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Classroom Assessment: What Teachers Need to Know

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This is the eBook of the printed book and may not include any media, website access codes, or print supplements that may come packaged with the bound book.

 

Jim Popham’s widely popular Classroom Assessment shows teachers how to use classroom testing skillfully and formatively to dramatically increase their teaching effectiveness and make a difference in how well students learn. As in past editions, the author pays particular attention to the instructional payoffs of well-designed classroom tests and highlights the implications of testing on teaching throughout in special But What Does This Have to Do with Teaching? sections in each chapter. Decision Time vignettes present practical classroom problems and show readers actual decisions being made. Parent Talk features describe situations in which a teacher needs to explain something about assessment to parents and show what the author would say in that situation. And a lighter tone is established with cartoons to which readers can relate. The new Eighth Edition highlights the increasing importance of educational assessment in an era of common core state standards and teacher evaluations based on students’ tests scores, incorporates the Standards for Educational and Psychological testing guidelines throughout relevant sections, and includes a new section on instructionally diagnostic tests to help readers evaluate the merits of commercial or locally developed diagnostic assessment.

 

420 pages, Kindle Edition

First published November 1, 1994

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About the author

W. James Popham

95 books4 followers

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5 stars
45 (19%)
4 stars
78 (34%)
3 stars
71 (31%)
2 stars
25 (11%)
1 star
8 (3%)
Displaying 1 - 21 of 21 reviews
Profile Image for Angela.
9 reviews
June 21, 2025
I know many people enjoy the personalized commentary in Popham’s book, but I did not. I found too many of the parts of the book went off into personal narratives of I did this, or I did that, and I published this, and in my personal opinion, and I may be biased, but I think, etc. I found the side bars occurred too often and the personalized information distracting and not relevant to what I was trying to understand. It’s very wordy and not very concise.

It is written as a personal narrative about classroom assessment, which was hard for me to stay focused reading. Example, “complex syntax, although it sounds something like an exotic surcharge on cigarettes and alcohol, is often encountered in the assessment items of neophyte item writers” (P.169). Or, “I must confess to a mild bias towards this oft-used item type because for over 20 years I used such tests as the final exam examinations in an introductory educational measurement course I taught in the UCLA Graduate School of Education” (p.174). Another unnecessary sidebar, “I recently authored an essay appearing in an academic journal, whose articles are published in both English and Turkish. It was an invited article about the importance of providing actionable reports of students performances if any test is to be employed instructionally. Unable to speak or write in Turkish, I relied on oral translations of my English language blather. My analysis pleaded with our Turkish colleagues to report formatively oriented test performances of students so that they can be reported as readily usable “right size“ information. I hope that this is the main idea of the Turkish version” (p.343). I honestly don’t even know why that bit was in the chapter. There are multiple examples of this throughout each chapter of the book. It just makes the entire thing insufferable to read.

Bottom line, if this wasn’t a required for an upper level graduate course, I would have passed on it. It is not a book that I would have chosen to read, and one that would be better if it were as explicitly written as it proposes test items should be.

30 reviews
March 3, 2009
This is probably the most readable textbook I have ever encountered. I congratulate Mr. Popham. Plus, if you're going to be a teacher, assessment is pretty important thing to know about.
Profile Image for Logan.
532 reviews3 followers
January 20, 2023
6/10:
I started reading this during the Spring 2022 semester for a class I was taking, but didn’t get around to finishing it until today, nearly an entire calendar year after starting it. This is a pretty solid resource as someone entering the field of education, but I don’t see it being much use to those who have been teaching for decades.

Not a perfect resource, but one that I’ll most likely keep in my classroom with me.
Profile Image for Sara Cook.
90 reviews
April 7, 2026
The author tried to make this entertaining, but some of the comments just didn’t feel useful. Also the comics added throughout made no sense half the time. I started to just ignore them altogether. Maybe I just have a different sense of humor.
There were also things that I wish had more detail and examples. I did learn things from this book, but it wouldn’t be my immediate go-to for some of the concepts.
Profile Image for Educator Barnes.
28 reviews
August 2, 2021
Popham provided a variety of information about assessment in a way that would be understandable to educators. My one issue with this book is that the author constantly used the phrase “as you can see.” Every sentence the phrase is in would be fine without the phrase.
Profile Image for Kathy Dyer.
182 reviews
September 16, 2022
How many times do you come across a textbook with personal stories and witty comments by the author? I wish I had discovered this textbook years ago. Straightforward and clear explanations of assessment jargon that all teachers need to know. I particularly appreciated the chapter on portfolios.
Profile Image for Andrea.
5 reviews
April 26, 2020
The author is guilty of magniloquence but the book has important information and is useful for new teachers.
Profile Image for John Garcia- Landry.
25 reviews
May 29, 2020
I highly enjoyed reading this book as part of my Educational Measurement Class. This book is very thorough and well-written.


All the best,

John Garcia-Landry
Profile Image for Meegan.
94 reviews3 followers
July 2, 2024
For a grad school book this was actually really interesting. Definitely learned more about assessment and one of the few grad books that I will keep 👏🏻👏🏻
Profile Image for Jennifer.
53 reviews7 followers
December 25, 2011
This book has some good information. Many chapters I absolutely agreed with and found very informative.

However, I think the main points could be greatly distilled into an even more useful, short handbook for teacher's to refer to as opposed to the full textbook.

Also very elementary teacher geared.

Only a teacher with one class of students would ever be able to implement some of the improvements suggested in this book.

I'm not discounting elementary teachers, but a lot of this text is overly idealistic and it's difficult to read as such.

This is the first textbook I read all 16 chapters of. I did not complete the extended exercises; but having read the entire text, I think, is quite an accomplishment.

Also, the last few chapters really are worth reading, despite some in the middle getting quite bogged down.
Profile Image for Julianna.
40 reviews
April 1, 2015
While extremely readable, this textbook was not one that I would recommend buying. Rent or borrow it if you can. Most of the information provided was what I would consider to be general knowledge among teachers and nothing that would be found to be new or enlightening. I found it to be rather repetitious and in need of some good editing. This was a fine supplementary text to my graduate course on classroom assessment, however I don't feel the need to hold on to it for future reference.
Profile Image for Courtney Hatch.
850 reviews22 followers
May 22, 2016
He uses a pretty casual tone, which makes it easier to get through. I kept thinking that it could use a better editing job, though, as some points are reviewed over and over. To me, one of the best things you can take away from reading this book is how to interpret standardized testing and the place that high stakes testing has in current classrooms.
15 reviews2 followers
April 19, 2014
Fairly easy read. Very informative. Many parts went over my head simply because I have a hard time with data and statistics not because of the presentation of the author. Popham did a really good job of spicing up an otherwise boring topic.
Profile Image for Cora Lee.
Author 21 books87 followers
June 11, 2016
One of the better textbooks I've read. It was full of practical information and very well written. Would I pick it up and read it for fun? No. Will I keep it around for further reference? Quite possibly.
Profile Image for Brenda.
5 reviews1 follower
June 21, 2008
This book should be required reading for every classroom teacher. If they were not required to take a course in classroom assessment this book will definately help!
Profile Image for Amanda.
89 reviews
April 16, 2017
Sometimes it felt a bit dry, but if you stick with it there is some hidden gems of humor that made me smile. I think this will be a good reference for learning to assess my students and my teaching as I start my career. It made me think about assessment in a new way and I am grateful for that.
Displaying 1 - 21 of 21 reviews