300 likes | 448 Views
Maine Department of Education New England Common Assessment Program Mathematics – Grades 6-8. A professional development seminar presented by: Michele Mailhot and Susan Smith March 21, 2012 michele.mailhot@maine.gov susan.smith@maine.gov. NECAP Mathematics Assessment.
E N D
Maine Department of EducationNew England Common Assessment Program Mathematics – Grades 6-8 A professional development seminar presented by: Michele Mailhot and Susan Smith March 21, 2012 michele.mailhot@maine.gov susan.smith@maine.gov
NECAP Mathematics Assessment Goals of the presentation: 1. communicate NECAP mathematics test design, structure and scoring procedures; 2. demonstrate how to access NECAP mathematics data; 3. provide strategies for using NECAP data to inform instruction and program analysis, and; 4. describe the influence that the Common Core State Standards will have on future mathematics assessment.
Purpose and Design of the NECAP Mathematics Assessment • Measures the mathematics content of the NECAP Grade Level Expectations (GLEs) • Reports across four subtopics • Provides a consistent measure of mathematics programs across all schools in the state
Purpose and Design of the NECAP Mathematics Assessment • 3 separate sections requiring a minimum of 45 minutes of testing time each; 1 session does not permit the use of calculator or other tools • 48 questions worth 66 common score points – 32 multiple choice questions, 12 short answer questions (worth 1 or 2 points), and 4 constructed response questions (worth 4 points)
Purpose and Design of the NECAP Mathematics Assessment The raw score is calculated in the following manner: • 1 point for each correct answer to MC items • 1 point for each correct answer to 1-pt SA items • 0-2 points for each answer to 2-pt SA items, with a score of 2 indicating that the response is complete. • 0 – 4 points for each answer to constructed response items, with a score of 4 indicating that the response is complete.
NECAP Mathematics Assessment • Overview of the data analysis tool (a product of Measured Progress) • Using this tool, school designated personnel can view student’s responses to MC answers and earned points for SAs and CRs for every released NECAP mathematics item.
iServices – “Interactive” Tab • Released Items Summary Data • Multiple Choice Item • Short Answer and Constructed Response – including scoring guide, sample student response and annotation • Item Analysis Reports • Longitudinal Data • School Reports
NECAP Mathematics Assessment - Data Mathematics Student-Level Item Analysis • NECAP results and new access codes were mailed to school principals in January 2012 • Go to link below. • Select “Maine,” and then “Maine Reports” OR select “New England Common Assessment Program”, click on map of Maine, then “Maine Reports”. http://iservices.measuredprogress.org
NECAP Mathematics Assessment - Data Mathematics Student-Level Item Analysis If your principal needs a reminder of these codes s(he) should call Measured Progress at 1-877-632-7774 http://iservices.measuredprogress.org
iServices – “Interactive” Tab • Released Items Summary Data • Multiple Choice Item • “Open Response” – including scoring guide and sample student responses to short answer and constructed response items • Item Analysis Report • Longitudinal Data • School Reports
NECAP Mathematics Instructional Strategies Ideas for consideration: Begin classes with a question of the day… Use a released NECAP question… multiple choice or short answer.
NECAP Mathematics Instructional Strategies Ideas for consideration: Have students create their own multiple-choice items aligned to the mathematics unit of instruction and learning goals. Challenge them to create four choices, including a correct answer and three good distractors. Have students explain what makes the distractors good choices.
NECAP Mathematics Instructional Strategies Ideas for consideration: Have students create their own short answer and constructed response items and corresponding scoring guides aligned to the mathematics unit and learning goals.
NECAP Mathematics Instructional Strategies Ideas for consideration: Embed a released NECAP question (or two) into a homework assignment.
NECAP Mathematics Instructional Strategies Ideas for consideration: Ask students to answer selected released items (constructed response, short answer and/or multiple choice items) at the end of a unit. Score and compare the results from year to year.
NECAP Mathematics – Uses for the Data Ideas for consideration: Reflect on your school programming • What are your strengths/weakness across areas? • Which students are served well/not served well?
NECAP Mathematics – Uses for the Data Ideas for consideration: Reflect on student misconceptions/thinking • Can your mathematics staff predict your student response patterns? • Can your staff predict student response patterns for disaggregated groups in your community?
NECAP Mathematics – Uses for the Data Important ideas: • NECAP data is one tier (small but comparable) of a pyramid of student data intended to inform understanding of school program. • NECAP data must be supported and informed by classroom and school level formative assessment data for individual students.
NECAP Mathematics – Support Resources Resources for consideration: • NCTM Principles and Standards of School Mathematics • NCTM Curriculum Focal Points • Helping Children Learn Mathematics • Adding It Up
NECAP Mathematics – Support Resources Resources for consideration: • Curriculum Topic Study • Formative Assessment Probes • The Illustrative Mathematics Project http://illustrativemathematics.org/
CCSSM Implementation Timeline • 2010-2011: Year of Study – become familiar with the documents and terminology • 2011-2012: Begin implementing the 8 Standards for Mathematical Practice in your instruction and take an informal look at your current curriculum • 2012-2013: Begin aligning/implementing your curriculum to the CCSS content standards (including the practices) • 2013-2014: Continue aligning/implementing your curriculum to the CCSS content standards (including the practices) • 2014-2015: Full alignment/implementation of the CCSS practice and content standards
New Assessments Aligned to CCSS Current plans are for the last NECAP assessment to be administered in October 2013. Maine is a member of the SMARTER Balanced Assessment Consortium with 26 other states, which is building an assessment system aligned to the CCSS to be implemented in 2014-15. The system will consist of optional interim assessments and a summative assessment consisting of computerized performance tasks and a computer-adaptive assessment administered in the Spring of 2015. FMI - http://www.smarterbalanced.org/
Changes to NECAP During the Transition • There will be no changes to the NECAP Reading, Mathematics, and Writing tests in the fall of 2012. • There will be no changes to the NECAP Reading and Writing tests in the fall of 2013. • The fall 2013 NECAP Mathematics tests will have a limited number of changes due to differences with the CCSS
Changes to NECAP During the Transition *The GLEs that will be eliminated from testing—primarily because they have moved to a higher grade level in the CCSS—include concepts such as probability, combinations, similarity, and rate of change.
Maine’s NECAP Mathematics MDOE Website Overview of the MDOE website and resources. http://maine.gov/education/lsalt/index.htm http://www.maine.gov/education/necap/index.html
Stay informed • MDOE Mathematics website http://www.maine.gov/education/lres/math/index.html • Mathematics Listserv https://list.terc.edu/mailman/listinfo/maine-math
The NECAP Mathematics Test This presentation is recorded and posted at: http://www.maine.gov/education/lres/math/index.html and http://www.maine.gov/education/necap/presentations.html