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Presenters Sharon Hall U.S. Department of Education Martin Kehe

State Exemplar: Maryland’s Alternate Assessment Using Alternate Achievement Standards The Alternate Maryland School Assessment. Presenters Sharon Hall U.S. Department of Education Martin Kehe Maryland State Department of Education William Schafer University of Maryland. Session Summary .

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Presenters Sharon Hall U.S. Department of Education Martin Kehe

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  1. State Exemplar: Maryland’s Alternate Assessment Using Alternate Achievement StandardsThe Alternate Maryland School Assessment Presenters Sharon Hall U.S. Department of Education Martin Kehe Maryland State Department of Education William Schafer University of Maryland

  2. Session Summary • This session highlights the Alternate Assessment based on Alternate Academic Achievement Standards in Maryland – The Alternate Maryland School Assessment (Alt-MSA) • Discussion will focus on • A description of the assessment and the systems-change process which was required to develop and implement the testing program • Development of reading, mathematics and science item banks • The process to ensure alignment with grade-level content standards and results and results of independent alignment studies • Technical documentation and research agenda to support validity and reliability.

  3. Agenda • Developing Maryland’s AA-AAAS: A Systems Change Perspective • Conceptual Framework • Alt-MSA Design • Developing the Mastery Objective Banks • Evaluation of the Alt-MSA’s alignment with content standards • Technical Documentation and Establishing a Research Agenda Support Validity and Reliability • Questions and Answers

  4. A Systems Change Perspective Process • Collaboration • Divisions of Special Education and Assessment • Stakeholder Advisory • Alt-MSA Facilitators • Alt-MSA Facilitators and LACs • MSDE and Vendor Instruction and Assessment • Students assigned to age appropriate grade (for purposes of Alt-MSA) • Local School System Grants

  5. A Systems Change Perspective Content • Reading and Mathematics mastery objectives and artifacts (evidence) linked with grade level content standards • No program evaluation criteria

  6. Maryland’s Alternate Assessment Design (Alt-MSA) Portfolio Assessment • 10 Reading and 10 Mathematics Mastery Objectives (MOs) • Evidence of Baseline (50% or less attained) • Evidence of Mastery (80% - 100%): 1 artifact for each MO • 2 Reading and 3 Mathematics MOs aligned with science • Vocabulary and informational text; measurement and data analysis

  7. What’s Assessed: Reading • Maryland Reading Content Standards 1.0 General Reading Processes • Phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency (2 MOs) • Vocabulary (2 MOs; 1 aligned with science) • General reading comprehension (2 MOs) 2.0 Comprehension of Informational Text • (2 MOs; 1 aligned with science) 3.0 Comprehension of Literary Text • (2 MOs)

  8. What’s Assessed: Mathematics • Algebra, Patterns, and Functions • (2 MOs) • Geometry • (2 MOs) • Measurement • (2 MOs; 1 aligned with science) • Statistics-Data Analysis • (2 MOs aligned with science) • Number Relationships and Computation • (2 MOs)

  9. What’s Assessed: Science (2008) • Grades 5, 8, 10 • Grades 5 and 8; select 1 MO each • Earth/Space Science • Life Science • Chemistry • Physics • Environmental Science • Grade 10 5 Life Science MOs

  10. Steps in the Alt-MSA ProcessStep 1: September • Principal meets with Test Examiner Teams • Review results or conduct pre-assessment

  11. Steps in the Alt-MSA ProcessStep 2: September-November • TET selects or writes Mastery Objectives • Principal reviews and submits • Share with parents • Revise (written) Mastery Objectives

  12. Steps in the Alt-MSA ProcessStep 3: September-March • Collect Baseline Data for Mastery Objectives: 50% or less accuracy • Teach Mastery Objectives • Assess Mastery Objectives • Construct Portfolio

  13. Standardized • Number of mastery objectives assessed • Format of mastery objectives • Content standards/topics assessed • All mos must have baseline data and evidence of mastery at 80%-100% • Types of artifacts permissible • Components of artifacts • Training and Handbook provided • Scoring training and procedures

  14. MO Format

  15. Evidence (Artifacts) • Acceptable Artifacts (Primary Evidence) • Videotapes-1 reading and 1 math mandatory • Audiotape • Student work (original) • Data collection charts (original) • Unacceptable Artifacts • photographs, checklists, narrative descriptions

  16. Artifact Requirements • Aligned with Mastery Objective • Must include baseline data that demonstrates student performs MO with 50% or less accuracy • Data chart must show 3-5 demonstrations of instruction prior to mastery • The observable, measurable student response must be evident (not “trial 1”) • Mastery is 80%-100% accuracy • Name, date, accuracy score, prompts

  17. Scores and Condition Codes A MO is not aligned B Artifact is missing or not acceptable C Artifact is incomplete D Artifact does not align with MO, or components of MO are missing E Data Chart does not show 3-5 observations of instruction on different days prior to demonstration of mastery F Accuracy score is not reported

  18. Reliability: Scorer Training • Conducted by contractor scoring director, MSDE always present • Must attain 80% accuracy on each qualifying set • Every portfolio is scored twice by 2 different teams • Daily backreading by supervisors and scoring directors • Daily inter-rater reliability data • Twice weekly validity checks • Ongoing retraining

  19. Maryland’s Alt-MSA Report

  20. Development of the Mastery Objective Banks • Initial three years of program involved teachers writing individualized reading and mathematics Mastery Objectives (approximately 100,000 objectives each year) • Necessary process to help staff learn the content standards • Maryland and contractor staff reviewed 100% of MOs for alignment and technical quality

  21. Mastery Objective Banks • Prior to year 4, Maryland conducted an analysis of written MOs to create the MO Banks for reading and mathematics • Banked items available in an online application, linked to and aligned with content standards • Provided additional degree of standardization • Process still allows for writing of customized MOs, as needed

  22. Mastery Objective Banks • In year 4, Baseline MO measurement was added • Teachers take stock of where a student is, without prompts at the beginning of the year on each proposed MO • This helps to ensure that students are learning and assessed on skills and knowledge that has not already been mastered • Year 5 added Science MO Bank

  23. Mastery Objective Banks

  24. Mastery Objective Banks

  25. Mastery Objective Banks

  26. Mastery Objective Banks

  27. Mastery Objective Banks

  28. National Alternate Assessment Center (NAAC) Alignment Study of the Alt-MSA

  29. NAAC Alt-MSA Alignment Study • Conducted by staff from University of North Carolina at Charlotte and Western Carolina University from March – August, 2007 • Study was an investigation of the alignment of Alt-MSA Mastery Objectives in Reading and Mathematics to grade-level content standards

  30. NAAC Alt-MSA Alignment Study • Eight (8) criteria used to evaluate • Developed in collaboration of content experts special educators and measurement experts at University of North Carolina at Charlotte (Browder, Wakeman, Flowers, Rickleman, Pugalee, & Karvonen, 2006) • A stratified random sampling method (stratified on grade level) was used to select the portfolios, grades 3 – 8 and 10, 225 reading/231 mathematics

  31. Alignment Results by Criterion Criterion 1:The content is academic and includes the major domains/strands of the content area as reflected in state and national standards (e.g., reading, math, science) Outcome: Reading:99% of MOs were rated academic Math: 94% of MOs were rated academic

  32. Criterion 2:The content is referenced to the student’s assigned grade level (based on chronological age) Outcome: Reading: 82% of the MOs reviewed were referenced to a grade level standard (2.0% were not referenced to a grade level standard. 16% were referenced to off-grade standards (K-2) which were referenced to the standards of phonics and phonemic awareness.) Math: 97% were referenced to a grade level standard Alignment Results by Criterion

  33. Criterion 3:The focus of achievement maintains fidelity with the content of the original grade level standards (content centrality) and when possible, the specified performance Outcome Reading: 99% MOs rated as far or near for content centrality, 92% MOs rated partial or full performance centrality, and 90% rated as being linked to the MO Math: 92% MOs rated as far in content centrality, 92% MOs rated partial performance centrality, and 92% rated as being linked to the MO Alignment Results by Criterion

  34. Criterion 4:The content differs from grade level in range, balance, and Depth of Knowledge (DOK), but matches high expectations set for students with significant cognitive disabilities. Outcome Reading: All the reading standards had multiple MOs that were linked to the standard and although 73% were rated at the depth of knowledge level of memorize/recall, there were MOs rated at the highest level of depth of knowledge levels (i.e., comprehension, application, and analysis) Math: MOs were aligned to all grade level standards and distributed across all levels of depth of knowledge except the lowest level (i.e., attention), with the largest percentage of MOs at the performance and analysis/synthesis/evaluation levels. Alignment Results by Criterion

  35. Criterion 5:There is some differentiation in achievement across grade levels or grade bands. Outcome Reading: Overall the reading has good differentiation across grade levels Math: While there is some limited differentiation, some items were redundant from lower to upper grades Criterion 6:The expected achievement for students is for the students to show learning of grade referenced academic content Outcome: The Alt-MSA score is not augmented with program factors. However, in cases where more intrusive prompting is used, the level of inference that can be made is limited. Alignment Results by Criterion

  36. Criterion 7:The potential barriers to demonstrating what students know and can do are minimized in the assessment Outcome: Alt-MSA minimizes barriers for the broadest range of heterogeneity within the population, because flexibility is built into the tasks teachers select. (92% of the MOs were accessible at an abstract level of symbolic communication, while the remaining MOs were accessible to students at a concrete level of symbolic communication). Criterion 8: The instructional program promotes learning in the general curriculum Outcome:The Alt-MSA Handbook is well developed and covers the grade level domains that are included in alternate assessment. Some LEAs in MD have exemplary professional development materials. Alignment Results by Criterion

  37. Study Summary • Overall the Alt-MSA demonstrated good access to the general curriculum • The Alt-MSA was well developed and covered the grade level standards • The quality of the professional development materials varied across the different counties

  38. Technical Documentationof the Alt-MSA

  39. Sources • Alt-MSA Technical Manuals (2004, 2005, 2006) • Schafer, W. D. (2005). Technical Documentation for Alternate Assessments. Practical Assessment, Research and Evaluation, 10(10). At PAREonline.net. • Marion, S. F. & Pellegrino, J. W. (2007). A validity framework for evaluating the technical adequacy of alternate assessments. Educational Measurement: Issues and Practice, 25(4), 47-57. • Report from the National Alternate Assessment Center from a panel review of the Alt-MSA. • Contracted technical studies on Alt-MSA

  40. Validity of the CriterionIs Always Important • To judge proficiency in any assessment, a student’s score is compared with a criterion score • Regular assessment: standard setting generates a criterion score for all examinees • Regular assessment: the criterion score is assumed appropriate for everyone • It defines an expectation for minimally acceptable performance • It is interpreted in behavioral terms through achievement level descriptions

  41. Criterion in Alternate Assessment • A primary question in alternate assessment is Should the same criterion score should apply to everyone? • Our answer was no, because behaviors that imply success for some students, imply failure for others • This implies that flexible criteria are needed to judge the success of a student or of a teacher – unlike the regular assessment

  42. Criterion Validity • The quality of criteria is documented for the regular assessment through a standard setting study • When criteria vary, then each different criterion needs to be documented • So we need to consider both score and criterion reliability & validity for Alt-MSA.

  43. Technical Research Agenda • There are four sorts of technical research we should undertake: • Reliability of Criteria • Reliability of Scores • Validity of Criteria • Validity of Scores We will describe some examples and possibilities for each.

  44. Reliability of Criteria • Could see if the criteria (MOs) are internally consistent for a student in terms of difficulty, cognitive demand, and/or levels of the content elements they represent • Could do that for, say, 9 samples of students: L-M-H degrees of challenge for L-M-H grade levels, • Degree of challenge might be assessed by age of identification of disability or by location in the extended standards of last year’s MOs

  45. Reliability of Scores • 2007 rescore of a 5% sample of 2006 portfolios (n=266) showed agreement rates of 82%-89% for reading & 83%-89% for math • A NAAC review concluded the inter-rater evidence of scorer reliability is strong • Amount of evidence could be evaluated using Smith’s (2003) approach of modeling error using the binomial distribution to get decision accuracy estimates:

  46. Decision Accuracy Study • Assume each student produces a sample of size 10 from a binomial population of MOs • Can use the binomial distribution to generate the probabilities of all outcomes (X=0 to10) for any π • For convenience, use the midpoints of ten equally-spaced intervals for π (.05 … .95) • Using X=0-50 for Basic, X=60-80 for Proficient, X=90-100 for Advanced yields:

  47. Classification Probabilities for Students with Various πs π Basic Proficient Advanced .95 .0001 .0861 .9138 .85 .0098 .4458 .5443 .75 .0781 .6779 .2440 .65 .2485 .6656 .0860 .55 .4956 .4812 .0232 .45 .7384 .2571 .0045 .35 .9052 .0944 .0005 .25 .9803 .0207 .0000 .15 .9986 .0013 .0000 .05 1.000 .0000 .0000

  48. 3x3 Decision Accuracy Collapsing across π with True Basic = .05-.55, True Proficient = .65-.85, True Advanced = .95: Classification True Level Basic Proficient Advanced Total Advanced .0000 .0086 .0914 .1000 Proficient .0336 .1789 .0874 .3000 Basic .5118 .0855 .0028 .6000 P(Accurate) = .5118 + .1789 + .0914 = .7821 This assumes equally-weighted πs

  49. Empirically Weighted πs Mastery Objectives Mastered in 2006 for Reading and Math (N = 4851 students) Percent Mastered Reading Percent Math Percent 100 21.8 26.4 90 16.1 16.7 80 11.6 10.3 70 8.0 7.8 60 6.7 6.1 50 5.5 5.8 40 4.9 4.6 30 5.1 4.1 20 4.7 4.1 10 6.7 6.3 0 6.9 7.7

  50. 3x3 Decision Accuracy with Empirical Weights - Reading Observed Achievement Level True Level Basic Proficient Advanced Total Advanced .0000 .0258 .2726 .2984 Proficient .0274 .1768 .1057 .3099 Basic .3414 .0486 .0017 .3917 P(Accurate) = .3414 + .1768 + .2726 = .7908

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