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Spring 2014 MCAS Information Night for Parents of Grade 10 Students

March 11, 2014 Gabriella White Academic & Testing Coordinator. Spring 2014 MCAS Information Night for Parents of Grade 10 Students. Agenda. General Information Dates Test Structure and Design Scores Test Administration Results Reporting Preparation of Students. General Information.

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Spring 2014 MCAS Information Night for Parents of Grade 10 Students

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  1. March 11, 2014 Gabriella White Academic & Testing Coordinator Spring 2014MCAS Information Nightfor Parents of Grade 10 Students

  2. Agenda • General Information • Dates • Test Structure and Design • Scores • Test Administration • Results Reporting • Preparation of Students

  3. General Information • The MCAS tests English, Math and Science. • By state law, all Grade 10 students in Massachusetts are required to participate in the MCAS test. • Beginning with the class of 2002, all students in Massachusetts have been required to earn a passing score on the English and Math Test to be eligible for graduation. • The class of 2010 was the first class who was also required to pass the Science and Technology test for graduation.

  4. Test Dates • English Language Arts • March 18 • March 19 • March 21 • Math • May 13 • May 14 • Science • June 2 • June 3

  5. Test Design • Classroom teachers from around the state meet in committees to review and approve test questions. • Test questions are then given a trial run on spring tests. • Questions are then reviewed a second time before being used on the active test. • All questions are based on the state approved frameworks for the subject area

  6. English Language Arts • Four sections to the test: • Long Composition • 3 sessions of reading comprehension • Three types of questions • Long Composition • Open Response • Multiple Choice

  7. Long Composition • Worth 20 points • 12 points for topic development • 8 points for English conventions • All students in the state answer the same essay question. • The question is open ended, and always asks students to write about a piece of literature. • The essays should answer the question. • It should not be a plot summary of the book • A plot summary equals zero (0) points

  8. Can be in 5 paragraph essay format, but this will result in a reduced topic development score • Want to be able to see the student’s “voice” • Can use a dictionary on the long composition section • Students will write a rough draft first • Final compositions will be scored for spelling and grammar

  9. Long composition will be administered on March 18 • If students are absent, they will be required to participate in the long composition make up test on March 27 • This is the only make up date for the long composition test • Students will answer a different essay prompt

  10. Sample Question – 2010 Spring Test

  11. Reading Comprehension • 3 sessions of reading comprehension • March 19: Sessions 1 and 2 • March 21: Session 3 • Trial questions and reading passages will be included on the test, but will not count towards the final score • Absent students must make up missed sessions no later than March 28 • There is not a separate test for missed reading comprehension sessions

  12. After reading each passage, students will be asked to answer several multiple choice questions • In addition to the multiple choice questions, students will be asked to write open response questions for some passages • Some readings will only have multiple choice questions but no reading will only have open response questions

  13. Open Response Questions • 4 points each • Open response questions will ask students to make an argument, backed up by evidence from the reading passage • More than one possible correct answer • Not scored for spelling or grammar • Not a 5 paragraph essay • Looking for students to cite evidence • Direct quotes • Indirect quotes • Examples

  14. Sample Question – 2010 Spring Test

  15. Mathematics • 2 Sessions • May 13: session 1 • May 14: session 2 • 3 types of questions • Multiple Choice • Short Answer • Open Response • No calculators allowed on session 1 • All students are allowed to use calculators on session 2 • Answer booklets include a graph paper section • All students are given a reference sheet of formulas

  16. Short Answer • Worth 1 points each • Student must perform calculation and record answer • Students can not choose from list of possible answers

  17. Sample Question – 2010 Spring Test

  18. Open Response • Worth 4 points • Students are asked to answer a multiple part question based on a set of given parameters • Students must label all parts of the question • Sometimes the different parts of the question build off of each other • Students must EXPLAIN their answers and not just give calculations • Not scored for spelling or grammar, but points can be deducted for not labeling answers • 23 cars • 4 pounds

  19. Sample Question – 2010 Spring Test

  20. Science & Technology • Tests available in Biology, Physics, Chemistry and Science/Technology • Schools have the option of testing in grades 9 or 10 • Students must take the test corresponding to the subject they are currently enrolled in • Nashoba Valley Technical School students take the Biology test in grade 10

  21. Biology Test • 2 sessions • June 2: session 1 • June 3: session 2 • 2 types of questions • Multiple Choice • Open Response • Can use calculators, but the biology test is designed to be taken without the use of calculators • Cumulative knowledge test

  22. Open Response • Worth 4 points • Students are often given a reading passage, chart, graph or diagram • Questions leave room for multiple possible answers • Not scored for spelling or grammar

  23. Sample Open Response Question – Spring 2010

  24. Questions

  25. How Scores are Calculated • The raw score is calculated first • Total number of points earned • No points are deducted for wrong or skipped scores • The raw score is then converted to a scaled score using a conversion chart • Scaled score is used to determine performance level and growth score • Growth score shows how much a student has improved or grown since their last MCAS test

  26. Performance Levels • Advanced: 260-280 • Proficient: 240-258 • Needs Improvement: 220-238 • Failing: 200-218

  27. Competency Determination • Determines eligibility for graduation • Must meet MCAS requirements • Must also meet local graduation requirements • English and Math • Earn a scaled score of 240 or higher • Earn a scaled score of 220 AND fulfill the requirements of an Educational Proficiency Plan (EPP) • Science • Earn a scaled score of 220 or higher

  28. What is an EPP? • Required for all student who score at the Needs Improvement Level on the MCAS test • Students must show they are making progress towards proficiency – improving • Students show improvement by: • Classroom grades • Standardized test scores • Final exams • Self-Assessments • Teacher progress reports • MCAS/EPP Testing

  29. Can Students Be Written Off An EPP? • Yes • Students can be written off of an EPP by participating in the MCAS/EPP Test and earning a scaled score of 240 or higher • MCAS/EPP Test for English is the March Retest • MCAS/EPP Test for Math is administered at the end of April • All students on an EPP are required to participate • If students score the same or lower it will NOT lower their scores

  30. What If A Student Fails English or Math? • Students who score below 220 have two retest opportunities to improve their score • November • March • Structure remains the same except: • All sample questions are removed from the retest • Questions designed to test advanced students are removed from the retest

  31. What If A Student Fails Science? • Retest opportunity in February of the following year • Retest opportunity is in Biology • If students do not earn a scaled score of 220 or higher on the Biology retest in February, they must participate in either the Physics or Chemistry testin June • Choice of test depends on which class the student is enrolled in • There is no EPP for Science

  32. MCAS Appeals • Students who have participated in testing and retesting and have good grades in the subject, but have not passed the MCAS exam may qualify for an appeal. • Students must maintain a 95% attendance rate to be eligible for an appeal • Students must maintain a GPA over 1.0 in the corresponding course • Student GPA is compared to a cohort of students within the school who scored between 220-228 on the MCAS exam • If granted an appeal, students qualify for graduation

  33. John and Abigail Adams Scholarship • For Advanced Students • Provides free tuition for 4 years at any Massachusetts state university, college or community college • To be eligible: • The average of students English, Science and Math scores must be in the top 25% of scores from NVTHS • Students must score in the advanced category on either the English, science or the Math test, and be at least proficient in the other two • Scholarship winners are announced in the fall of their Senior year

  34. Questions?

  35. Testing Times • Testing is scheduled from 8:00 – 11:00 on most test days (periods 1-4). • There are some exceptions based on the length of the testing session. • The test is untimed. • Extra time rooms are provided for students who need time beyond the 11:00 cut off. • Students may work on the test until the close of the school day.

  36. Testing Rooms • Each room has two teachers assigned to administer the test. • Students and staff are informed of their room assignments approximately 1 week prior to testing. • I work with Melissa LeRay, the Director of Special Education, to arrange for small group, read aloud, word processing and all other accommodations for students on an IEP or 504 plan. • Testing takes place on the second floor, the library, and all computer labs in the academic portion of the building. • All freshmen, juniors and seniors are sent to their technical program until 5th period (11:00). • No one but test administrators and grade 10 students are allowed on the second floor during MCAS administration.

  37. Materials Provided • Each Student is Provided: • Pencil • Magic Rub Eraser • Highlighter • Snack • Math reference sheet for Math testing • Calculators for Session 2 of Math testing • A dictionary is provided for each classroom on the day of the English Long Composition • Graphic organizers and other reference sheets for special education students with the graphic organizer/reference sheet accommodation. • Calculators for Session 1 of the Math test for special education students with this accommodation • Computers for special education students with the word processing accommodation

  38. Prohibited Items • CELL PHONES!!!!! • Can invalidate student, classroom or school scores • iPods and other electronic devices • Unapproved reference materials • Calculators on session 1 of the math test • Dictionaries on anything other than the English Long Composition • Thesaurus

  39. What can you do to help?

  40. Be positive and encouraging • Get students to school on time • Do not schedule any appointments for students on MCAS testing mornings • Make sure students eat a good breakfast • Make sure students get a good night sleep the night before • Discuss a book with your child before the Long Composition • Emphasize importance of answering all parts of open response questions, answering the question asked and labeling answers • Remind students to guess – no points are deducted – rather than leaving questions blank • Educated guessing is even better: try to eliminate one or two answer choices • Encourage students to check their work, take their time and use the extra time if necessary • Review the Math Reference Sheet • Remind students to use the dictionary for spelling on the long composition • Keep cell phones at home

  41. Thank you for Coming! Questions?

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