540 likes | 763 Views
December 18, 2013. Are You Ready for PARCC and SBAC Writing?. Welcome!.
E N D
December 18, 2013 Are You Ready for PARCC and SBAC Writing?
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
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
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.
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
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
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
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
Grade 7 Students respond to multiple sources… www.parcconline.org …and cite textual evidence
The written explanation is worth 29% of the total available points for this item.
Grade 5 www.smarterbalanced.org
Grade 4 www.smarterbalanced.org
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.
Task Steps to Follow www.smarterbalanced.org Directions for Beginning
Students answer short questions… www.smarterbalanced.org
…which lead to the writing prompt www.smarterbalanced.org A scoring guide is provided
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
PARCC & SBAC scoring guides are trait-based, So are the writing rubrics used to assess students’ work.
PARCC & SBAC scoring guides are trait-based, and so are the rubrics used to assess students’ work.
What kinds of writing will students have to produce on PARCC, SBAC, and other next-generation tests?
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.”
Persuasion Argument CCSS Appendix A, page 24
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
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”
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
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”
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…
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!
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…
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.
So what do the prototypes and draft rubrics tell us? So are the writing rubrics used to assess students’ work.
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…
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
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?
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
So what can we do about it? So are the writing rubrics used to assess students’ work.