460 likes | 517 Views
Assessment. Session 1. Introductions. Everyone thinks they can teach. Most have been in school for at least 12 years They think that anybody can be a teacher Those that can Do, those that can’t…. Activity. List Two occupations that you would consider professionals
E N D
Assessment Session 1
Everyone thinks they can teach • Most have been in school for at least 12 years • They think that anybody can be a teacher • Those that can Do, those that can’t….
Activity • List Two occupations that you would consider professionals • Then decide what it is that make these occupations professionals
Experts in the filed say a profession has the following: A lifetime commitment to the profession A sense of public service A defined body of knowledge High prestige an economic standing Professional organizations that provide recognition for individual achievements A lengthy period of specialized training Control over licensing standards and entry requirements Autonomy in making decisions at work A set of standards for performance A responsibility for judgments Self Governing A code of ethics that clarify ambiguous matters What Makes Up a profession
The Teaching Profession • Everyone feels they can walk in off the street and be a teacher. Because there is the perception that you learn by doing and that there is no knowledge base to draw from… • We as professionals need to rely on this knowledge base, refer to this knowledge base and challenge this knowledge base.
Professionals • People Clearly feel That Doctors are professionals • Although they question them., they meet the qualifications we just saw • They uses dozens of assessments to determine what they need to do • Watch this
Activity • In your Groups, list some of the reasons we need assessments
Reasons for Assessments • Identify a starting point to educate a child, • Do not want to reteach something if a child knows it • Identify a child's strengths and weaknesses • Identify children that need special help • As a country we have as much as 13% of school age children with special education • 75 % of sixth graders are 2 years behind in reading
Activity • In your groups define Assessment • Then define the purpose of assessment
Assessment defined • Assessment is a process of collecting data for the purpose of making decisions about students or schools • School personnel make decision about • What children should be taught • What they have learned
Assessment defined • Assessment is used to • Gather information about schools • Where are their strengths • Where should they improve • Are they meeting national and state expectations
Assessment defined • Assessment is used to • Gather to see if students are making progress towards competencies • Social • Academic • Behavioral
Assessment defined • Assessment can be formal or informal • Meet in your groups and develop a list of both types
Assessments Importance • Assessment is used in all walks of life • You are assessed to see if you can drive • Assessed to see if you can be a teacher • Students are assessed to see if they are progressing like children nationally • Our country is assessed to see how we compare to other parts of the world
Assessments Importance • Assessment can be positive or negative • Positive- if done correctly and used properly can be helpful • Negative if it is not given properly, interpreted wrong and used for reasons it was not designed to be used
Assessments Decisions • Assessment decision are usually made when the assessment indicates that a child is having a problem • or when the assessment indicates that a discrepancy exists • Academically • Behaviorally • Physically
Screening • Screening is a form of assessment • In many cases, the earlier a problem is identified, the greater the chance to rectify the problem
Activity • In your groups, identify what are some screenings that schools use?
Screenings • Vision • Hearing • Height, weight, BMI • Universal screenings ( why is it called universal) • Reading • Gifted ( in some schools) • math
Activity • Define what Progress monitoring is? • Who is it used with? • How often?
Progress Monitoring • Originally just used with Special education to determine if a child was making progress • Now used as part of RTI
Monitoring Progress • Can be done in Math or reading • Can be done with all students • Is instruction working • If not change • Can be used to see if schools are making progress toward state goals
Monitoring Progress • No child left behind and parts of IDEA specify that instructional tools should be evidence based or research based instructional practices
Monitoring Progress • Sometimes assessment is used to determine the need for resources • If data proves that there is a weakness in a certain area of the curriculum or the teaching practice, resources should be allocated to fix the problem
Special education • Before RtI, (RtII) entrance into special education was governed by assessment • An assessment was done to determine that a disability existed • And assessment was used to determine that a learning need existed • Both were required in PA ( still are if using discrepancy model)
Program evaluation • Assessment data are used to determine if different programs are effective • Two approaches to teaching can be compared • Can compare groups simultaneously or compare and before and after or two different groups on different years
AYP • Assessment is used to determine AYP • Adequate Yearly Progress
Determining the type of assessment • Different assessments are used for different purposes • Determining eligibility for special education • Planning for a lesson • Progress monitoring • Examine behavior • Can assess instruction or curriculum to determine if that is the problem
Ideally • Can assess instruction or curriculum to determine if that is the problem • Ideally you have good instruction • But you could have poor instruction and that is what is causing failure, or you could have poor curriculum
Tier III: Students not responding to Tier I or II interventions – Sustained Intensive Individual Interventions Possible Special Education Identification for non-responders of Tier III interventions Three Tiered Module ~5% Tier II: Students not responding to Tier I efforts – group and individual interventions, Specialized Research-based Interventions ~15% Tier I: Classroom/All Students - Core Class Instruction ~80% of Students
Activity In your groups • Lets assume that the children in the Philomena School are all capable of learning. They all have average home lives and average or above average intelligence ( except 10% who are special needs) • Yet they have an inverted triangle, 80 % are basic or below on state and national assessments, • Determine what are some causes for this?
Activity Review • Other include • Instructional environment • Poor management • Poor curriculum • Poor instruction • Poor resources • Poor assessment conditions
Activity • If you were asked to go in and determine what the problem is at Philomena school, what would you do, • Devise a plan
Plan • The plan could include a number of items including the following: • Observation of instruction; • Recollections • Interview people who went there or taught there or are familiar with the school, use a structured interview • Test • Good because they are very objective, and the same for all • Professional judgment • Eventually, you will need to make some judgments based on your knowledge and experience about the situation
Assessment consequences • What are some negative consequences that people or organizations can suffer because of assessment results?
Laws • Much of the testing we do is based on many different laws • Sometimes it is to deliver the law and meet the requirements of the law • We assess students to determine if they meet eligibility for special education
Laws • Jig Saw activity Directions Each group will take an Area of the law and answer the following questions related to the division assigned. Fives- 504 Sevens- IDEA fours- NCLB Royals- GIEP Develop a two to three statement descriptive summary of the topic. What are the major parts of this law What impact do they have for learning
Laws • Pl- 94-142 education for al handicapped children • Reauthorized in 1986, 1990 ( became- IDEA), 1997, 2004 • 2001- Elementary and secondary School Act aka NCLB • Section 504 of the rehabilitation Act of 1973
Section 504 • “ No otherwise qualified handicapped individual shall, solely by reason of his handicap, be excluded from the participation in, denied the benefit of, or be subjected to discrimination in any program or activity receiving federal financial assistance.”
Section 504 • Sometimes called 504 agreements • Service agreements or other names • Just as serious and in some ways more serious than an IEP • If you do not follow, district can be denied federal funds and you can be sued personally • Monitored by OCR
IDEA • IDEA affects assessment in four ways: • Developing an IEP • Protection in evaluation • Education is provided in the LRE • Due process rights
IDEA • Other concepts of IDEA • FAPE • Provide goals for students • Core team • Based on comprehensive assessment • Included in state and district assessment • Test accommodation must be established