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Developing an Aligned Alternate Assessment System. Iowa’s Alternate Assessment for 2006-07 October 6, 2006. Developing an Aligned Alternate Assessment System. Steve Maurer Martin Ikeda, Ph. D. Iowa Department of Education. Today’s Presentation. Handouts Taping
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Developing an Aligned Alternate Assessment System Iowa’s Alternate Assessment for 2006-07 October 6, 2006
Developing an Aligned Alternate Assessment System Steve Maurer Martin Ikeda, Ph. D. Iowa Department of Education
Today’s Presentation • Handouts • Taping • Presentation will be emailed to AEA and UEN Iowa Alternate Assessment (IAA) Contacts
Why are you here today? • Understand the enhancements to the Iowa Alternate Assessment for 2006-2007 • Federal NCLB Peer Review • Standard Setting • Evaluation from the field
ICN Protocol for today • If you are having problems at your site, use the phone in your room to contact ICN • Due to the number of participants, we will not be stopping to answer questions live • As you have questions, email or fax them: • Email questions to mary.sullivan@iowa.gov • Fax to Mary Sullivan @ (515) 242-6019
Outcomes • Understand federal requirements for alternate assessments • Steps in the IAA for 2006-2007 • Examples of how to document and keep evidence • What to do on Monday
Acknowledgements • Material in this presentation was developed and adapted from work done by: • Steve Maurer, IDE, Project Contact • Tom Deeter, IDE • Mary Sullivan, IDE • Marty Ikeda, IDE • Mike Burdge and Jean Clayton, ILSSA • Jerry Tindal, University of Oregon • United States Department of Education • National Center for Educational Outcomes • Stephen Elliott, Vanderbilt University
A Regulatory Perspective • General Assessment (ITBS/ITED) with or without accommodations • Iowa Core Content Standards and Benchmarks (ICCSBs) • Alternate Assessment I • alternate achievement standards for 1% of the population (most significant cognitive disabilities) • Alternate Assessment II • modified academic achievement standards for 2% of the population
Remember: • The materials you are seeing are in DRAFT format. • Process and materials piloted the week October 16th • Materials in final format will be sent out in November
Requirements for Alternate Assessment (August 2005) • http://www.ed.gov/policy/elsec/guid/altguidance.pdf
A-1. Why should students with disabilities, including those with the most significant cognitive disabilities, be included in State assessment and accountability systems? • “It’s the law” • Students with disabilities, including those with the most significant cognitive disabilities, benefit instructionally from such participation • To ensure that appropriate resources are dedicated to helping these students succeed, appropriate measurement of their achievement needs to be part of the accountability system
B-5. May a State use student progress on IEP goals or an assessment of functional life skills to meet the Title I regulation requirements? • No.
First, IEP goals are individualized for each student, and a student’s progress toward each goal is measured for purposes of reporting progress to parents and for making individualized decisions about the special education and related services a student receives…
Second, as required by Title I, schools are accountable for student achievement only in the content areas of reading/language arts and mathematics. IEP goals may address a broad range of individualized instructional needs, as well as behavioral and developmental needs, and might not be based on the State’s academic content standards.
Guidance also adds… … students with the most significant cognitive disabilities should have access to the general curriculum
Common Approaches to Alternate Assessment • Portfolio Assessment • Performance Assessment • Comprehensive Rating Scales of Achievement
Portfolio Assessment • is an organized collection or documentation of student-generated or student-focused work typically depicting the range of individual student skills.
Performance Assessment • is a task or series of tasks requiring a student to provide a response or create a product to show mastery of a specific skill or content standard.
Comprehensive Rating Scales of Achievement • are rating scales anchored by descriptive rubrics for quantifying teacher judgments of students’ knowledge and skills based on repeated direct and indirect observations situated in a number of school settings.
Commonalities Across Alternate Assessment Approaches • Collection of Evidence Samples • Alignment or linkage to state grade level content standards. • Evaluation of evidence samples for reliability and validity • Scores that can be summarized by a proficiency level descriptor
Alternate Assessment Approaches Rating Scales are most amenable to traditional metrics of reliability. Safeguards for validity need to be built in. Tasks are more amenable to traditional metrics of reliability and validity. Pose issues around test security and multiple forms Portfolios are difficult to establish traditional metrics of validity and reliability
Good Evidence Creates aPicture of Performance! • Think of each dot of color in the picture as a piece of classroom evidence or a response to a test item. • To get a clear and complete picture of a student’s performance takes a good sample of evidence. • Some alternate assessments do a better job of sampling information from both the “foreground” and the “background” of students’ skills.
Alternate Assessment 2006-07 • Body of Evidence will include: • Learner Characteristics Inventory • Rating Scale in Reading, Mathematics and Science • Supporting Evidence • Teacher selected • Standard Task
Learner Characteristics Inventory • Purpose: • to understand the characteristics of students in the Iowa Alternate Assessment • 12-item scale (handout) • Developed by the National Alternate Assessment Center • Timeframe
Rating Scales • Development • Iowa Core Content Standards and Benchmarks • Other States’ frameworks • Standards frameworks from National Organizations (McRel, NCTM) • Input from content specialists
Steps in the IAA 2006-2007 • Step 1: Complete the Learner Characteristics Inventory • Step 2: Read the items on the rating scale. • Step 3: Document evidence of proficiency for each CCSB. Keep 2 samples of evidence for each CCSB on the appropriate Portfolio Evidence form • Step 4: Administer Performance Task • Step 5: Record results of performance task on Performance Event form • Step 6: Use performance task and classroom evidence to rate student on all items • Step 7: Summarize Proficiency Scores & Proficiency Level Decisions • Step 8: Report Results • Step 9: Reliability Check and Audit
Step 1. Complete the Learner Characteristics Inventory • You will need: • State ID number that is entered into Project EASIER. • Someone in your school building’s office should be able to help you locate the student’s ID number. • Check with building principal on how to access appropriately • Three options for returning inventory
Step 1. Complete the Learner Characteristics Inventory • Three options • Online • Complete the “fillable form.” • Hard copy
Step 2. Read the Items on the Rating Scale • Start thinking about which items you will have naturally occurring opportunity to teach and could enter into the Portfolio Evidence Forms • Rating scales will be sent out electronically in late October or early November
Step 3. Document Evidence of Proficiency for ICCSBs • Record student’s performance between November and February • Rating scale for Reading, Mathematics, and Science • Portfolio Evidence Form • Evidence is gathered over the course of the year and just not during February and March
Step 3. Document Evidence of Proficiency for ICCSBs • Portfolio Evidence Form—Reading (Grades 3-8 and 11) • One Standard • Many entries • Total 2-4 Total (To be determined) pieces of evidence
Step 3. Document Evidence of Proficiency for ICCSBs • Portfolio Evidence Form—Mathematics (Grades 3-8 and 11) • Four Standards • Many entries • 2 pieces per Standard • 8 TOTAL
Step 3. Document Evidence of Proficiency for ICCSBs • Portfolio Evidence Form—Science (Grades 5, 8, and 11) • Four Standards • Many entries • 2 pieces per Standard • 8 TOTAL
Step 3. Document Evidence of Proficiency for ICCSBs • Steps to Document Evidence • Date • Write the item number that the evidence corresponds to on the Portfolio Evidence Form • Summarize student’s accuracy of performance
Evidence • + or – 2 years or grades • Recent • Representative • Relevant • Reliable
Recent • Collected during the current school year
Representative • Typical performance of knowledge and skills with classroom materials, instruction, and accommodations
Relevant • Is linked to a rating scale item
Reliable • If another person would examine performance/evidence they would come to the same conclusion
Step 4. Administer Performance Tasks • Developed by Iowa Department of Education • targeting late February to send out • tasks cover grade spans • tasks cover many benchmarks • Performance Task Form
Step 5. Record Results of Performance • The Performance Event form is used to summarize performance on the standard task • Rate the student’s performance
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Step 6. Rate the Student’s Performance • Using the entries in the Portfolio Evidence Forms and the Performance Task forms, complete the rating scale • For Reading, Mathematics (Grades 3-8 and 11) and Science (Grade 5, 8, and 11)
Step 7. Summarize Proficiency • Proficiency Scores • Proficiency Levels
Step 8. Report Results • Share with Parents • Make appropriate decisions for IEP, instruction, and assessment for 2007-08
Step 9. Reliability Check and Audit • 50% of Portfolios • April 2007 • Trained Raters • Report Results • Make changes for 2007-08
Questions Fax to Mary Sullivan (515-242-6019) Email to mary.sullivan@iowa.gov We will be back with answers to some questions at:XXXX
What to do Monday • Student State ID numbers • Make sure building and/or district administrators are aware of the IAA process • Review the Participation Guidelines • Examine Iowa’s Core Content Standards and Benchmarks (ICCSBs) • Examine your districts standards and benchmarks for natural links to the ICCSBs
What to do Monday • Talk to parents about the process • E-mail additional questions to steve.maurer@iowa.gov