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Changes to assessment and reporting of children’s attainment A guide for Parents and Carers Please use the SPACE bar to move this slideshow at your own pace Foston and Terrington Primary Schools

Changes to assessment and reporting of children’s attainment A guide for Parents and Carers Please use the SPACE bar to move this slideshow at your own

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What changes have come from the Department for Education (DfE)? Foston and Terrington Primary Schools

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Page 1: Changes to assessment and reporting of children’s attainment A guide for Parents and Carers Please use the SPACE bar to move this slideshow at your own

Changes to assessment and

reporting of children’s attainment

A guide for Parents and Carers

Please use the SPACE bar to move this slideshow at your own pace

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Page 2: Changes to assessment and reporting of children’s attainment A guide for Parents and Carers Please use the SPACE bar to move this slideshow at your own

First of all…why has assessment been updated?

• Along with schools across the nation, we have had to develop our own assessment format with the removal of “Levels”.• As with all new systems in school they need

tweaking in response to external changes and new knowledge and information gathered throughout an academic year.• We have listened to feedback from consultants

(Learning Ladders and FOCUS Education) and teachers about last year’s system.

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Page 3: Changes to assessment and reporting of children’s attainment A guide for Parents and Carers Please use the SPACE bar to move this slideshow at your own

What changes have come from the Department for Education (DfE)?

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Page 4: Changes to assessment and reporting of children’s attainment A guide for Parents and Carers Please use the SPACE bar to move this slideshow at your own

• “As part of our reforms to the national curriculum, the current system of ‘levels’ used to report children’s attainment and progress will be removed from September 2014 and will not be replaced. By removing levels we will allow teachers greater flexibility in the way that they plan and assess pupils’ learning. • The programmes of study within the new National

Curriculum (NC) set out expectations at the end of each key stage, and all maintained schools will be free to develop a curriculum relevant to their pupils that teaches this content. The curriculum must include an assessment system which enables schools to check what pupils have learned and whether they are on track to meet expectations at the end of the key stage, and to report regularly to parents.”

National curriculum and assessment from September 2014: information for schools

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How will this change the assessment and reporting of children’s attainment?

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Moving Assessment at Foston and Terrington forward

• With levels now gone, all schools have been given the freedom to select an assessment procedure that is clearer for parents and carers.• As a school we must report back on whether a pupil

is achieving the expectations for the end of each key stage.• At Terrington and Foston we have taken this a step

further and have split the national curriculum in to ‘End of Year Expectations’ for English and Mathematics. This is a list of the key objectives that pupils need to know by the end of each academic year.

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Page 7: Changes to assessment and reporting of children’s attainment A guide for Parents and Carers Please use the SPACE bar to move this slideshow at your own

How will we report back to parents?

From Year 1 to Year 6, every pupil has a set of ‘End of Year Expectations’ to achieve by the end of each academic year in English and Mathematics. • At parental consultations you will be notified if your child is “on track” to

achieve the Expected grade – along with some areas you can support your child’s learning at home.

• If you child is NOT “on track” you will be provided with information about what the school is doing to support your child for the upcoming term, as well as how you can support your child’s learning at home.

• For your child’s end of year report, you will be given information on: an assessment of either Emerging (split into 3 stages), Expected or Mastery based on the percentage of expectations they have met AND suggested targets to help support your pupil over the Summer break ready for September and a new set of expectations

• The ultimate aim is by the end of Year 6, is for every pupil to be ready for Secondary school, by achieving the Year 6 Expected grade.

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It is important to note that…• the new curriculum is very challenging. The bar has been raised for

every year group.• to achieve an ‘Expected’ grade in Year 6, researchers and

educationalists have compared it to an old level 4A/5C. Previously, a child only had to reach the level 4C threshold to have met the old

national expectations for the end of Key Stage 2.

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So what will this new system look like?

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Level 6Level 5aLevel 5bLevel 5cLevel 4aLevel 4bLevel 4cLevel 3aLevel 3bLevel 3cLevel 2aLevel 2b

Emerging Expected MASTERY

Year 6 Emerging 1

Year 6 Emerging 2

Year 6 Emerging 3

Year 6 Expected

Year 6 MASTERY

Year 5 Emerging 1

Year 5 Emerging 2

Year 5 Emerging 3

Year 5 Expected

Year 5 MASTERY

Year 4 Emerging 1

Year 4 Emerging 2

Year 4 Emerging 3

Year 4 Expected

Year 4 MASTERY

Year 3 Emerging 1

Year 3 Emerging 2

Year 3 Emerging 3

Year 3 Expected

Year 3 MASTERY

Year 2 Emerging 1

Year 2 Emerging 2

Year 2 Emerging 3

Year 2 Expected

Year 2 MASTERY

Year 1 Emerging 1

Year 1 Emerging 2

Year 1 Emerging 3

Year 1 Expected

Year 1 MASTERY

We move away from an assessment system that

runs throughout the School and across Year Groups

where children are encouraged to accelerate

through the levels.

We moved to a system where pupils are assessed against a key set of expectations per Year Group. The children are

learning in greater depth and apply their learning to a wide variety of situations. They are not accelerated through levels, instead they are developing a deeper understanding and an ability to apply this understanding across other subjects and in a variety of situations. At the beginning of each year they face the challenge of a new set of End of Year Expectations

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How will our assessment system work within each Year Group?

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All children at the start of each Year begin at Emerging 1. As they begin to achieve the objectives for that year, they move towards ‘Expected’. This is the desired grade for the end of each academic year, to be ready/prepared for the following Year.

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potential progression throughout the year

Emerging is split into 3 parts to aid monitoring progress throughout the early portion of the school year, when

the children are beginning their work towards achieving a new set of expectations.

Expected is the aim for children to achieve by the

end of each academic year.

Achieving a “Mastery” standard for an expectation? For children to reach the “mastery” standard for an expectation they must show continually that:• They make no mistakes• They work at a rapid pace• They can consistently apply that objective

in a range of situations• They can apply what they know to other

subjects • They have an “unconscious competence” –

they can do it without thinking

Below the National Standard

Emerging 1 Emerging 2 Emerging 3 EXPECTED MASTERY Exceptional

Children are not able to access their age-related expectations and are working on expectations from previous year groups

Children are meeting 50% or below of the Expectations

Children are meeting between 50% and 65% of the Expectations

Children are meeting between 65% and 80% of the Expectations

Children have met 80% to 100% of the Expectations and can apply them to different contexts.

Children have met 100% of the Expectations and 25% of the Expectations are to a “Mastery” standard

Children have completed 100% of the Expectations to a “Mastery” standard. This is the stage that describes children with attainment significantly beyond age typical expectations.These percentages are new as of September 2015

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How will Teachers know which stage my child is at?

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Example – Below is the Year 4 End of Year Expectations for Mathematics

• Teachers will keep a running record of children’s understanding of these expectations• Teachers will make a judgment of when a child has achieved an expectation – adding

notes where necessary• A percentage can be then calculated of expectations achieved against expectations

needed, to show an assessment of Emerging 1, Emerging 2, Emerging 3, Expected• If a child completes all the end of year expectations before the end of the year, they begin

to work on the expectations in a variety of situations and settings, where they can apply their knowledge IN DEPTH – Mastery.

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When does this new assessment and reporting system begin?

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Page 16: Changes to assessment and reporting of children’s attainment A guide for Parents and Carers Please use the SPACE bar to move this slideshow at your own

It is already in place…• Since November 2015, with this expected change in mind, the Foston

and Terrington Senior Leadership Team began looking into the ‘End of Year Expectations’.

• Since the start of last academic year, lessons have been taught to begin achieving these expectations in line with the new National Curriculum requirements.

• ‘End of Year Expectations’ have been added to the front of children’s books, and teachers are beginning to make their judgments.

• At your next parental consultation evening, you will be able to view your child’s progress towards achieving these ‘End of Year Expectations’.

• We will update our end of year reports in response to the curriculum changes and subsequent changes we have made to our assessment procedures.

• End of Key Stage Expectations For English and Maths will be available shortly on our website, along with this powerpoint

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What about the new KS1 and KS2 end of year assessments?

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Key stage 1

• Tests that are externally set but internally marked continue as before but with new tests to reflect the new curriculum from summer 2016. • The output of the tests will be scaled scores. A scaled

score is defined as ‘a score where 100 will represent the new expected standard for that stage’. The scaled scores will inform teacher assessment. Little detail is given about scaled scores other than pupils with a score of 100 or above will have met the new standard and those with a score of less than 100 will not. It is not clear how the scaled score will relate to current measures for KS1.

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Key stage 2 • New, more challenging, externally set and marked

national tests will be introduced from 2016 for use at the end of KS2 in mathematics, reading and GPS. Sampling tests for science will continue as will teacher assessments for mathematics, reading, writing and science.• The output from the reading, mathematics and GPS

national tests will be scaled scores (similar to Key Stage 1 tests). Parents will receive details of their own child’s score, the average score for the school, local area and nationally.

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Page 20: Changes to assessment and reporting of children’s attainment A guide for Parents and Carers Please use the SPACE bar to move this slideshow at your own

Assessment ChangesNovember 2015

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