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Are You Ready for PARCC and SBAC Writing?

December 18, 2013. Are You Ready for PARCC and SBAC Writing?. Welcome!.

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Are You Ready for PARCC and SBAC Writing?

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  1. December 18, 2013 Are You Ready for PARCC and SBAC Writing?

  2. Welcome! Scott has taught students in all grade levels, K-12. He has served as a literacy coach, as an instructional specialist, as a coordinator of writing instruction, and as an author of ELA curriculum. While employed with Clovis Unified School District, Scott helped establish the “Buchanan Area Writing Project.” The Project successfully articulated a process-based, trait-specific model for writing instruction among nearly three hundred teachers in nine area schools. Scott Miller, M.Ed., Curriculum Design, Senior Instructional Consultant and Consulting Author, Strategies for Writers

  3. Next-Generation Assessment Consortia: S B A C Partnership (for) Assessment (of) Readiness (for) College (and) Career P A R C C Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium

  4. Poll Question 1:Which of the following statements is false? • Both PARCC and SBAC include technology-enhanced items in ELA and math. • Both PARCC and SBAC use a combination of electronic and human scoring. • Both PARCC and SBAC include computer adaptive technology. • Both PARCC and SBAC provide optional interim assessments.

  5. Next-Generation Technology-Based Assessments PARCC SBAC Summative in Grades 3-8 and 11 8:1 student-to-computer ratio (total students in all tested grades) Adaptive delivery Provides interim assessmentsand resources Electronic and human scoring Scores available in 2 weeks Online score reporting • Summative in Grades 3-11 • 2:1 student-to-computer ratio for largest tested grade level (1:1 for largest grade in K-8 school) • Fixed-form delivery • Provides interim assessments and resources • Electronic and human scoring • Scores available in 2 weeks • Online score reporting

  6. Computer Adaptive Testingclaims: T C A • C.A.T. tailors questions for each student based on his or her responses • Correct answers lead to more challenging questions • Incorrect answers lead to less challenging questions • C.A.T. yields more specific and detailed data • C.A.T. informs instruction better than other tests • C.A.T. takes less time than paper-pencil tests

  7. Next-Generation Technology-Based Assessments PARCC SBAC Summative in Grades 3-8 and 11 Requires 8:1 student-to-computer ratio (total students in all tested grades) Adaptive delivery Provides interim assessmentsand resources Electronic and human scoring Scores available in 2 weeks Online score reporting • Summative in Grades 3-11 • 2:1 student-to-computer ratio for largest tested grade level (1-1 for largest grade in K-8 school) • Fixed-form delivery • Provides interim assessments and resources • Electronic and human scoring • Scores available in 2 weeks • Online score reporting

  8. Students respond to text… …using a computer Grade 6 PARCC&Smarter Balanced Assessments will test your students’ mastery of Common Core writing skills very, very soon. www.parconline.org

  9. Grade 7 Students respond to multiple sources… www.parcconline.org …and cite textual evidence

  10. Writing is assessed in the content areas

  11. The written explanation is worth 29% of the total available points for this item.

  12. Grade 5 www.smarterbalanced.org

  13. Grade 4 www.smarterbalanced.org

  14. Poll Question 2:Which of the following statements is false? • The Common Core Writing & Language Standards (CCSS) are based on the six traits of writing. • PARCC and SBAC scoring guides do not include the trait language. • The traits help define the CCSS text-types. • The traits help define the CCSS writing process.

  15. Task Steps to Follow www.smarterbalanced.org Directions for Beginning

  16. Students answer short questions… www.smarterbalanced.org

  17. …which lead to the writing prompt www.smarterbalanced.org A scoring guide is provided

  18. Temporal words All writing standards, all writing lessons, all writing tests, and all writing rubrics Provide a reaction Evidence Spelling patterns Figurative Language Sentences flow Ideas logically grouped Opinion Pronoun person/number Humor Varied sentence patterns Tone are trait-based. Handwriting Linking words Develop experiences Sense of closure Domain-specific words Style Reader interest Concrete words & phrases Perfect verb tenses Reasons Sentences have rhythm Formatting

  19. PARCC & SBAC scoring guides are trait-based, So are the writing rubrics used to assess students’ work.

  20. PARCC & SBAC scoring guides are trait-based, and so are the rubrics used to assess students’ work.

  21. www.smarterbalanced.org

  22. www.smarterbalanced.org

  23. www.smarterbalanced.org

  24. www.parcconline.org

  25. www.parcconline.org

  26. ???

  27. What kinds of writing will students have to produce on PARCC, SBAC, and other next-generation tests?

  28. Poll Question 3:Which of the following statements is false? • Argument writing is an advanced form of opinion writing. • Informative and explanatory are different kinds of writing. • Writing to persuade is not addressed by the Common Core Standards. • Common Core Standards include the word “expository.”

  29. Persuasion Argument CCSS Appendix A, page 24

  30. The Common Core defines, specifies, and emphasizes instructional text-types: “Opinion” “Persuasive” PARCC “Analytic Essays” “Argument” “Expository” “Informative/ Explanatory” “Narrative” “Narrative” “Descriptive” Part of the other modes

  31. How Does the Common Core Define Narrative Writing? • Includes a wide array of genres • Tells a real or imagined story • Employs time as its “deep structure”

  32. What’s New In Narrative Writing? • More rigorous expectations • Increasingly used to respond to text • Indicated in content-area classes • Used for a greater variety of purposes

  33. Informative/Explanatory Writing Expositorywriting has traditionally been defined as: “A composition written for the purpose of informing, explaining, describing, or defining. Expository writing seeks to be factually accurate.” “Informative” / “Explanatory”

  34. Informative/Explanatory Writing Informative Explanatory Processes Relationships Causes Effects Function Behavior How things work Why things happen • Types • Features • Components • Size • Shape • Consistency • Little-known facts • Other characteristics A quick example…

  35. Informative Writing My computer is made out of black plastic. It has a 14-inch screen, 4 USB ports, and a standard Qwerty keyboard. It has two speakers, one on each side of the keyboard. Explanatory Writing Turning my computer on is easy. I just push the power button and waitfor the password prompt. Then, I type my password and left-click the “Enter” key once. After a minute or two, my desktop appears, and I’m ready to go!

  36. Opinion and Argument Writing Argument Writing (6-12)… Opinion Writing (K-5)… states an opinion supports the opinion with reasons and examples often focuses upon personal experience elaborates using expository structures (like cause/effect) is more concrete/observational is still developing and less sophisticated • makes a claim • defends the claim with reasons, examples, and evidence • weighs and evaluates evidence from experience and/or sources • moves beyond expository structures (like cause/effect) • is more deeply analytical • is comparatively well developed and sophisticated A quick example…

  37. Opinion Writing Opinion: I like my computer. Reason: It’s very durable. Example: I dropped it yesterday, and it didn’t break. Argument Writing Claim: This is the best computer for people who travel. Reason: It is very durable. Example: Its case is made from high-impact plastic. Evidence: Consumer Reports gives this model 4 stars for durability.

  38. So what do the prototypes and draft rubrics tell us? So are the writing rubrics used to assess students’ work.

  39. To Summarize: • Writing questions will require close reading. • Prompts will require responses to multiple sources. • Prompts will require the citation of textual evidence. • Writing will be assessed in each tested grade level. • Writing will be assessed in the content areas. • Rubrics and scoring guides will be trait-based. • Students will respond using newly redefined text-types. • For these reasons, writing skills will have a more dramatic impact on test scores than ever before. • And some of us don’t feel ready…

  40. Houston. . . We have a problem. “My kids already struggle with writing, and now the bar is being set even higher.” -anonymous teacher “I don’t have time to teach writing in math.” -anonymous teacher “Our new Common Core reading program has writing lessons in it, so I think we’re good-to-go.” -anonymous teacher “My district is writing its own writing program. That completely terrifies me.” -anonymous teacher “I still don’t get how argument writing is different than persuasive writing.” -anonymous teacher “I’m pretty good at teaching reading. It’s the writing part of the test that really scares me.” -anonymous teacher “I’ve been pretending to teach writing for about the last twenty years, and I was afraid to say anything about it.” -anonymous teacher

  41. One Example New York Implements CCSS Assessments, 2013 • 2012 statewide reading proficiency: 55.1% • 2013 statewide reading proficiency: 31.3% • Recent pilot test (grades 3-8): 26% passing (down from 47% on previous assessment) • Pilots in other states have seen similar results. Why?

  42. Contributing FactorsFor Decreased Scores on Common Core Assessments • More rigorous standards* • Test-format transfer (digital assessment) • Increased performance expectations: • Higher order thinking skills • Advanced writing skills • Research skills *Depending upon state and curriculum area

  43. So what can we do about it? So are the writing rubrics used to assess students’ work.

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