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2004 National Evaluation Institute
Keynote Speakers |
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Carol Anne Dwyer |
Robert Linn CRESST/University of Colorado, Boulder Robert L. Linn is professor of education at the University of Colorado at Boulder and Co-director of CRESST. Receiving his PhD from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign with a specialization in psychometrics in 1965, Dr. Linn has published over 150 articles dealing with a wide range of theoretical and practical issues in educational measurement. He has served as president of the National Council on Measurement in Education, President of the Division of Evaluation and Measurement of the American Psychological Association, and vice president of the American Educational Research Association for the Division of Measurement and Research Methodology. Among the many honors Dr. Linn has received for his contributions to educational measurement are the E.L. Thorndike Award in 1992, the E.F. Lindquist Award in 1993, and the American Educational Research Association (AERA) Award for Distinguished Contributions to Educational Research in 1997. |
Robert Marzano Dr. Robert Marzano is president of Marzano & Associates. He is the author of more than 20 books, 150 articles and chapters in books, and more than 100 curriculum guides and related materials for teachers and students in grades K-12. His works include Classroom Management that Works, What Works in Schools, Classroom Instruction that Works, and multiple other publications. Over his 35 years in education, Marzano has worked in every U.S. state and a host of countries in Europe and Asia. The central theme of his work has been translating research and theory into practical programs and tools for K-12 teachers and administrators. In addition to his duties at Marzano & Associates, he is a senior scholar at Mid-continent Research for Education and Learning (McREL), an associate professor at Cardinal Stritch University, and vice president at Pathfinder Education. Marzano earned his B.A. degree in English at Iona College, his M.Ed. degree in reading and language arts at Seattle University, and his Ph.D. in curriculum and instruction at the University of Washington. He has also written more than twenty sections for other books, including: Minimal Competency Testing The Effects of Standardized Testing Student Evaluation Standards Bloom’s Taxonomy: A Forty Year Retrospective Instructional Barriers to School Change Taxonomy for Learning, Teaching & Assessing: A Revision of Bloom’s Taxonomy of Educational Objectives |