1 / 30

IEP Teams and Assessment Accommodation Decisions: Recommended vs. Implemented

IEP Teams and Assessment Accommodation Decisions: Recommended vs. Implemented. Jane L. Ewing, Ed.D. Paul V. Sherlock Center on Disabilities at Rhode Island College. What is the relationship between. Instructional accommodations Recommended assessment accommodations (IEPs)

Download Presentation

IEP Teams and Assessment Accommodation Decisions: Recommended vs. Implemented

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. IEP Teams and Assessment Accommodation Decisions:Recommended vs. Implemented Jane L. Ewing, Ed.D. Paul V. Sherlock Center on Disabilities at Rhode Island College

  2. What is the relationship between • Instructional accommodations • Recommended assessment accommodations (IEPs) • Accommodations used during state assessments?

  3. Methodology • Observed 66 students in 9 schools during classroom instruction and state assessments. • Gathered data from 107 IEPs, including those of observed students. • Interviewed assessment proctors, monitors, administrators.

  4. Major Findings • Location was the better predictor of accommodations during tests, rather than IEPs. • Students testing together received same “package” of accommodations, regardless of IEPs.

  5. Major Findings • Test accommodations were not individualized or developed from students’ instructional accommodations. • Seeming lack of awareness how to tailor assessment accommodations to individual students’ testing needs.

  6. Institutional Capacity: a zero-sum game? • Condensed testing schedule (March to May in 2002; March only in 2003) • Growing numbers of students needing accommodations • Increased number of high-stakes assessments added to the schedule (ex., NAEP added to RI in 2003) • No additional resources

  7. Decision Making Resources • State assessment guidance 40% • Feedback of students’ teachers 11% • Students’ IEPs 7% • Individual student need 4% • Supervisor’s guidelines 3% • Classroom accommodations 2%

  8. General Educators: Not Full Partners • I have very little involvement as an IEP team member. My input is rarely sought. • I am asked to sit in on IEP meetings infrequently. To be honest, most decisions on accommodations are made without my input. • I do not have a part in this process. I don’t have the training or the knowledge. I don’t make decisions. • I have never been given information on how to assess a special education student, but I have requested it.

  9. Special Educators • Accommodations were determined by students’ prior teachers and staff. • Follow-through on assessment accommodations was almost always the job of the Special Education department. • State trainings: test facilitation only

  10. Special Educators • Elementary special educators preferred to proctor/implement for their own students. • High school students could decline their accommodations; often proctored by staff who did not know the students at all.

  11. Instruction and Assessment • Significant difference between the level of support received during instruction and assessment • Students may benefit from instructional accommodations but do not receive assessment accommodations in any way comparable. • Respondents reported basing all accommodations on “individual need of student” yet few had individualized accommodations during tests (e.g., scribing, readers, flexible schedule).

  12. 2002 Assessments • Alternative settings – anywhere from 7 to 15 students, each with different IEPs but all receiving the same accommodations • Regular setting – students on IEPs in cafeteria but none of the monitors could identify • Proctor with one or two students – settings were not quiet (e.g., library where class is being held)

  13. 2003 Follow Up • Greater agreement between recommended and implemented assessment accommodations for this year’s smaller sample of students (N=39) • Similar to 2002, 2003’s 5 most commonly recommended assessment accommodations were also the most frequently implemented and most generic. • Students had on average more instructional accommodations (5), compared to test accommodations (3). • Instructional accommodations were more specific and based on individual student needs.

  14. High school students • 2003 sample had fewer assessment supports both recommended and implemented than lower grades. • Consistently had 2 recommended accommodations, alternate location and extended time. • Often given oral administration of directions, though rarely recommended on their IEPs. • Students rarely took extended time.

  15. Comparison of Accommodations

  16. Comparison of Accommodations

  17. 11 STUDENTS oral administration of math tests (28% of the 2003 sample) • Teacher reading math test to student if needed (3 middle school students) • Oral administration of math assessment (3 elementary students) • Key words highlighted in math directions (1 elementary student)

  18. 11 STUDENTS Oral administration of math tests • Reader (2 high school students) • Tests read orally (1 high school student) • Should be read to (1 high school student)

  19. But was it implemented …? • Few proctors had the math read-aloud listed on their accommodations sheets. • Proctors occasionally re-read problems to students during the math assessments in the middle and elementary grades.

  20. But was it implemented …? • IF the proctor/aide was familiar with the student’s needs or IEP, the student was more likely to receive an IEP recommended accommodation. • In most cases, proctors did not know the students.

  21. Other “Unusual” Accommodations • Check for comprehension • Use of calculator • Access to computer • Flexible schedule for testing • “Keywords highlighted in directions” • Preferential seating • Alternative setting free of distractions

  22. And the implementation… • Monitors did not noticeably check more frequently. • Many students allowed calculators. • Student decided not to use a computer. • Classroom teacher/proctor decided “flexible scheduling” was not necessary.

  23. And the implementation… • Keywords highlighted – translated as “read-aloud.” • Preferential seating – students choose their own seats. • Alternative settings were too full to be quiet.

  24. Conclusions Student-centered assessment accommodations – scribing, reading assistance, 1-on-1 support – required resources and preparation that schools did not produce.

  25. Conclusions • Proctors not sure how to implement accommodations such as scribing or support. • Assessment accommodations that parallel instructional accommodations not available to students during state assessments.

  26. School-level basics … • Proper training for proctors • Clear guidelines on individualized accommodations to increase confidence in discretionary decision making • Appropriate rooms for testing • Use of computers and other AT

  27. Other Possible Changes in Practice • Provide additional state-sponsored training for proctoring staff, not just administration (test security, etc.) • Hold school-based sessions with leadership personnel to clarify “what is permitted.”

  28. Other Possible Changes in Practice • Develop IEPs during same school year in which student will participate in state assessments. • Insure that both classroom and assessment personnel participate. • Promote individualized accommodations that approximate instructional support during assessments.

More Related