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Modified High School Assessment (Mod-HSA)

Modified High School Assessment (Mod-HSA). Maryland State Board of Education August 26, 2008. NCLB REQUIREMENTS

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Modified High School Assessment (Mod-HSA)

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  1. Modified High School Assessment(Mod-HSA) Maryland State Board of Education August 26, 2008

  2. NCLB REQUIREMENTS • Beginning in 2005-06, all students in grades 3-8, including students with disabilities (with reasonable adaptations and accommodations, as necessary) will participate in annual assessments in, at a minimum, mathematics and reading/language arts, and, beginning no later than 2007-08, in science. [Sec. 1111(b)(3)(C)] • Accommodations, guidelines, and alternate assessments must be provided in the same manner as under [Sec. 612(a)(17) of the IDEA. Sec. 1111(b)(2)(I)] IDEA REQUIREMENTS • Students with disabilities will participate in general state and district wide assessments, with appropriate accommodations, where necessary. [Sec. 612(a)(17)(A)] • For students with disabilities who are determined to be unable to participate in general assessments, alternate assessments will be used. []Sec. 612(a)(17)(A)(ii)]

  3. Regular assessment Regular assessment with accommodations Alternate assessment based on grade-level achievement standards (Mod-2%) Alternate assessment based on alternate achievement standards (Alt-1%) ALL Students with Disabilities Participate in Assessments

  4. A student’s disability must not determine which assessment the student will take. There is no limit on the number of students TAKING any particular assessment. A student’s IEP team will make the decision as to which assessment a student will take.

  5. May not be limited to students in a particular disability category. Alternate achievement standards and modified achievement standards must be developed using a documented and validated standard-setting process. Assessments based on alternate or modified achievement standards must be valid and reliable and must be of high technical quality. Assessments must be linked to academic content standards for the grade in which the student is enrolled.

  6. Mod-HSA • Includes students with disabilities who can make significant progress but may not reach grade-level achievement standards in the same time frame as other students • States that students must receive grade-level instruction • States that the student’s IEP team must use objective evidence (e.g., from state assessments), based on multiple measures, and collected over a period of time to identify these students • May not preclude students from earning a regular high school diploma Alt-HSAs • Includes students with the most significant cognitive disabilities • Includes students whose cognitive impairments may prevent them from attaining grade-level achievement standards, even with the best instruction • Preclude students from earning a regular high school diploma

  7. Characteristics of Assessments

  8. General Curriculum and Assessments

  9. Modified Achievement Standards and Instruction • Designed to meet the needs of student’s specific instructional characteristics, such as the need for: • Shorter reading passages • More visual cues • Scaffolding questioning • Few items presented on a page • Provide a measure of students with disabilities performance compared with grade-level academic content standards • Provide teachers and parents with information that will help guide access to the general curriculum and instruction strategies

  10. Who is a Mod-Eligible Student? A student with an IEP working on grade level content A student making progress on grade-level academic IEP goals, but not a year for a year Has had multiple interventions over consecutive years Does not qualify for Alt-MSA eligibility (not a student with significant cognitive disabilities)

  11. Cannot attain proficiency on the actual grade-level MSA, even with the provision of accommodations based on documented multiple valid and objective measures of student’s progress Learning based on the State’s approved Academic Content Standards/Core Learning Goals in Algebra/Data Analysis, Biology, English and/or Government.

  12. Only Selected Responses Reduced number of answer choices (3 instead of 4) Simplified sentence structure, vocabulary, and graphics Deleted extraneous information when possible No “EXCEPT” and “NOT” questions Separated long paragraph questions into bullets whenever possible Online Assessment “Pre-reading” text added prior to passages Use pictures to support passage

  13. Mod-MSA Math Test Format Publicly Released Item Look at the equation below. 125 x N = 375 What value of N makes this equation correct? • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 Sample Modified Test Item

  14. Benefits • Eligible to take the Mod-HSA in one subject and take the HSA in another subject • Test is more accessible and students with IEPs will do better • All accommodations available • Students do not need to “pass” to benefit from participation in assessment • Assist in increasing points towards composite score of 1602 • Improve opportunities for completion of Bridge Modules • Online Availability

  15. Mod-HSA Professional Development Trainings State and Regional meetings and individual Technical Assistance to LSS and schools. 949 participants attended the Mod-HSA Regional Trainings and Technical Support meetings • Assistant Superintendents • Local Accountability Coordinators • Directors of Special Education • Central Office Special Education Personnel • High School Principals • High School Assist. Principals • STCs • IEP Chairpersons

  16. Topics Covered at Mod-HSA Professional Development Trainings • Mod-eligibility requirement • Guidelines for IEP Teams • Summary of Maryland’s Assessments • Sample of modified test items • Creating standard based IEPs • Writing IEP goals based on content standards

  17. Modified High School Assessment(Mod-HSA) Standard Setting

  18. Mod-HSA Alternative assessment for students working on grade level content • Assesses algebra, biology, English • End of course • Multiple-choice assessment • English and algebra scores included in AYP – 2%

  19. Mod-HSA Standard Setting New Assessment in May 2008 • Equated to regular HSA scale to maintain graduation passing scores. • NCLB requires standards of proficient and advanced. • Proficient is defined as passing for the regular HSA • Standard setting was to recommend proficient and advanced performance for AYP calculations

  20. Numbers of Students Participating in the 2008 Mod-HSA (Grades 9-11 Combined)

  21. Standard-Setting Work Flow 3 content groups August 17 thru 19th Psychometric Council Review & Articulation Committee Week of August 18th State Superintendent State Board of Education August 26-27th Set Mod-HSA Standards

  22. 3 Standard-Setting Groups 15 to 16 participants (teachers and supervisors with content area and special education expertise) representing 20 school systems • Mod-HSA Algebra • Mod-HSA English • Mod-HSA Biology

  23. Mod-HSA Performance Standards threshold students Basic Proficient Advanced Recommended Standards

  24. Review and Articulation August 21, 2008 • Superintendents • Local Accountability Coordinators • Teachers • Central Office Personnel • Directors of Special Education • Advocates for students with special needs • Parents • Business Community members • MSDE

  25. Proposed Mod-HSA Cut Scores

  26. Impact Data Percent of students scoring Proficient and Advanced on May 2008 Mod-HSA

  27. Next Steps for Mod-HSA Assessments September • Implement cut scores, double check the data for accuracy at school and system level Late September • NCLB Parent reports sent to school systems • Data added to regular HSA status data • High school AYP calculated • Scores added to website

  28. Modified High School Assessment(Mod-HSA) Questions & Discussion

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