33
Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and

Writing

Tompkins-Chapter 35th edition

Page 2: Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

Determining READING LEVELS

INDEPENDENT- CAN READ ON OWN WITH 95-100% ACCURACY

INSTRUCTIONAL-CAN READ WITH SUPPORT WITH 90-94% ACCURACY

FRUSTRATION-TOO DIFFICULT LISTENTING CAPACITY-POTENTIAL

READING LEVEL

Page 3: Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

READABILITY FORMULAS

Method of estimating the difficulty of text or reading level of a text

Determined by correlating semantic and syntactic features

Leveled Books, FRYE Readability Graph, Lexile Framework

Page 4: Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

Leveled Books

Basal readers traditionally leveled according to grade level equivalent, but may be too broad

Fountas and Pinnell’s Text Gradient-levels books on continuum from easiest to hardest (p. 79)

Page 5: Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

The Lexile Framework(developed by MetaMatrix available through Scholastic)

System for leveling books (or matching books to readers)

Measures student’s reading level and the difficulty level of the text

Lexile levels range from 100-1300 (pl 80)

Ex. 6th grade = 850-950

Page 6: Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

Fry Readability Graph

Readability Formula Used to determine if a textbook or trade

book is appropriate for a particular grade level

See p. 78 for instructions Select 100 word passage Count # of syllables in each word Count # of sentences in the passage Plot on graph

Page 7: Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

Reading Recovery

Early intervention program for struggling readers at the end of the first grade

Goal to get them on grade level by 3rd grade

Reading Recovery reading levels = 0-26

Page 8: Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

Informal Assessments

Used to guide instruction Not high-stakes (does not

determine placement in groups or grade levels)

Page 9: Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

Monitoring Student Progress

Observations Anecdotal Notes Conferences Rubrics Work Samples Portfolios Self-Assessment (Also See Assessment Tools p. 85)

Page 10: Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

Observation

Interaction with students Shadowing-following one student and

systematically recording the student’s instructional experiences

“Kidwatching”-Ken GoodmanTeachers explore: 1) What evidence exists that language development is occurring?

2) What does the child’s unexpected production say about the child’s knowledge of language?

Anecdotal records- written accounts of specific incidents in the classroom (p. 82)

Page 11: Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

Conferences

Planning Conferences Reading/Writing Workshop

Conferences Evaluation Conferences

Page 12: Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

Rubrics (p. 64 and p. 84)

Rubrics are used to assess a students’ composition (writing), performance on a task, or a project.

Teachers establish criteria for scoring each product.

Page 13: Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

Portfolios

Folders, notebooks, web-based files that hold students work.

Teacher establish guidelines Students submit work within the

guidelines Progress Portfolios Showcase Porfolios

Page 14: Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

Self-Assessments

Involving students in self-assessment requires them to look more critically at their own work and set goals for improvement

Page 15: Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

Diagnosing Students Strength and Weaknesses

Teachers use diagnostic reading assessments to determine a student’s strengths and areas of weakness

See page 85

Page 16: Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

Concepts about Print or CAPMarie Clay

Assessment of Basic understandings about print and the way it works

Book-Orientation concepts Directionality concepts Letter/word concepts (See p. 113 for example of Scoring

Sheet)

Page 17: Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

Phonemic Awareness and Phonics

Monitor sound isolation, segmentation, blending, etc. through picture sorts, songs, rhyming words

DIBELS-Dynamic Indicators of Basic Early Literacy Skills (assess phonemic awareness and phonological awareness)

The Names Test-Phonics (Cunningham)

Page 18: Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

Running Records(Marie Clay)

To assess word identification and fluency Students read text aloud while teachers

make checkmarks noting the words read correctly and the miscues

Calculate # of words read correctly (95 %= independent, 90-94%= instructional, and fewer than 90%= frustration level

Examine miscues Examine comprehension through retelling (DIBELS >>>Running Records)

Page 19: Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

Miscue Analysis

Miscues= unexpected responses Includes substitutions, repetitions,

omissions, mispronunciation Categorize according to cueing

systems: semantic (meaning is similar) graphophonic (looks similar) syntactic (grammatically acceptable)

Page 20: Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

Informal Reading Inventory (IRI)

Commercial tests to assess reading levels (grade level equivalents)

Includes graded word lists, graded passages, and comprehension questions

Used to calculate independent, instructional, and frustrations levels

Page 21: Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

Retellings

Students retell a story or expository text after reading the text silently or aloud

Student retell story without assistance and then the teacher may ask open ended questions (What happened next?)

Teachers analyze retelling for comprehension

Page 22: Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

Oral Language Assessments

Teachers students who speak a language other than English (SOLOM)

Five Components on a Continuum Listening, Fluency Vocabulary Pronunciation Grammar

Page 23: Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

Cloze Procedure

Used to:

Determine suitability of a textbook or trade book

and/orAccess comprehension

Page 24: Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

Cloze Procedure

1. Select a passage of approximately 250 consecutive words from the text or trade book. The text should be one that the students have not read, or tried to read, before.

2. Type the passage using the first sentence intact and deleting every fifth word thereafter.

3. Give students the passage and have them fill in the blanks. Allow them all of the time they need.

Page 25: Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

Scoring Cloze Tests

Score by counting as correct only the exact words that were in the original text.

Determine the percentage of correct answers.

Less than 44%- Frustration Level (level that is too difficult…thwarts or baffles student)

44%-57%- Instructional Level (level at which the student can read with teacher guidance)

57% or more- Independent level (level to be read “on his or her own”)

Page 26: Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

Maze Procedure

Similar to cloze procedure Students are provided with 3

choices for each deleted word (or each blank)

1) correct word 2) syntactically acceptable but

semantically unacceptable 3) both semantically unacceptable

and syntactically unacceptable

Page 27: Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

Authentic Assessment (informal)

Takes place during the teaching/learning process Does not measure language as a set of fragmented

skills Oral and written language are integrated and whole Contextual/situational Assesses many types of literacy abilities in real and

functional ways Continuous process Varied process Should include student’s interests and beliefs Involves self-reflection and self-evaluation

Page 28: Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

Standardized Tests(Formal)

Mandated tests Schools and districts use scores for

comparing student achievement with previous years

Comparing with national norms and other districts

Page 29: Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

Purposes

To place and classify students To provide accountability To determine who needs extra help or

enrichment To create groups

Standardized tests often fail to reflect current views of teaching reading and are of little use to teachers day-to-day instruction

Page 30: Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

Formal Assessment-Norm Referenced

Norm-referenced- measure a student’s relative standing in relation to comparable groups of students across the nation or locally

Authors seek reliability and validity so that schools can be confident that the tests measure what they intend to measure

Results in standard scores—grade equivalents (in years and months) and percentile ranks (position within a set of 100 scores)

Page 31: Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

Criterion-Referenced

Scores are interpreted in terms of specific standards

Designed to match the standards or expectations of what students should know at successive points, or benchmarks

Advantage: Students do not compete with one another, but try to master certain objectives or criterion

Disadvantage: Reading can appear to be merely a set of skills that can be taught and learned in isolation

Page 32: Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

Standardized Testing

Is standardized testing beneficial to

student learning?NO YES

Conclusion

Page 33: Assessment of Student Progress in Reading and Writing Tompkins-Chapter 3 5 th edition

Standardized Testing

Pros--wide-scale testing

could bring about need reforms

--can be a tool for teaching and learning as well as designing curriculum

Cons Biased Teaching to the test Students become

“passive” rather than “active” learners

Not always accurate representation of what the student can do

Not authentic One source of

information