SPED 562: C 3 and 4 Assessment and Managing Instruction Witzel

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SPED 562: C 3 and 4

Assessment and Managing Instruction

Witzel

Itinerary

• Chapter 3– Stages of learning– Monitoring learning– Monitoring instruction

• Chapter 4– Instructional Options– Teaching self-determinism– Lesson design

Stages of Learning

Mercer & Mercer1.Acquisition2.Proficiency3.Maintenance4.Generalization5.Adaptation

Are these the only stages that exist in theory?

Two Approaches to Developing Progress Monitoring Measures

(Fuchs, 2004)

• Curriculum Sampling– Systematically sample items from the annual

curriculum on each measure

• Robust Indicator– Identify a global behavior that either

encompasses many skills taught in the annual curriculum or is predictive of proficiency in the annual curriculum

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Regular EducationSpecial Education

Slope = .97Slope = .97(SD = .14)(SD = .14)

Motivational Motivational ContractContract

Explicit Explicit InstructionInstruction

Strategy Strategy InstructionInstruction

Extra Fact Extra Fact Practice Practice

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Bobbae’s Math Performance

5© Witzel, 2008

Fuchs Research
MOTIVATIONAL CONTRACT: self monitoring completion of classroom work during reading instructional period, especially reading library books during class reading period, with negotiated rewardLOWER READING MATERIAL: identifying, with assistance of librarian, high interest library books of lower, mre appropriate difficulty levelFINAL e AND VOWEL TERMS: Mnemonics instruction in decoding final e and vowel team words, with systematic planning for transfer to decoding in natural textMONITORING ERRORS: Reading aloud into a tape recorder. Then, listening to herself read while reading silently, and identifying and correcting errors that fail to preserve the meaning of the text. Mixing this with repeated reading activities.

RANKED SCORES - ComputationTeacher: Mrs. Smith

Report through 3/17

Name Score Growth

Samantha Spain 57 +1.89Aroun Phung 56 +1.60Gary McKnight 54 +1.14Yasmine Sallee 53 +1.34Kathy Taylor 53 +1.11Jung Lee 53 +1.23Matthew Hayes 51 +1.00Emily Waters 48 +1.04Charles McBride 43 +1.12Michael Elliott 42 +0.83Jenna Clover 42 +0.78Becca Jarrett 41 +1.14David Anderson 38 +0.79Cindy Lincoln 36 +1.04Kaitlin Laird 35 +0.71Victoria Dillard 34 +0.64Vicente Gonzalez 29 +0.28Adam Qualls 26 +0.60Michael Sanders 25 +0.70Jonathan Nichols 25 +2.57Amanda Ramirez 23 +0.85Anthony Jones 19 +0.05Erica Jernigan 18 +0.23Icon 0 +0.00

From Monitoring Basic Skills Progress: Basic Math Computation (2nd ed.) (1998)

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General General EducationEducation

Intervention Intervention EducationEducation

Slope = .97Slope = .97(SD = .14)(SD = .14)

PALSPALS CBI PracticeCBI Practice CRA with CRA with fractions fractions and factsand facts

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Caroline’s Math Performance

Fuchs Research
MOTIVATIONAL CONTRACT: self monitoring completion of classroom work during reading instructional period, especially reading library books during class reading period, with negotiated rewardLOWER READING MATERIAL: identifying, with assistance of librarian, high interest library books of lower, mre appropriate difficulty levelFINAL e AND VOWEL TERMS: Mnemonics instruction in decoding final e and vowel team words, with systematic planning for transfer to decoding in natural textMONITORING ERRORS: Reading aloud into a tape recorder. Then, listening to herself read while reading silently, and identifying and correcting errors that fail to preserve the meaning of the text. Mixing this with repeated reading activities.

© Witzel, 2008 8

Grading procedures (see handout)

Multi fact

combo Carry in

Carry out

Add carry

Line up add

Add facts

Answer

Mike √ √ √ √ √ √ √ √

Tarek √ X √ √ √ √ √ X

Miguel √ √ √ √ √ √ √ √

Manuel √ √ X X √ √ √ X

Jose √ √ √ √ √ √ √ √

Pam √ √ √ √ √ X √ X

Michele √ √ √ √ √ √ √ √

Brandon √ √ √ √ √ √ √ √

Stan √ √ √ √ √ X √ X

Monitoring Instruction

• Repeated testing may become tedious and not informative

• More importantly, it may not provide the teacher with a clear look at students’ understanding.

• Thus, it is important to use assessment in a manner that drives instruction.

• Use multiple forms of assessment and adjust accordingly. Monitor and track your adjustments accordingly.

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Self-determinism

• Include students in the decision process.• Let them investigate career options and math

requirements.• Students should lead IEPs rather than teams

away from the student.

• During math class, what should we have students look for everyday?

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Explicit Instruction

• Explicit instruction consistently resulted in large effects both for learning single skills as well as multiple related skills in complex problem solving.

• These findings must be tempered by the fact that the measures on which the effect sizes were calculated were all researcher-developed. Gersten, Baker, & Chard (in-press)

© Witzel, 2008

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Connected Teaching Steps Best Practices consistent in math research

literature:– Advance Organizer– Model– Guided Practice– Independent Practice– Feedback– Maintenance and Generalization

Observe these steps in http://etv.jmu.edu/mathvids/

© Witzel, 2006 13

Suggested lesson format

1. Warm-up (maintenance) 2. Statement of relevance3. Describe / Model4. Guided Practice5. Independent Practice (process feedback)6. Word Problem (generalization)7. ***Fluency Probe (product feedback)

Witzel, 2009

Warm-ups• Mixed reviews are meant to help students

maintain previous skills. This process can be a quick drill oriented piece, but it is most useful with word problems that students understand.

• Bob went to the movies and lost his wallet. How much money did he lose? He bought two $8 tickets and three $1.50 sodas. He started with two $20 bills.

• It is best to try to tie the mixed review to the newly introduced concept.

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Witzel, 2009

State the Relevance

• Find a reason why these concepts are important to students immediately.

• Why should we learn reducing expressions?• Why should we learn inverse operations

(solving for single variables)?

• If we do not know why we are teaching a concept, should we teach it at all?

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Witzel, 2009

Let’s try some examples

• First some modeling “I do it”

• Then well work together on some “We do it”

• Then you try some on your own “You do it”

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Models of Information Transfer

Cecil Mercer

• “I do it”• “We do it”• “You do it”

Matt McGueThe 5 steps to Apprenticeship1. “I do, you watch, we talk”2. “I do, you help, we talk”3. “You do, I help, we talk”4. “You do, I watch, we talk”5. “You do, someone else

watches”

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“I do it” “We do it” “You do it”

• What are the explicit steps to:1.Changing floors using an elevator2.Checking out at a grocery store3.Greeting a new neighbor4.Confronting your boss with a problem

• How does this process apply to math?

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Witzel, 2009

Feedback and Generalization

• Appropriate feedback

• When should homework involve multiple independent practice problems?

• When should homework involve math problems that explain the application in their own lives?

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Summation

• What ideas stood out here?

• Name other ways to assess student learning and teacher’s instruction.

• How can constructivism be confused with explicit instruction?

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