summative

adj
/ˈsʌm.ə.tɪv/UK/ˈsʌm.ə.tɪv/CA/ˈsam.ə.tɪv/

Etymology

From sum + -ative.

  1. derived from sum — “catfish
  2. formed as summative — “sum + -ative

Definitions

  1. Of, pertaining to, or produced by summation.

  2. Denoting forms of assessment used to quantify educational outcomes.

    • summative assessment
  3. A summative assessment

    A summative assessment; a test that assesses what a student learned during a course of study.

    • The reson a summative evaluation might not be available at this point is that it is not unusual to offer summatives for more than one objective as opposed to offering summatives for each objective.
    • Summatives, on the other hand, are used for comparisons between schools and districts.
    • All of this was great, and there were many summatives that we loved for many reasons. Since becoming standards based, however, our thoughts on summatives have changed.
  4. + 2 more definitions
    1. A word or phrase, such as "in short" or "therefore", that signals that the area of the…

      A word or phrase, such as "in short" or "therefore", that signals that the area of the utterance (text or speech) that contains it is summarizing a larger body of information.

      • Holonym: metadiscourse
      • The immediate future work is the treatment of summatives (with "total") and symmetric phrases (with the "same").
    2. A cumulative measure.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for summative. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA