1 / 41

Accountability, Testing, and Common Exams

Accountability, Testing, and Common Exams. Tammy Howard Jim Kroening Jennifer Preston October 25, 2012. Overview: 2012-13. 2. READY Accountability Model. 3. Accountability Purpose – Indicators – Key Ideas. ▲. Provide incentives and supports to Improve Student Learning Outcomes

idola
Download Presentation

Accountability, Testing, and Common Exams

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. Accountability, Testing, and Common Exams Tammy Howard Jim Kroening Jennifer Preston October 25, 2012

  2. Overview: 2012-13 2

  3. READY Accountability Model 3

  4. AccountabilityPurpose – Indicators – Key Ideas ▲ • Provide incentives and supports to • Improve Student Learning Outcomes • Raise Graduation Rates • Close Achievement Gaps 4

  5. Elementary and Middle School AccountabilityPurpose – Indicators – Key Ideas ▲ StatusIndicators “this year” ProgressIndicators“trend over time for groups of students” Growth Indicators“combined individual student’s growth” Δ End of Grade 3-8 Math End of Grade 3-8 Math EOG3-8 Math EVAAS Growth School-wide Δ End of Grade 3-8 ELA End of Grade 3-8 ELA ΔEnd of Grade 5 & 8 Science End of Grade 5 & 8 Science 5

  6. High SchoolSchool AccountabilityPurpose – Indicators – Key Ideas ▲ StatusIndicators “this year” ProgressIndicators“trend over time for groups of students” Growth Indicators“combined individual student’s growth” Δ End of Course End of Course Δ End of Grade 3-8 Math EOG3-8 Math Δ ACT ACT EVAAS Growth School-wide Δ Graduation Rates Graduation Rates Δ Math Course Rigor Math Course Rigor Δ WorkKeys WorkKeys Graduation Project 6

  7. How each indicator is defined 7

  8. School Performance Grades 8

  9. Responding to School Performance Grades (SPG) • The SBE must respond to the General Assembly “…annually by January 15 on recommended adjustments to the school performance grade elements and scales for award of scores and grades.” • Additionally, SECTION 7A.3.(f) indicates:“It is the intent of the General Assembly to add a student growth component to school performance grades.” • Operational in 2012-13 9

  10. Performance Composite Algebra II/Integrated III Graduation Rate WorkKeys ACT + Growth What are the basics of the SPGs? Elementary/Middle Schools Total Points 0-100 100 points • Performance Composite Total Points 0-500 High Schools 10 100 points 100 points 100 points 100 points 100 points

  11. How each indicator is defined 11

  12. Performance Composite Algebra II/Integrated III Graduation Rate WorkKeys ACT Alignment Between Indicators in High School High School Performance Grades End of Course Math Course Rigor Graduation Rates Key Point: The set of indicators are shared and set a college and career-ready expectation. The Graduation Project is not part of the school grade. WorkKeys ACT Graduation Project 12

  13. Assessment A Closer Look at the Next Generation of State Assessments 13

  14. 2012-2013 School Calendar - Draft 2012 2013 New Assessments Last ABCsReport READY Report to SBE Compilation of New Data Standard Setting ACTMarch 5, 2013March 19, 2013 (make-up)March 5-19 (accommodations testing) PLAN WorkKeys EXPLORE WorkKeys for Early Graduates in Dec Teacher teams write field test items Pilot test of summative and interim assessment items and performance tasks 2ndTech Readiness Tool Collection Windows 14

  15. A Change in the Claim of Testing Claims in the Past: Proficiency Claims in the Future: Career- and College- Ready 15

  16. Changing what we think of as “State Assessments” • Constructed Response • Performance Tasks • Computer Adaptive Testing This is what we’ve known + Summative Interim Tools “Along the Way” Formative Processes “Every Day” 16

  17. Assessment How do I get READY for the new summative assessments? 17

  18. Getting Ready Step 1: Dig into the Standards. Where do I go to do that? For Common Corewww.ncpublicschools.org/acre/standards/common-core-tools/ For Essential Standardshttp://www.ncpublicschools.org/acre/standards/support-tools/ 18

  19. Getting Ready Step 2: Internalize Content Specifications Where do I go to do that? Content Specificationshttp://www.ncpublicschools.org/acre/assessment/online/ 19

  20. Getting Ready Step 3: Review New Item Types, Items and Released Forms Where do I go to do that? Item Typeshttp://thismeeting.wikispaces.com/under Summer Institute 2012 Released FormsComing in Fall of 2012 Tutorial of New Assessmentshttp://go.ncsu.edu/nctdemo 20

  21. Getting Ready New Item Types and ItemsConstructed-Response and Technology-Enhanced Items Step 3: • Mathematics: gridded response items • Grades 5-8 and Math I (Algebra I/Integrated I) • Calculator Inactive: Grades 3-8 and Math I (Algebra I/Integrated I) • One-third to one-half of grades 3-8 • One-third of Math I (Algebra I/Integrated I) • English II: short constructed response, technology-enhanced and multiple choice 21

  22. Grade 5 Science TE Item Distance Time Graph 5.P.1.2 Infer the motion of objects in terms of how far they travel in a certain amount of time and the directions in which they travel (RBT = Conceptual/Understand; DOK = 2) This distance/time graph shows the distance covered by an insect crawling across a table. Using the information on the graph, place (click and drag) the remaining distances to complete the table below. 30 cm 40 cm 50 cm 22

  23. Grade 8 Science TE Item • List of Species and Their Characteristics • Estuarine species inhabit coastal areas; they are adapted to a mix of salt and fresh water • Desert species are adapted to hot, arid areas which have large temperature fluctuations • Very rare tree species inhabit the Amazon basin • Reef-building coral inhabit coastal areas; their health and growth are negatively affected by • pollutants • Salamander species in the southern U.S. depend on flowing water to keep oxygen levels high • enough for survival If the changing conditions in the chart below occur, which species listed above will likely go extinct? Drag and drop the species that will most likely go extinct for each changing condition. 8.L.4.1 Summarize the use of evidence drawn from geology, fossils, and comparative anatomy to form the basis for biological classification systems and the theory of evolution (RBT = Conceptual/ Understand; DOK = 2) Amazon rare tree Desert Salamander Reef-building coral 23

  24. Grade 6 Constructed Response Item • A company is having a picnic. The expenses will be for music and refreshments. • The music will cost $150. • The refreshments will cost $125.  • Tickets will be sold for $2.50 per employee. • What is the minimum number of tickets that must be sold to pay for the picnic expenses? Note that students receive instructions and practice for gridding answers. Calculator: Inactive DOK: Skill/Concept Domain: Expressions and Equations Standard: 6.EE.7 Solve real-world and mathematical problems by writing and solving equations of the form x + p = q and px = q for cases in which p, q and x are all nonnegative rational numbers. 24

  25. Math I Constructed Response Item The daily profit, P, of a business that sells x units of a product each day is given by the function P = –2x2 + 200x + 3,000. The number of units sold on Tuesday was 10 less than the number needed for maximum possible profit. What is the difference between the actual profit on Tuesday and the maximum possible profit? Enter your response here: Only 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, ., -, and / are allowed. Calculator: Inactive DOK: Skill/Concept Domain:Interpreting Functions Standard: F.IF.4 For a function that models a relationship between two quantities, interpret key features of graphs and tables in terms of the quantities, and sketch graphs showing key features given a verbal description of the relationship. Key features include: intercepts; intervals where the function is increasing, decreasing, positive, or negative; relative maximums and minimums; symmetries; end behavior; and periodicity. 25

  26. English II Multiple-Choice Item Moonrise by Jenette Purcell City night skygives itself to me againwhen I have so little left to receive it.I am dark, crumblingand you are rivers and trees awaysearching your own night sky for a sign.The strong gates of your heartare wide open to me always, but,if only.So I wait, as seasons before, decades before,fathers and mothers before me still insidewatch and listen.Suddenly,bamboo, bones, fiber, fences,water, glistening koi,*all the tiny rooms,paths and places I hold your memoriesrelaxin audible, reverent wonderat the fullness formingon this horizon’s edge.*koi: colorful fish that symbolize love and friendship Which line from the poem describes the speaker’s feelings about loving someone? • “when I have so little left to • receive it” • “are wide open to me always, but” • “paths and places I hold your • memories • “at the fullness forming” DOK: Skill/Concept Standard: Reading for Literature (RL.1) Key Ideas and Details: Cite strong and thorough textual evidence to support analysis of what the text says explicitly as well as inferences drawn from the text. 26

  27. English II Constructed-Response Item Moonrise by Jenette Purcell City night skygives itself to me againwhen I have so little left to receive it.I am dark, crumblingand you are rivers and trees awaysearching your own night sky for a sign.The strong gates of your heartare wide open to me always, but,if only.So I wait, as seasons before, decades before,fathers and mothers before me still insidewatch and listen.Suddenly,bamboo, bones, fiber, fences,water, glistening koi,*all the tiny rooms,paths and places I hold your memoriesrelaxin audible, reverent wonderat the fullness formingon this horizon’s edge.*koi: colorful fish that symbolize love and friendship In Moonrise, explain how the theme is developed throughout the poem. Use specific details to support your answer. DOK: Strategic Thinking Standard: Reading for Literature (RL.2) Key Ideas and Details: Determine a theme or central idea of a text and analyze in detail its development over the course of the text, including how it emerges and is shaped and refined by specific details; provide an objective summary of the text. 27

  28. Scoring Rubric for Constructed- Response Item In Moonrise, explain how the theme is developed throughout the poem. Use specific details to support your answer. 28

  29. English II Technology-Enhanced Item Select (by clicking) the synonym that can replace reverent in the poem. Excerpt from Moonrise by Jenette Purcell Suddenly,bamboo, bones, fiber, fences,water, glistening koi,*all the tiny rooms,paths and places I hold your memoriesrelaxin audible, reverent wonderat the fullness formingon this horizon’s edge. DOK: Skill/Concept Standard: Reading for Literature (RL.4) Craft and Structure: Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are used in the text, including figurative and connotative meanings; analyze the cumulative impact of specific word choices on meaning and tone (e.g., how the language evokes a sense of time and place; how it sets a formal or informal tone). respectful redundant amazed significant 29

  30. Common Exams A Library of Common Exams is being designed for non-tested subjects for district use to populate Standard 6 30

  31. Focusing on the “Why” So why have statewide Measures of Student Learning/Common Exams? North Carolina has a statewide evaluation system to ensure that every teacher receives a fair and consistent evaluation, regardless of his or her employing LEA Teachers in all content areas should receive a Standard Six rating based on the growth of their own students on their content-specific standards Most LEAs do not have the capacity to design their own assessments for all non state-tested grades and subjects 31

  32. Principles for Administration 1. Every English Language Arts, Science, Mathematics, and Social Studies teacher in grades 4 – 12 has a value-added score 2. Teacher growth values will be calculated based on all students a teacher teaches and, when multiple assessments are required, on all data generated through the assessments 32

  33. Decision Tree for Administration 33

  34. Resources for Districts • Implementation Guide • Administration Timelines • Assessment Specifications • Guide to Measuring Student Growth • Local Planning Template 34

  35. Implementation Options - Timing • Administration of the high school MSLs in the fall is optional • If a district chooses to administer, all MSLs must be administered (1st semester only - Geometry & Algebra II optional) • If a district chooses to administer, results will be used to determine the sixth standard rating 35

  36. District Flexibility • Administration online, paper/pencil or hybrid • Date of administration • Administration during class period or testing week • Use in student grade • Which assessments are administered • How to ensure secure administration 36

  37. Addressing Concerns • Who has designed the Common Exams, and how have they been designed? • Same basic process as state assessments with the creation of assessment blueprints, generation of items, review of items, review of forms, and final production • Over 800 teachers from across the State have been involved in the blueprint creation and form review processes • NCDPI psychometricians and test measurement specialists have been involved and will analyze (and remove from results) any poor-performing items before growth is calculated 37

  38. Addressing Concerns • Why doesn’t anyone know what will be on the MSLs? • Assessment specifications are available at: http://www.ncpublicschools.org/educatoreffect/measures/specifications/ • General information on rubrics released to C&I leaders on October 19 (and posted to website) • Online module will provide training on how to use rubrics to score performance tasks • Each item has its own specific rubric 38

  39. Addressing Concerns • How will the performance items be scored? • There must be at least one scorer who is not the student’s teacher of record AND who has the content knowledge necessary to score the item • With the exception of ELA, performance items can be administered early to allow time for scoring • Scoring of work is necessary for what the 800 teachers deemed to be authentic assessment for new, concept-based standards 39

  40. Addressing Concerns • MSLs hurt students and teachers • The Common Exam administration process should not affect students any differently than the administration of a teacher-created final exam • MSL scores do not need to be used as final exam grades • Percent correct provided by Winscan is a suggestion for a grade • It is only fair to base SOME part of a teacher’s evaluation on the growth of his or her students 40

  41. Contact Information educatoreffectiveness@dpi.nc.gov http://www.ncpublicschools.org/educatoreffect/ 41

More Related