1 / 29

Using Curriculum-Based Measurement to Evaluate Student Writing and Plan Instruction

Using Curriculum-Based Measurement to Evaluate Student Writing and Plan Instruction. Stacy L. Weiss Josh Bock Casey O’Connell Indiana University-Bloomington. Agenda. Writing in today’s world Assessment – Instruction interaction Basics of Curriculum-Based Measurement

sybil
Download Presentation

Using Curriculum-Based Measurement to Evaluate Student Writing and Plan Instruction

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Using Curriculum-Based Measurement to Evaluate Student Writing and Plan Instruction Stacy L. Weiss Josh Bock Casey O’Connell Indiana University-Bloomington

  2. Agenda • Writing in today’s world • Assessment – Instruction interaction • Basics of Curriculum-Based Measurement • Written Expression CBM • Scoring procedures • Practice • Tips for CBM • Writing interventions

  3. Writing Today • Written expression is key in a digital world (Yancey, 2009) • Writing skills are essential for well-paying professions (National Commission on Writing, 2004) • Written expression is needed to demonstrate learning across subject areas

  4. Writing Today • Written expression is a multi-faceted process (Berninger, Garcia, & Abbott, 2009) • A large percentage of students with disabilities have difficulty with basic writing skills (NAEP, 2007) • Writing needs to have a greater focus in today’s schools

  5. Teaching Cycle

  6. Curriculum-Based Measurement Short, simple, efficient assessments

  7. Purpose of CBM • Formative assessment • Class-wide screening • Progress monitoring • Goal setting • Program evaluation

  8. Administration of Written Expression CBM • Standardized directions • Students respond to a story starter • Animals can’t talk, but… • Just when we got into our seats, the… • Yesterday, I went to the park and… • I was sleeping soundly when…. • I opened the front door very carefully when… http://www.aimsweb.com/measures-2/written-expression-cbm/

  9. Administration of Written Expression CBM • Students have: • 1 minute for planning • 3 or 5 minutes for writing • Students write a first draft

  10. TWW Scoring Guidelines • A word is any group of letters, even if the word is misspelled • Abbreviations count as a word • Numerals do not count as words (e.g., 5), unless they are in a date (e.g., Nov. 4) or after a dollar sign ($4.00). Numbers that are spelled out count as words (e.g., five) • A repeated story starter is counted as words written

  11. WSC Scoring Guidelines • Proper nouns must be capitalized to be spelled correctly (e.g., mary is incorrect) • Words written as proper nouns or names should be given the benefit of the doubt (e.g., Marey) • The first word of a sentence does not need capitalized to be a correctly spelled word (the girl went outside = 4 correctly spelled words) • Common abbreviations are spelled correctly (e.g., TV) • Words with reversed letters are spelled correctly, unless the reversal makes another letter that makes the word misspelled.

  12. Correct Word Sequences • Number of pairs of words that include the correct grammar and spelling • Generally good indicator of writing skills overall • For older students, calculate the number of correct word sequences minus incorrect word sequences (CWS – IWS) for accuracy

  13. CWS Scoring Guidelines • Capitalization, spelling, and ending punctuation must be correct • Correct sequences are grammatically correct (e.g., My mom and I are…) • Homophones need to be correct (e.g., two/to/too) • Numerals and symbols are not included in the scoring

  14. Evaluate Results • Examine writing samples for patterns of errors • Spelling errors • Grammatical errors • Handwriting difficulties • Letter reversals • In addition to the raw score, the percentage of correct responses can be calculated.

  15. Progress Monitoring: Expected Growth • Compared to reading CBMs of oral reading fluency, limited research on expected progress • Norms are available by percentile of progress between three benchmarks for Correct Word Sequences (Hosp, Hosp, & Howell) • After a short writing intervention, students wrote an average of three more words (TWW) (Gansle et al., 2004)

  16. Progress Monitoring: Goals • Using norms, goals can be written for CWS • For IEP goals, use a combination of fluency and accuracy • Example Goal: In response to a story starter, Rita will produce 39 correct word sequences in three minutes with 90% accuracy. Hosp, Hosp, & Howell, 2007

  17. Progress Monitoring: Graphing

  18. Plan and Deliver Instruction Writing Process, Grammar, and Spelling

  19. Self-regulated Strategy Development • Developing and activating background knowledge • Discussing the strategy • Cognitive modeling of the strategy • Memorization of the strategy • Supporting the strategy • Independent performance

  20. POW • Pick my idea • Organize my notes • Write and say more Reid & Leinemann, 2007

  21. WWW What=2, How=2 • Planning strategy for narrative writing • Questions • Who is the main character? • Who else is in the story? • When does the story take place? • What does the main character do? • What happens when he/she tries to do it? • How does the story end? • How does the main character feel? Reid & Leinemann, 2007

  22. Graphic Organizers http://www.eduplace.com/graphicorganizer/

  23. Writing Strategy - COPS • An easy-to-use revision strategy • Assists students in making mechanical revisions • Students are prompted with questions to help them review any revisions that need to be made • The mnemonic of COPS helps student remember the steps that need to be followed (Reid & Lienemann, 2007)

  24. CHave I capitalized the first word ? OHow is the overall appearance? P Have I put in commas and punctuation? SHave I spelled all the words right?

  25. Spelling Strategies • Cover, Copy, Compare (Erion et al., 2007) • Look at the spelling word • Cover the word • Copy the word from memory • Uncover word and Compare with model • Direct, explicit instruction in spelling patterns (Wanzek et al., 2006)

  26. Suggestions for Incorporating CBM • Be organized • Make a schedule • Take breaks when scoring • Reward yourself • Collaborate with others

  27. Contacts Stacy L. WeissAssistant Professor in Special Education(812) 856-8139stweiss@indiana.edu Josh Bockjbbock@indiana.edu Casey O’Connellcatoconn@indiana.edu

  28. Resources Mather, N., Wendling, B. J., & Roberts, R. (2009). Writing assessment and instruction for students with learning disabilities. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. ISBN-13: 978-0470230794. Riley-Tillman, T. C., & Burns, M. K. (2009). Evaluating educational interventions: Single case design for measuring response to intervention. New York: The Guilford Press. ISBN-13: 978-1606231067. Troia, G. A. (Ed). Instruction and assessment for struggling writers: Evidence-based practices. New York: Guilford Press. ISBN-13: 978-1593859923.National Center on Response to Interventionhttp://www.rti4success.org/index.php Intervention Central Curriculum-Based Measurement Warehousehttp://www.interventioncentral.org/index.php/cbm-warehouse#writtenExpression National Center on Student Progress Monitoringhttp://www.studentprogress.org/

  29. Works Cited Berninger, V. W., Garcia, N. P., & Abbott, R. D. (2009). Multiple processes that matter in writing instruction and assessment. In G. A. Troia’s (Ed.). Instruction and assessment for struggling writers: Evidence-based practices (pp. 15-50). New York: The Guilford Press. Erion, J., Davenport, C., Rodaz, N., Scholl, B., & Hardy, J. (2009). Cover-copy-compare and spelling: One verses three repetitions. Journal for Behavioral Education, 18, 319-330. Gansle, K. A., Noell, G. H., VanDerHeyden, A. M., Slider, N. J., Hoffpauir, L. D., Whitmarsh, E. L., Naquin, G. M. (2004). An examination of the criterion validity and sensitivity to brief intervention of alternative curriculum-based measures of writing skill. Psychology in the Schools, 41, 291-300. Hosp, M. K., Hosp, J. L., & Howell, K. W. (2007). The ABCs of CBMs: A practical guide to curriculum-based measurement. New York: The Guilford Press. National Commission on Writing (2004, September). Writing: A ticket to work or a ticket out. A Survey of Business Leaders. The College Board. Retrieved from: http://www.host-collegeboard.com/advocacy/writing/index.html Reid, R., & Lienemann, T. O. (2006). Strategy instruction for students with learning disabilities. New York: The Guilford Press. Wanzek, J., Vaughn, S., Wexler, J., Swanson, E. A., Edmonds, M., & Kim, A. (2006). A synthesis of spelling and reading interventions and their effects on spelling outcomes for students with LD. Journal of Learning Disabilities, 39, 528-543. Yancey, K. B. (2009). Writing in the 21st Century: A report from the National Council of Teachers of English. Urbana, IL: National Council of the Teachers of English. Retrieved from http://www.ncte.org

More Related