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A program evaluation
judges the quality and success of the program.
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The primary question to
be answered in any program evaluation is, How well is the program
working in relation to goals and expectations for the students?
With a school mathematics program, the question is, How well does
it achieve the vision of the Curriculum, Evaluation, Teaching, and
Assessment Standards? The term program is used here to refer
to any significant unit of instruction. Examples of programs include
a thematic unit involving ratio and proportion, a course involving
precalculus mathematics, all the mathematics courses at a middle
school, a districts mathematics curriculum, and the implementation
of a state mathematics framework across schools and districts.
The Assessment Standards
represent criteria with which to judge the quality of mathematics
assessments, whether in a full program evaluation or as assessment
components within a program. Evaluating the assessment components
of a program involves making judgments about how well they provide
information for such educational purposes as monitoring students
progress, supporting teachers instructional decisions, and
evaluating students achievementtopics discussed elsewhere
in this document. The discussion in this section deals with the
use of assessments as a source of information for evaluating programs.
A program evaluation uses
student performance data with other evidence to judge the quality
and success of the program. Information on students achievement
produced through assessment may be used for making decisions about
continuing a program or for making modifications in an ongoing program.
Many questions about such programs can be answered by directly assessing
students knowledge of mathematics as they progress through
the program
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