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Power of Reviewing Standards

Power of Reviewing Standards. Consortia Conference Call March 15, 2005 Susan Pimentel. Welcome Evaluation!. Benefits: Ensures standards are appropriate, clear, accurate and complete Builds ownership and awareness Provides ideas about rollout of standards. professional development, etc.

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Power of Reviewing Standards

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  1. Power of Reviewing Standards Consortia Conference Call March 15, 2005 Susan Pimentel

  2. Welcome Evaluation! Benefits: • Ensures standards are appropriate, clear, accurate and complete • Builds ownership and awareness • Provides ideas about rollout of standards. professional development, etc.

  3. Make it Multi-Faceted! 1. Internal Review: Determine how the standards drafts align to the research and other documents as required (e.g., GED, K-12 standards, NCTM) {Alignment} • Field Review: Ensure standards are understandable and acceptable to field who will be charged with standards’ implementation. {Validity} • External Expert Review: Focus here is primarily on the sufficiency and understandability of the content. {Validity}

  4. Tips for Internal Review 1. Ask members of writing teams to conduct. 2. Get specific about how standards align to research or other docs. Are they: • Congruent? • Aligned? • Contradictory? 3. Document extent of alignment (develop written rationale or correlation chart).

  5. Tips for Field Review: Focus Groups • Focus Group: • Involve instructors, program directors, etc. • Keep groups small (10-15) • Plan on 3 hours • Be prepared to walk through the docs • Employ members of writing teams to run • Send invitations and drafts well in advance of session • Hold sessions around key regions of the state

  6. Focus Groups, cont’d. • No defensiveness allowed!! Time to listen and inquire • Develop feedback forms/surveys • Document conversations/feedback • Report back to focus groups (meet again if possible)

  7. Tips for Field Review:Survey • Test survey with members of your writing team • Mail out to programs w/personal appeal to directors • Make it web-based as well • Collect quantitative and qualitative information • Ask about more than just the quality of the standards (e.g., roll out ideas, prof. dev.) • Consider using a general question survey and standards specific survey See attached draft survey.

  8. Combo is Best! • Pros of Focus Group: Personal and in-depth inquiry possible (but time consuming and can only accommodate small numbers) • Pros of Surveys: Able to reach large numbers and time and cost efficient (but can’t inquire, explain, discuss and promote greater understanding). Combo allows gives you depth and breadth; allows you to gather rich qualitative and quantitative information.

  9. Tips for External Expert Review • Develop a set of questions for the expert reviewer. • Include key aspects of the academic domain? Any gaps? • Clear and specific enough to inform instruction? • Adherence to research? • Appropriate rigor? • Reasonable and manageable? • Proper sequence or progression of skills? • Be clear about how specific you want the reviewer to be (e.g., general evaluation and recommendations or specific suggestions for wording changes and refinements). • Need to give “experts” a month or more lead-time.

  10. Pros of Expert Review They are: • Current on research • Familiar with expectations across the nation (and perhaps the world!) so they offer a broad perspective • Independent • Able to recognize common pitfalls • Offer specific recommendations about how to strengthen your standards • Able to provide standards with a “stamp of approval” that you can present to legislators, policy makers, etc.

  11. Prepare Teams for Review • Reviewers tend to tell you what they don’t like rather than what they do like. 2. Read between the lines: Standards mean change and change can be scary so important to hold on to your principles (e.g., must align to the research, prepare adults for success). 3. Prepare for conflicts in the reviews and determine means to grapple with the contradictions (go back to why you asked a group or individual to give you feedback).

  12. Prepare Teams, cont’d. 4. Let teams know that feedback offers a set of suggestions, not mandates. • Having said that, let teams know when it is just a matter of style or the change won’t diminish the draft, make the change even if it isn’t their preferred choice. It promotes ownership. • Set the expectation that teams will review every suggestion carefully and either adjust the standards or note a rationale for not accepting the feedback. The End

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