la perspectiva de un formador de docentes y
diseñador curricular, el ensayo nace de la reflexión personal tras cursar una
capacitación sobre evaluación ofrecida por Calidad Docente en la Universidad
Latina. Entre los temas centrales se destacan la evaluación para el
aprendizaje, la evaluación formativa y el fomento de la autonomía
estudiantil. |
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Resumo Este ensaio reflexivo analisa a transição de
modelos tradicionais de avaliação baseados no controle e na nota final para
práticas formativas que promovem a compreensão e o desenvolvimento do aluno.
Baseado nas ideias da Unidad Didáctica
1 e fundamentado em pesquisas na área de ensino de inglês, o texto
defende ambientes de aprendizagem onde o feedback é constante, os alunos
constroem conhecimento em colaboração e os professores atuam como
facilitadores. Escrito do ponto de vista de um formador de professores e
desenvolvedor curricular, o ensaio resulta de uma reflexão pessoal após
participar de um curso de formação docente sobre avaliação promovido pela
Calidad Docente da Universidad Latina. Os temas centrais incluem avaliação
para a aprendizagem, avaliação formativa e a promoção da autonomia do aluno. |
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Reflecting on today’s language teaching
environments, the concept of evaluation should be undergoing a significant
transformation. As a teacher educator, I have come to believe that the way we
assess our students says much about our educational values and teaching
philosophy. Are we measuring retention or nurturing growth? Are we issuing
grades or fostering reflection? Drawing on insights from Unidad Didáctica 1: El sentido actual de la evaluación en educación
(MEP, n.d.) and other key thinkers in the field, this essay outlines the shift
from an evaluation rooted in control to one grounded in understanding,
especially as it applies to English Language Teaching (ELT).
Beyond
Grades: Redefining Evaluation vs. Assessment
Before any pedagogical shift can occur, teachers
must first recognize the important distinction between evaluation and assessment.
In many contexts, the former is linked to assigning grades, often summative in
nature, while the latter refers to the broader, formative processes that
support learner development (Brown & Abeywickrama, 2010). A well-prepared
language teacher does not merely deliver content and verify mastery through
tests; rather, they must create meaningful,
scaffolded learning activities that allow students to produce output,
reflect on their performance, and grow.
This broader perspective aligns with the
constructivist view of learning in Unidad
Didáctica 1, which emphasizes that evaluation should guide instruction and
allow learners to demonstrate how they are building knowledge, not merely what
they’ve memorized. “Assessment should be used to support learning and help
students improve, not just to classify or penalize them” (MEP, n.d., p. 5, own
translation).
In communicative classrooms, this means creating
tasks where students can engage in meaningful
language use, rather than simply retrieving isolated grammar forms. As
Richards (2006) reminds us, “Grammar is a resource for communication, not just
a set of rules to be memorized” (p. 6).
From
Control to Comprehension: A Paradigm Shift
Unidad Didáctica 1 urges educators to move from “evaluación como control” (evaluation
as control), characterized by final exams and standardized scores, to “evaluación como proceso de comprensión”
(evaluation as understanding). This transformation parallels what Black and
Wiliam (1998) refer to as the transition from assessment of learning to
assessment for learning.
Evaluation as control tends to reduce language
learning to isolated grammatical items, checked through discrete-point testing.
Its primary focus is on verifying outcomes and determining whether students
pass or fail. In contrast, evaluation as understanding invites teachers to diagnose learning in real-time, use
feedback loops, and adapt instruction to learner needs. It encourages students
to reflect on their performance, identify gaps, and develop strategies to grow
(Heritage, 2010).
In practical terms, this might mean replacing a
grammar test with a reflective speaking activity where learners receive
formative feedback. As Fulcher and Davidson (2007) argue, “Language assessment
is not just about determining what learners can do now; it should provide
information that can shape what they do next” (p. 12).
An
Ethical Commitment to Learners
Unidad Didáctica 1 also reminds us that
evaluation is not merely a technical process, but an ethical one. Language teachers have a duty to align with
institutional standards and syllabi, which represent a contract between teacher
and learner. When assessment deviates arbitrarily from these norms, through
what might be called “fly-by” grading, it undermines both transparency and
fairness.
As Brookhart (2013) notes, “Good assessment is
ethical. It requires transparency in goals, fairness in application, and
feedback that supports learning” (p. 15). Instructors must therefore ensure
that students understand the purpose and criteria of evaluation tools, and they
must avoid subjective impressions when assigning scores. Meanwhile, learners
must recognize feedback as a valuable tool, not a judgment.
Assessment
in Action: Strategies for ELT
To enact these principles in the ELT classroom,
teachers can draw on several practical strategies:
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Backward design (Wiggins & McTighe, 2005), which starts
with learning outcomes and plans instruction in reverse, ensures that
assessment aligns with communicative goals, not isolated grammar points.
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Checklists and rubrics make expectations visible and can be used not
just for grading, but for providing specific feedback that supports student
autonomy.
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Peer assessment protocols encourage reflection and accountability when
used with scaffolding. For example, learners can adopt a simple format: “One
thing you did well, and two things to improve.”
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ePortfolios allow students and teachers to track growth
over time and reflect on language development across multiple tasks.
All of these tools embody what Unidad Didáctica 1 advocates: evaluation
that is continuous, dialogic, and focused on learner understanding rather than
teacher control (MEP, n.d., pp. 6–7).
Transforming
Teacher Identity through Reflective Evaluation
When teachers shift from assessing what students
know to how they grow, their professional identity also
evolves. Teachers become guides and
facilitators, not gatekeepers. However, this shift can be difficult in
systems driven by grades, standardized curricula, and parent or institutional
pressure.
In my role as a teacher educator, I help
trainees understand that grammar-focused
testing is not inherently wrong, but incomplete. As Dr. Richards (2006)
emphasizes, grammar should be seen “as a means to develop fluency and accuracy
in communication, not an end in itself” (p. 6). By helping teachers adopt
reflective lesson planning and incorporate rubrics, portfolios, and formative
tasks, we promote an assessment model that values meaning-making, pragmatics, and
negotiation of meaning, the true fabric of language use.
Conclusion
In ELT, as in all education, we must ask
ourselves: Are we assessing to control or to understand? The future of
evaluation lies in its capacity to empower rather than rank, to illuminate
learning rather than obscure it. When teachers design assessments that align
with how learners build knowledge, and treat feedback as a moral
responsibility, we create classrooms where language development becomes a
shared, reflective, and human experience.
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References
Black, P., &
Wiliam, D. (1998). Assessment and classroom learning. Assessment in Education: Principles, Policy & Practice, 5(1),
7–74. https://doi.org/10.1080/0969595980050102
Brookhart, S. M.
(2013). How to create and use rubrics for
formative assessment and grading. ASCD.
Brown, H. D.,
& Abeywickrama, P. (2010). Language
assessment: Principles and classroom practices (2nd ed.). Pearson Longman.
Fulcher, G.,
& Davidson, F. (2007). Language
testing and assessment: An advanced resource book. Routledge.
Heritage, M.
(2010). Formative assessment: Making it
happen in the classroom. Corwin.
Ministerio de
Educación Pública (MEP). (n.d.). Unidad
Didáctica 1: El sentido actual de la evaluación en educación. Retrieved
from http://calameo.com/read/004414688fb9501437d4a
Richards, J. C.
(2006). Communicative language teaching
today. Cambridge University Press.
Wiggins, G.,
& McTighe, J. (2005). Understanding
by Design (Expanded 2nd ed.). ASCD.