Designing inclusive assessments
Assessment can make or break an inclusive classroom. Done well, it opens doors; done poorly, it can shut them. The GSE helps you design assessments that:
- Reflect real skill growth
- Allow different ways to demonstrate learning
- Maintain high standards with flexibility
To make this work in practice, you can:
- Use performance-based tasks (like presentations or role-plays)
- Build portfolios that show progress over time
- Add self- and peer-assessment using GSE descriptors
- Offer flexible formats (such as oral, written, visual and tech-based)
Example: For the goal “Can understand short, simple personal emails and letters", let learners choose between writing to a friend, replying to an invitation, or requesting information from a company. The objective is the same, but the paths to get there are different.
And for learners who are neurodiverse? You can:
- Break tasks into smaller steps (chunking)
- Use visual checklists tied to “can-do” goals
- Simplify instructions without watering down the objective
- Add audio or visual options to support processing
These aren’t extra accommodations, they’re examples of good teaching.
To recap, the GSE helps us set goals with students, track progress via portfolios, offer task choices, scaffold lessons, introduce ESP content when ready and design group work based on GSE strengths.