1 / 14

WELCOME!

WELCOME!. WELCOME!. SPRING 2008 Early Performance Assessment in Language Arts Grade 2 E-PAL Form - H. OVERVIEW OF THE GRADE 2 E-PAL.

asta
Download Presentation

WELCOME!

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. WELCOME! WELCOME! SPRING 2008Early Performance Assessment in Language ArtsGrade 2 E-PALForm - H

  2. OVERVIEW OF THE GRADE 2 E-PAL • Early Performance Assessment in Language Arts (E-Pal) is a component of the Early Childhood Literary Assessment System (ECLAS-2). It is a continuation of the kit for Grades 2 and 3. • E-PAL holistically assesses: • Listening/Writing and Reading/Writing-in–Response-to-Literature • AND • Writing Mechanics • It is administered over two days • The classroom teacher administers and scores this assessment • Eligibility • Only those students who have mastered Level 5 or higher of the Reading Accuracy & Comprehension activities of the Reading Strand in either the fall or spring administration of the ECLAS-2 Kit should be given this E-PAL assessment.

  3. WHAT DOES the Grade 2 E-PAL LOOK LIKE? • The E-PAL assessment contains: • One listening passage (located in the Teacher Directions) • One reading passage (located in the Student Response Book) • Two questions per selection: • One graphic organizer • One extended-response question

  4. WHAT IS HOLISTIC SCORING? Holistic scoring produces a single score on overall student performance. Using the rubrics in the Scoring Guide, you will assess multiple responses as one unit rather than evaluating each response individually. Be sure to read all applicable responses before assigning a single score. Do not score each question separately. E-PAL is scored holistically, you do not score each question separately.

  5. SCORING GRADE 2 E-PAL SCORING LISTENING/WRITING – AND READING/WRITING-IN-RESPONSE-TO-LITERATURE • You will refer to the Scoring Guide for the: • General rubrics – top of page • Specific rubrics – bottom of page • Student anchor papers • Use general rubrics + specific rubrics + anchors to arrive at one holistic score per passage. SCORING WRITING MECHANICS • General rubrics • Student anchor papers • Use general rubrics + anchors to arrive at one holistic score for both passages.

  6. SCORING GRADE 2 E-PAL GENERAL RUBRICS • Describe the elements necessary to determine a high, medium, or low score • Can be used to score any writing sample SPECIFIC RUBRICS • Describe ways in which a student’s response to a particular passage deals with • text specific themes • insightful interpretation of the text • key element of text • basic story line/main ideas • main characters

  7. SCORING GRADE 2 E-PAL LISTENING / READING / WRITING The student receives a Listening/Writing score for Day 1 and a Reading/Writing score for Day 2. The score for each day is obtained by scoring that day’s graphic organizer and the extended-response question together. LISTENING / WRITINGDAY 1 Maximum: 3 points READING / WRITINGDAY 2Maximum: 3 points 2 4 1 3 WRITING MECHANICS The student receives only one Writing Mechanics score for both Day 1 and Day 2. The writing Mechanics score is obtained by scoring the extended-response questions (2 and 4) together. The graphic organizers are not scored for Writing Mechanics. DAYS 1 and 2 Maximum: 3 points 4 2

  8. SCORING GRADE 2 E-PAL What if the student doesn't answer all of the questions or copies from the text? LISTENING / WRITING and READING / WRITING • If the student attempted only one of the two questions for a passage, the Listening/ Writing or Reading/Writing score is either oneor zero, depending on the quality of the response. • If the student didn't answer eitherof the questions accompanying a passage, the Listening/Writing or Reading/Writing score for that passage is zero. • If the student responses consist primarily of appropriate textthat is copied, there is no Reading/Writing penalty. Appropriate textis text that addresses the question. If student responses consist primarily of inappropriate text that is copied, the Reading/Writing score is zero. Inappropriate textis text that does not address the question. • If the student responses contain only rudimentary writing or are incomprehensible, completely off-topic, or a refusal, the Listening/Writing or Reading/Writing score for the passage is zero.

  9. SCORING GRADE 2 E-PAL What if the student doesn't answer all of the questions or copies from the text? WRITING MECHANICS • If the student answered onlyone of the two extended-response questions (Question 2 or 4), there is no Writing Mechanics penalty. Score the response based on the Writing Mechanics rubric. However, if the student did not answer eitherextended-response question, the Writing Mechanics score is zero. • If the extended-response answers are unreadable or consist primarily of copied portions of the text, with little or no original writing, or of random letters or letter strings, the Writing Mechanics score is zero.

  10. RECORDING THE SCORES • Score the Student Response Book • Record scores on inside front cover of the Student Response Book • The Class Record Sheet is an optional form that you may use if you wish to maintain a record of scores for your entire class. It can be found in the back of the Scoring Guide. • Bubble in student’s scores on the ECLAS-2 Data Collection Document

  11. RECORDING THE SCORES Inside front cover of the Student Response Book

  12. RECORDING THE SCORES The Class Record Sheet

  13. RECORDING THE SCORES The Data Collection Document (Bubble Sheet)

  14. Questions? We’ll be glad to help you! Alba Langenthal ALangen@schools.nyc.gov Trudy Licht TLicht@schools.nyc.gov Iris Rothstein IRothstein@schools.nyc.gov

More Related