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College and Career Ready Determinations and PARCC High S chool Assessments Governing Board Meeting September 12, 2012. Objectives. Determine which high school assessment(s) will be used to make College and Career Ready (CCR) Determination in ELA/Literacy
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College and Career Ready Determinations and PARCC High School Assessments Governing Board Meeting September 12, 2012
Objectives • Determine which high school assessment(s) will be used to make College and Career Ready (CCR) Determination in ELA/Literacy • Prioritize which options for high school assessment(s) will be used to make College and Career Ready (CCR) Determination in mathematics • Discuss potential policy implications derived from Objective 2
Background • Draft College-Ready Determination Policy purposefully does not indicate on which high school assessments students have to achieve Level 4 to be CCR: In order to earn and maintain a College-Ready Determination in ELA/ literacy and mathematics, a student will need to achieve at least the threshold score for Level 4 on the designated PARCC high school ELA/ literacy and mathematics assessments. • Primary work stream implicated: • Further development of high school assessment blueprints
CCR Determination in ELA/Literacy • PARCC Leadership Team recommendation: CCR determination should be based on 11th grade ELA/Literacy assessment • Rationale: Logical progression across three courses allows for final assessment to capture full range of CCSS.
Decision Should PARCC use the Grade 11 assessment in ELA/Literacy for making the College and Career Ready Determination?
Mathematics • Construct is different than ELA/Literacy, so different approach may be required. • Content progresses differently in high school than in K – 8, and different than in ELA/Literacy: • Literacy builds continuously grades K – 12; • ELA builds continuously grades 4 – 12; • Mathematics domains SHIFT between K – 8 and High School, leading to some discontinuity • Predominant approach of segregating Algebra and Functions from Geometry makes gathering data about all three more challenging
MathematicsKey CCR Development Milestones • April 2011: High School Math Task Force • Key members from K – 12 LT and IHE Representatives • Focus on Critical Content and Score Types • Spring – Fall 2011: Draft Model Content Frameworks • Captured critical content in high school standards for CCR • February 2012: Content Meeting, Orlando, FL • Further refinement of critical content and draft PLD • Summer 2012: Final HS Model Content Frameworks
Overview of Model Content Frameworks for HS Mathematics • Two pathways • Algebra I, Geometry, Algebra II • Mathematics I, Mathematics II, Mathematics III • Both pathways include all of the high school CCSS for all students; no (+) standards • Regardless of sequence, students will learn (and be assessed on) the same college- and career-ready content by the end the third course
Key Engaged Parties from Mathematics Community • Representatives from Higher Education, the Leadership Team, and state content experts • Members of the Content Technical Working Group • Drs. Wu, McCallum, Zimba, Schmidt, Askey, and Shaughnessy; Skip Fennell, Steve Leinwand, and Sybilla Beckman. • AFT and NEA • The Boards of NCTM and NCSM
Resulting in options for CCR determination in mathematics • There are three options: • Use student’s performance on terminal high school assessment (Algebra II or Mathematics III) as criterion • Expand scope of terminal assessment to include additional section focusing on securely held content from previous courses; base CCR determinations on performance on this expanded terminal assessment • Make CCR determinations based on performance on aggregate of all three high school assessments • Options arrived at through feedback from K – 12 and Higher Education, neither of which was monolithic in nature
Option 1 in CCR determination in mathematics: Vince Verges (FL) • The final assessment will include a number of culminating topics important to address foundational skills, as well as preparedness for college-level work, due to the structure of the CCSS • Some securely-held knowledge assessed on a portion of the test, in alignment with instructional objectives for the course • Students and teachers held accountable only for content addressed within these course descriptions • Straightforward data collection for CRD • Testing time/ length the same as in other tests/ grades
Challenges of Option 1 in CCR determination in mathematics: Doug Sovde (Achieve) • Not all content, particularly geometry, is well sampled, which is a particular concern for IHEs • Some securely held knowledge will be assessed, but it will be constrained, meaning less data about critical content from previous courses/grades • Different sequences could lead to different cut scores as a result of psychometrics, blurring the discussion about rigor and CCR
Option 2 in CCR determination in mathematics: Bob Bickerton (MA) • College mathematics professors expect PARCC to deliver greater assurance that “CCR” freshman are fluent in all K – 12 mathematics operations and capable of solving complex problems; they are skeptical that 3 end of course high school mathematics assessments can deliver on this promise • Extending the terminal (3rd course) high school mathematics assessment enables greater coverage of securely held knowledge and competence across more standards relevant to 1st year college math • Administering this assessment well after standards have been taught and proximate to H.S. graduation significantly increases assurance that students will meet the expectations of college freshman math
Challenges of Option 2 in CCR determination in mathematics: Doug Sovde (Achieve) • Additional testing time • Potential additional cost through form construction • Option 2 does NOT assume that the teacher of the terminal class would be responsible for prior years’ securely held knowledge; this could be confusing.
Option 3 in CCR determination in mathematics: Jim Wright (OH) • This option provides maximum evidence over all high school content from the three course sequence. • Provides student information over time showing students growth in mastering mathematical content. • Provides student information based on comparable content regardless of the sequence taken • Does not require additional testing time.
Challenges of Option 3 in CCR determination in mathematics: Doug Sovde (Achieve) • Management of data becomes far more challenging across three years • Could create circumstances of “false-positives”, which also brings into question conjunctive versus compensatory approaches • Retake issues becomes a paramount concern
Decision • For further development, how should PARCC prioritize the three options in mathematics for making the College and Career Ready Determination? • Terminal Assessment • Terminal Assessment + • All 3 Assessments
Critical Policy Implication • How will states resolve discrepancy between: Current graduation requirements in mathematics and • Full implementation of the CCSS, which is necessary for College and Career Readiness; • Implementation of the PARCC CCD Assessment(s); • Both require high school mathematics through Algebra II/Mathematics III to be CCR
Graphic of States’ progress toward CCR for All. Default CCR diploma with minimum opt-out Default CCR diploma with personal modification opt-out No CCR diploma Mandatory CCR diploma