Upload
kate-boatright
View
222
Download
0
Tags:
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
Texas Social StudiesSupervisors Conference
March, 2010
Student AssessmentUpdate
Brenda Tingle - Manager of Social Studies AssessmentLynn Franzen - World History Coordinator
1
The Next Two Years
Transition period TAKS Program STAAR Development
Advisory meetings Field Testing Mandatory and Field Testing Standard Setting
2
EOC mandatory sampling of operational EOC assessments
Can volunteer for these assessments
Performance results available
5
2009 - 2010 Testing
2009-2010 Testing
EOC Mandatory Sampling
Algebra I, geometry, biology, chemistry, U.S. history, physics, world geography
6
2009-2010 Testing
Field testing Algebra II and
English I for the first time
Representative sampling will be required to participate
Others can volunteer to participate
No performance reports
7
Current EOC Assessments
Untimed, but designed to be about 2 hours
Not grade specific
Not required to be part of student’s grade
Not included in state or federal accountability
No retests available until 2011–2012
8
Current EOC Assessments
Districts may volunteer for field tests and operational tests (online or paper when available) at the
student
teacher
campus,
or district level
9
Current EOC Assessments
Three week testing window for field tests (May 3–21) English I
Algebra II
Three week testing window for operational tests (May 10–28) Algebra I and Geometry
U.S. History and World Geography
Biology, Chemistry, and Physics
10
Current EOC Assessments
Operational
Online only
2011 - will be available in paper or onlineSome districts will participate in mandatory
testing
2010 U.S. History EOC Assessment
11
Current EOC Assessments
Operational
Mandatory for those districts selected; online only
Voluntary for everyone else; districts can choose paper, online, or combination
2010 World Geography EOC Assessment
12
Current EOC Assessments Within 24 hours of online testing
Confidential Student Report Confidential List of Student Results
Data file available in summer Overall raw score Performance by objective
Summary reports available in summer Overall raw score frequency distribution Objective level raw score frequency distribution Cumulative raw score frequency distribution
13
Current EOC Assessments
Resources available Assessed curriculum
Assessment blueprint
Assessment reference materials
Can be found at http://www.tea.state.tx.us/index3.aspx?id=3302&menu_id3=793
14
Changes to the Assessment Program—House Bill 3
Vertically align assessments from college and career readiness concepts in EOC assessments to new middle school assessments and to new elementary assessments
New assessments will focus on specific knowledge and skills with others rotating into the assessments across years
New Assessments at Grades 3–8 & High School
15
2009 – 2010 Development
STAARState of Texas Assessment of
Academic Readiness
16
2009 - 2010 Development
Grades 3–8 & High School (EOC)
Will have “clearer, fewer, deeper” focus
Will become stakes test for freshman in 2011–2012
17
2009 - 2010 Development
Convene educator advisory committees in 2010
Review curriculum to determine what is assessable
Review assessed curriculum to determine what should be the focus of the assessment
STAAR - Grade 8, and social studies EOCs
18
2009 - 2010 Development
NEW TEST DESIGN Determine the focus of grade 8 and each
EOC social studies assessment
What is essential in preparing students for success on the next social studies assessment and in college and career?
19
TEKS FOR SPECIFIC GRADE OR COURSE
NOT ASSESSED
ASSESSEDACROSS YEARS
FOCUS OF ASSESSMENT
New ProposedAssessment Design
2009 - 2010 Development
STAAR assessments will measure skills along with content in all subject areas
Will not separate out and measure skills alone Reflects how skills are taught -- authentic
assessment
21
2009 - 2010 Development
Some test items will be dual coded Items will have a primary content student
expectation number and when applicable, a skills student expectation number
22
Example of Dual-Coding
23
Content student expectation: world geography 18A Skills student expectation: world geography 21C
Example of Dual Coding
24
World Geography 18: Culture. The student understands the ways in which cultures change and maintain continuity. The student is expected to:
A. Describe the impact of general processes such as migration, war, trade, independent inventions, and
diffusion of ideas and motivations on cultural change.World Geography 21: Social studies skills. The student applies critical thinking skills to organize and use information acquired from a variety of sources including electronic technology. The student is expected to:
C. Construct and interpret maps to answer geographic questions, infer geographic relationships, and analyze geographic change;
2009 - 2010 Development
New assessment blueprints prior to 2011 administration
New reference materials
New information booklets
STAAR High School EOC
25
2009 - 2010 Development
26
STAAR Grade 8
New assessment blueprints prior to 2012 administration
New reference materials
New information booklets
2010 – 2011 Development
Setting performance standards
Standards for EOC assessments planned for fall 2011
Standards for grades 3–8 assessments planned for fall 2012
STAAR Development
27
World Geography
28
U. S. History Since 1877TAKS
Grade 10 and Exit Level
2010U. S. History EOC
STAAR U. S. History EOC(2011 and after)
Objectives 5 6 To be decided
Number of Questions
Grade 10 – 50Exit Level - 55
68 To be decided
Student Expectations included
Selected SEs from grade 8 world geography world history
All 92 SEs from the U.S. History curriculum
Selected U. S. History SEs (inclusion of SEs to be determined)
Assessment of skills
Stand-alone skills items
Stand-alone skills items
Dual–coded items will assess both content and skills
Question distribution
Questions distributed over cumulative social studies content
Questions distributed proportionally over SEs in the U. S. History Since 1877 curriculum
Question distribution will emphasize the core
World Geography
29
World GeographyTAKS
Grade 10 and Exit Level
2010World Geography EOC
STAAR World Geography EOC
(2011 and after)
Objectives 5 6 To be determined
Number of Questions
Grade 10 – 50Exit Level - 55
68 To be determined
Student Expectations included
Selected SEs from grade 8 world geography world history
Selected SEs from world geography(65 of 66 SEs)
Selected world geography SEs(inclusion of SEs to be determined)
Assessment of skills
Stand-alone skills items
Stand-alone skills items
Dual–coded items will assess both content and skills.
Question distribution
Questions distributed over cumulative social studies content
Questions distributed proportionally over SEs in the World Geography curriculum
Question distribution will emphasize the core
World Geography
30
World HistoryTAKS
Grade 10 and Exit Level
2010 2011 World History Field Test
STAAR World History EOC
(2012 and after)
Objectives 5 To be determined
Number of Questions
Grade 10 – 50Exit Level - 55
To be determined To be determined
Student Expectations included
Selected SEs from grade 8 world geography world history
Selected world history SEs(inclusion of SEs to be determined)
Assessment of skills
Stand-alone skills items
Dual–coded items will assess both content and skills
Dual–coded items will assess both content and skills
Question distribution
Questions distributed over cumulative social studies content
Questions assessing all student expectations included in the blueprint will be field tested
Question distribution will emphasize the core
World Geography
31
Grade 8 TAKS
Grade 82010 and 2011Grade 8 TAKS
STAAR Grade 8 Assessment
(2012 and after)
Objectives 5 5 To be determined
Number of Questions
48 48 To be determined
Student Expectations included
65 of 108 grade 8 student expectations
65 of 108 grade 8 student expectations
Selected grade 8 SEs(inclusion of SEs to be determined)
Assessment of skills
Stand-alone skills items
Stand-alone skills items
Dual–coded items will assess both content and skills
Question distribution
Questions distributed over the selected Grade 8 SEs
Questions distributed over the selected Grade 8 SEs
Question distribution will emphasize the core
EOC Assessments
Freshman class of 2011–2012 is first group to have EOC assessments as a graduation requirement
That is the current 7th graders
All 12 EOC assessments will be available in 2011–2012
34
EOC Assessments
2009–2010 2010–2011 2011–2012 2012–2013 2013–2014 2014–2015
GR 9 TAKS TAKS EOC EOC EOC EOC
GR 10 TAKS TAKS TAKS EOC EOC EOC
GR 11 TAKS TAKS TAKS TAKS EOC EOC
GR 12 TAKS* TAKS* TAKS* TAKS* TAKS* EOC or TAKS*
Plan for phase-out HS TAKS and phase-in EOC assessments
*Out-of-school testers and 12th grade re-testers
35
Your Input Is Needed
Educator involvement in test development is critical to process
Highly qualified educators are needed to serve on educator committees, especially at the high school level
The Educator Recommendation Form can be found at http://ritter.tea.state.tx.us/student.assessment/develop/recform.pdf
36
EOC Assessments
EOC assessments shall measure a student’s performance on college and career readiness standards
EOC assessments will include questions to measure college readiness (Algebra II and English III)
If a link is substantiated between performance on science and/or social studies EOC assessments and college readiness, then college readiness performance standards may be established
37
EOC Assessments A student must achieve a minimum score, as
determined by the commissioner, for the score to count towards the student’s cumulative score
A student’s cumulative score is determined using the student’s highest score on each EOC assessment
The 0–100 scale with references to scores of 60 and 70 has been deleted from the law
38
EOC Assessments
If a student does not achieve the minimum score on an EOC assessment, the student shall retake the assessment
If a student does not perform satisfactorily on the college-readiness component of the EOC assessments for Algebra II or English III, the student may retake the assessment
39
EOC Assessments
A student’s score on an EOC assessment will be worth 15% of the student’s final grade for that course
A school district is not required to use the student’s score on subsequent administrations to determine the student’s final grade for that course
40
Effects of Social Studies TEKS Revisions on Assessments
Assessments will be aligned to TEKS in place in the state for that school year
41
For More Information Go To …
Texas Education Code chapter 39 at http://www.statutes.legis.state.tx.us/Docs/ED/htm/ED.39.htm
House Bill 3 at http://www.capitol.state.tx.us/tlodocs/81R/billtext/pdf/HB00003F.pdf
42
Manager of Social Studies AssessmentBrenda Tingle
Social Studies Assessment TeamAimee Cabatingan
Nicole EllisLynn FranzenLisa Medina
TEA Student Assessment Social StudiesTeam
43
Copyright and Terms of Service Copyright @ Texas Education Agency, 2002.
These materials are copyrighted © and trademarked ™ as the property of the Texas Education Agency and may not be reproduced without the express written permission of the Texas Education Agency, except under the following conditions:
1) Texas public school districts, charter schools, and Education Service Centers may reproduce and use copies of the Materials and Related Materials for the districts’ and schools’ educational use without obtaining permission from the Texas Education Agency;2) Residents of the state of Texas may reproduce and use copies of the Materials and Related Materials for individual personal use only without obtaining written permission of the Texas Education Agency;3) Any portion reproduced must be reproduced in its entirety and remain unedited, unaltered and unchanged in any way;4) No monetary charge can be made for the reproduced materials or any document containing them; however, a reasonable charge to cover only the cost of reproduction and distribution may be charged.Private entities or persons located in Texas that are not Texas public school districts or Texas charter schools or any entity, whether public or private, educational or non-educational, located outside the state of Texas MUST obtain written approval from the Texas Education Agency and will be required to enter into a license agreement that may involve the payment of a licensing fee or a royalty fee. Contact TEA Copyrights with any questions you may have.
44