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Curriculum-based Measurement. Dynamic indicators of basic skillsAssess curriculumBrief to be administered oftenCapable of alternate formsEfficient in terms of time and costSensitive to student growth Reliable and valid (Marston, 1989). Uses of CBM. Developing local norms for problem identifica
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1. Reading Comprehension and Math Computation Screening and Progress Monitoring Assessments for Secondary Students Carrie Urshel, Ph.D., School Psychologist
2. Curriculum-based Measurement Dynamic indicators of basic skills
Assess curriculum
Brief to be administered often
Capable of alternate forms
Efficient in terms of time and cost
Sensitive to student growth
Reliable and valid (Marston, 1989)
3. Uses of CBM Developing local norms for problem identification and goal development
Screening to identify at-risk students
Evaluating intervention support services
Monitoring student progress
Identifying students for special education services
Predicting performance on high-stakes tests (Deno 2003)
4. Creating CBM Tools Progress monitoring measure needs to reflect all curriculum objectives identified for that grade (Shapiro, 1996).
Shinn and Bamonto (1999) added that to be consistent formative evaluation measures, assessment tools must be standardized, logistically feasible, and sensitive to student growth.
Technical adequacy – reliability and validity (Tindal & Marston 1990).
5. Reading CBM Oral reading fluency (Deno, 1985)
Cloze (Tindal & Marston, 1990)
Maze (Espin & Foegen, 1996)
Vocabulary matching (Espin & Foegen, 1996)
Retell (Good et al., 2002)
Question answering (Fuchs et al., 1988)
ORF – lower correlations for older students
Cloze/maze – average scores are low, therefore, not sensitive for low achieving students; not related to instruction
Vocabulary – not sensitive to student growth
Retell/QA – good indicators of comprehension when structured rubric is used for creation and scoringORF – lower correlations for older students
Cloze/maze – average scores are low, therefore, not sensitive for low achieving students; not related to instruction
Vocabulary – not sensitive to student growth
Retell/QA – good indicators of comprehension when structured rubric is used for creation and scoring
6. Math CBM Multiple digit computation and word problems (Foegen & Deno, 2001)
Conceptual word problems (Helwig et al., 2002)
Single or multi-skill basic fact probes (Thurber et al., 2002)
Word problems – average scores are low, therefore not sensitive for low achieving students; not sensitive to student growth (increase of 1 point per year)Word problems – average scores are low, therefore not sensitive for low achieving students; not sensitive to student growth (increase of 1 point per year)
7. Purposes of Present Study Replicate findings with oral reading fluency and basic fact computation
Evaluate 2 new standards-derived measures for technical adequacy:
Question Answering
Comprehension
Advanced Math Computation
8. Question Answering Comprehension 10 comprehension questions based on Academic Content Standards
Comprehension questions created from DIBELS sixth grade reading passages
5 items worth 1 point (prediction, literal, basic inferential). Basic Comprehension Index.
5 items worth 2 points (summarizing, evaluating, synthesizing). Advanced Index.
Score range 0 to 15 points
9. Advanced Math Computation Items based on Academic Content Standards
Items scored for Number of Correct Digits and Number of Correct Problems
10. Sample and Procedures 281 6th graders
All students assessed in oral reading fluency in fall and spring
20% sample assessed in other three measures in fall, winter, and spring
Progress monitoring: oral reading fluency assessed every 2 weeks, comprehension assessed every 2 months, math computation assessed every 3 weeks
11. Results: Progress Monitoring Increase of 1 unit expected every:
Index Based on Jan. slope Based on May Slope
Basic math correct problems 3 months 4 months
Basic math correct digits 2 weeks 2 weeks
Advanced math correct problems 1 month 3 months
Advanced math correct digits 2 weeks 1 month
Comprehension total points 2 months 17 months
Advanced comprehension points 1 month 8 months
Oral reading fluency 2 weeks 2 weeks
12. Results: Predicting Performance on High Stakes Tests The following measures had significant correlations with the reading and math proficiency tests:
Oral reading fluency (132 cwpm)
Total points comprehension index (12 points)
Basic points comprehension index
Basic computation correct problems and correct digits (28 correct digits)
Advanced computation correct problems and correct digits (16 correct digits)
Cut scores with an 88% to 100% passing rate are in parentheses. All demonstrated adequate reliability and criterion-related validity.All demonstrated adequate reliability and criterion-related validity.
13. Results: Better Indicators of Performance Multiple regression analyses:
Oral reading fluency was a better indicator of reading achievement than the comprehension indices.
Advanced math correct digits was a better indicator of math achievement than basic math correct digits.
14. Results: Reliability % agreement between 2 scorers:
Math computation
basic correct digits = 92%
basic correct problems = 100%
advanced correct digits = 92%
advanced correct problems = 90%
Comprehension
total points = 87%
basic points = 96%
advanced points = 87%
15. OISM Problem-Solving ModelTier 1 Universal Screening at Tier 1
- Oral reading fluency (individual delivery)
- Question answering (classwide delivery)
- Advanced math computation correct
problems (classwide delivery)
Cut scores used to assign students to Tier 2 intervention groups QA classwide delivery: pilot study results indicated a .85 correlation between individual and group administrations.QA classwide delivery: pilot study results indicated a .85 correlation between individual and group administrations.
16. OISM Problem-Solving ModelTiers 2 and 3 Progress Monitoring
- Oral reading fluency every 2 weeks
- Advanced math computation correct
problems and correct digits every 2 weeks
Data-based decision rules used to assign students to tier 3 or special education