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What Administrators Need to Know: Smarter Balanced Assessment Grades 6-12 Penny Plavala, School Improvement Specialist M

What Administrators Need to Know: Smarter Balanced Assessment Grades 6-12 Penny Plavala, School Improvement Specialist Multnomah ESD. Session Goals. • Review the Smarter Balanced Assessment Components • Identify Key Points to Share with Teachers • Review the SBA Practice Test.

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What Administrators Need to Know: Smarter Balanced Assessment Grades 6-12 Penny Plavala, School Improvement Specialist M

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  1. What Administrators Need to Know: Smarter Balanced Assessment Grades 6-12 Penny Plavala, School Improvement Specialist Multnomah ESD

  2. Session Goals • Review the Smarter Balanced Assessment Components • Identify Key Points to Share with Teachers • Review the SBA Practice Test • Instructional design: • direct instruction; work independently; • with a partner; and in small groups Please choose a partner.

  3. What Will Be Tested? Place text here

  4. Common Core Timeline YOU ARE HERE 2014 -2015 2013 – 2014 Next Generation Assessments Students in grades 2-7 and 10 this year will test next year Annual test for grades 3-8 and 11

  5. Developing the Common Core Assessment

  6. What is the Smarter Balance Assessment Consortium? • SBAC is a groupof 25 states that have been working collaboratively to develop next-generation assessments that are aligned to the CCSS and that accurately measure student progress toward college and career readiness. www.smarterbalanced.org • The other consortium: PARCC ~ Partnership for the Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers

  7. SBAC Member States Six ODE staff members are on SBAC Work Groups SMARTER: Summative Multi-State Assessment Resources for Teachers and Educational Researchers

  8. Smarter Balanced Assessment SystemComponents Summative assessments Benchmarked to college and career readiness Teachers and schools have information and tools they need to improve teaching and learning Common Core State Standards specify K-12 expectations for college and career readiness All students leave high school college and career ready Teacher resources for formative assessment practices to improve instruction Interim assessments Flexible, open, used for actionable feedback

  9. The SBAC Assessment System English Language Arts and Mathematics, Grades 3 – 8 and High School Optional Interim assessment system — no stakes Summative assessment for accountability Grade 11 will test the last 6 weeks of the year Last 12 weeks of year* DIGITAL CLEARINGHOUSE of formative tools, processes and exemplars; released items and tasks; model curriculum units; educator training; professional development tools and resources; an interactive reporting system; scorer training modules; and teacher collaboration tools. INTERIM ASSESSMENT INTERIM ASSESSMENT • PERFORMANCE • TASKS • Reading • Writing • Math COMPUTER ADAPTIVE ASSESSMENT Computer Adaptive Assessment and Performance Tasks Computer Adaptive Assessment and Performance Tasks Scope, sequence, number, and timing of interim assessments locally determined * Time windows may be adjusted based on results from the research agenda and final implementation decisions.

  10. Components of the Summative Assessment + COMPUTER ADAPTIVE ASSESSMENT PERFORMANCE TASKS • A computer adaptive assessment • given during final 12 weeks of the • school year* • Multiple item types, scored by • teachers: 45-60 items per test • Measure the ability to integrate • knowledge and skills, as required • in CCSS • Computer-delivered, during final • 12 weeks of the school year* • Scored by teachers. Results within • 2 weeks • Scores from the performance assessment and the computer adaptive • assessment will be combined for annual accountability scores. * Time windows may be adjusted based on results from the research agenda and final implementation decisions.

  11. What is Computer Adaptive Testing?

  12. Computer Adaptive Testing

  13. SBAC Assessment • headphones • external keyboard • some way to move the curser

  14. Assessment Item Types • Selected Response (SR) • Variety of multiple choice and true/false • Constructed Response (CR) • Short or long answer using textual evidence • Performance Tasks (PT) • Use higher level thinking skills; integrate reading, writing and speaking • Technology Enhanced (TE) • Technology embedded into items

  15. Smarter Item Types • Multiple Choice • Assess a broad range of content. • Scoring is objective, fast, and generates immediate results. • Difficult to understand a student’s reasoning process and to assess higher-order thinking skills. • Selected Response

  16. Componentsof Selected Response Items Lizards are fascinating creatures. There are over 3,000 known species, including monitors, skinks, geckos, chameleons, and iguanas, and they vary greatly in appearance. The largest lizard, the Komodo dragon, can grow over ten feet long, and the smallest, the Jaragua lizard, can fit on a dime. Skinks usually have smooth scales like snakes, iguanas have mohawk-like crests running down their backs, and the moloch is covered with spikes from head to tail. Lizards vary in color from shades of gray and brown to bright red or green, spotted or striped. Most have four legs but some are legless and easily confused with snakes (Hint: if it has external eardrums and eyelids it’s a lizard). Geckos can walk up walls. Chameleons not only change color but also have prehensile tails, similar to those of monkeys, that wrap around branches and their eyes can move in different directions. What is the best way to revise the highlighted sentence to match the language and style of the paragraph? • Geckos are able to adhere to flush surfaces because setae on their footpads facilitate van der Waals forces between the setae structures and the surface. • Geckos are awesome because they have sticky toes that allow them to climb windows like Spiderman. • Geckos have the remarkable ability to walk up walls thanks to tiny hair-like structures on their toes that cling to smooth surfaces. • Geckos scurry up walls like tiny dancers gliding effortlessly across a stage, their movements as (Reading Passage) STIMULUS What is the best way to revise the highlighted sentence to match the language and style of the paragraph? STEM • Geckos are able to adhere to flush surfaces because setae on their footpads facilitate van der Waals forces between the setae structures and the surface. • Geckos are awesome because they have sticky toes that allow them to climb windows like Spiderman. • Geckos have the remarkable ability to walk up walls thanks to tiny hair-like structures on their toes that cling to smooth surfaces. • Geckos scurry up walls like tiny dancers gliding effortlessly across a stage, their movements as natural as a well-rehearsed ballet. OPTIONS

  17. Selected Response • Read the sentence from the text. Then answer the question. • “Nanodiamonds are stardust, created when ancient stars • exploded long ago, disgorging their remaining elements • into space.” • Based on the context of the sentence, what is the most precise • meaning of disgorging? • A. scattering randomly • B. throwing out quickly • C. spreading out widely • D. casting out violently

  18. Selected ResponseSingle Response – Multiple Choice Many experts will tell you that television is bad for you. Yet this is an exaggeration. Many television programs today are specifically geared towards improving physical fitness, making people smarter, or teaching them important things about the world. The days of limited programming with little interaction are gone. Public television and other stations have shows about science, history, and technical topics. Which sentence should be added to the paragraph to state the author’s main claim? A. Watching television makes a person healthy. B. Watching television can be a sign of intelligence. C. Television can be a positive influence on people. D. Television has more varied programs than ever before.

  19. Selected ResponseMultiple Response • Read the sentence containing a main idea and the directions that follow. • Experiments show elephants understand that cooperation • brings benefits to everyone involved. • Select the two key details from the text that support the main idea. • A) One will wait alone at the rope until another comes to help pull. • B) They give hugs and call each other by using their trunks as trumpets. • C) Experiments like the simple pull-together test give scientists a way to begin to learn. • D) Animals received corn treats only if both pulled the rope ends at the same • time with their trunks. • E) Two elephants can pull on rope ends at the same time to get corn close • enough for both to eat.

  20. Smarter Item Types • Multiple Choice • Assess a broad range of content. • Scoring is objective, fast, and generates immediate results. • Difficult to understand a student’s reasoning process and to assess higher-order thinking skills. • Selected Response • Require the student to generate a response as opposed to selecting a response. • Include both short and extended responses. • Allow students to demonstrate their use of complex thinking skills consistent with the expectations for college and career readiness. • Constructed Response

  21. Components of a Constructed Response Item • (Reading Passage) • The Shepherd’s Boy and the Wolf • A Shepherd's Boy was tending his flock near a village, and thought it would be great fun to trick the villagers by pretending that a Wolf was attacking the sheep: so he shouted out, "Wolf! Wolf!" and when the people came running up he laughed at them because they believed him. He did this more than once, and every time the villagers found they had been tricked, for there was no Wolf at all. At last a Wolf really did come, and the Boy cried, "Wolf! Wolf!" as loud as he could: but the people were so used to hearing him call that they took no notice of his cries for help. And so no one came to help the boy, and the Wolf attacked the sheep. • In a few sentences, explain what lesson the reader can learn from the shepherd’s boy. Use details from the story to support your response. STIMULUS STEM • In a few sentences, explain what lesson the reader can learn from the shepherd’s boy. Use details from the story to support your response. SPACE FOR ANSWER

  22. Constructed Response Read this sentence from the passage. “Besides being beautiful to contemplate, space diamonds teach us important lessons about natural processes going on in the universe, and suggest new ways that diamonds can be created here on Earth.” Explain how information learned from space diamonds can help scientists make diamonds on Earth. Use evidence from the passage to support your answer. Type your answer in the space provided.

  23. Constructed Response What are some ways in which the Mexican free-tails are unique among bat species? Use at least two details from the presentation to support your answer. Type your answer in the space provided.

  24. Constructed Response There are physical health benefits associated with meditation. Using at least two details from the text, support this conclusion Type your answer in the space provided.

  25. Scoring a Constructed Response Item

  26. Smarter Item Types • Multiple Choice • Assess a broad range of content. • Scoring is objective, fast, and generates immediate results. • Difficult to understand a student’s reasoning process and to assess higher-order thinking skills. • Selected Response • Require the student to generate a response as opposed to selecting a response. • Include both short and extended responses. • Allow students to demonstrate their use of complex thinking skills consistent with the expectations for college and career readiness. • Constructed Response • Students manipulate information (example: drag and drop) • May have digital media for stimulus: video, animation, sound. • Technology Enhanced

  27. Technology Enabled Technology Enhanced • Video • Animation • Sound • Specialized interaction • May have digital media for stimulus • Same requirements as selected and constructed response items • Students manipulate information • Drag & Drop, click to highlight

  28. Technology-Enhanced Sample Item Below is a poem, a sonnet, in which the speaker discusses her feelings about a relationship. Read the poem and answer the question that follows. Remember When you can no more hold me by the hand, Nor I half turn to go yet turning stay. Remember me when no more day by day You tell me of our future that you plann’d: Only remember me; you understand It will be late to counsel then or pray. Yet if you should forget me for a while And afterwards remember, do not grieve. For if the darkness and corruption leave A vestige of the thoughts that once I had Better by far you should forget and smile Than that you should remember and be sad. In the sonnet “Remember,” click on the two lines that reveal a change in the speaker’s message to her subject.

  29. Technology Enhanced A student is writing a report for science class. This paragraph from the report contains language that is not appropriate for the audience or the task. Read the paragraph. Then, click on three words or groups of words that are too vague or informal for a science report. There are loads of reasons to eat organic food. The term “organic” indicates that the food has been grown without pesticides or other chemicals. A consumer who chooses to eat organic food does not consume any of this bad stuff. Crops that are grown organically are nice for the land because farmers do not have to add chemicals to the soil. Growing organic food also improves the lives of farm workers because they can avoid working with poisons. In sum, everyone benefits from the farming of organic food.

  30. Technology Enabled

  31. Technology Enabled Selected Response that Includes Multimedia Listen to the presentation. Then answer the questions. Trust Your Feet What is the narrator’s main purpose in presenting information about rock climbing? A. To identify the most challenging places for both beginners and experts B. To provide the listener with techniques essential for successful climbing C. To introduce the listener to the basic equipment used in climbing D. To describe the personal characteristics of expert rock climbers

  32. SBAC Practice Test • First launched in May 2013 • All grades that are assessed • Answers and rubrics released August 2013 • •Mock computer adaptive portion: • Reading passages • SR, CR, and TE questions Let’s look closely at sample items from the Practice Test.

  33. Smarter Item Types • Multiple Choice • Assess a broad range of content. • Scoring is objective, fast, and generates immediate results. • Difficult to understand a student’s reasoning process and to assess higher-order thinking skills. • Selected Response • Require the student to generate a response as opposed to selecting a response. • Include both short and extended responses. • Allow students to demonstrate their use of complex thinking skills consistent with the expectations for college and career readiness. • Constructed Response • Students manipulate information (example: drag and drop) • May have digital media for stimulus: video, animation, sound. • Technology Enhanced • Measure multiple claims • Require students to demonstrate ability to think and reason, and produce fully developed products. • Provide evidence of college and career readiness. • Performance Tasks

  34. Performance Tasks • Extended projects demonstrate real world writing • and analytical skills • May include online research, group discussions, and • presentations • Require 1-2 class periods to complete • Included in both interim and summative assessments • Applicable in all grades being assessed • Evaluated by teachers using consistent scoring rubrics

  35. • Not looking to assess surface knowledge or literal comprehension• Performance tasks attempt to tap a deeper understanding on the part of the student • Students write about what they have just read and viewed

  36. Components of a Performance Task Emphasis on stimuli related to science, history, and social studies. Can use up to five different stimuli for grades 6-8 and 11.

  37. Sample Performance Task • Student Directions You will watch a video, read a short story and article, review research statistics, answer questions, and write an argumentative essay on the following topic: Your parents are considering having you attend a virtual high school. Write an argumentative essay explaining why you agree or disagree with this idea. Support your claim with evidence from what you have read and viewed. What skills must students have?

  38. Sample Performance Task • Read: • Short story • Article • Research statistics • Watch: • Video clip • Answer: • - Constructed Response questions • Write: • - Argumentative essay

  39. • We must prepare students for a very different type of • performance assessment that may include: • Taking notes while watching a video • Taking notes when reading an article, short story, etc. • Answering Constructed Response questions (use evidence) • Participating in small group discussions • Students writing about what they read • Analyzing, synthesizing, evaluating, and integrating • information read in order to write a complete essay

  40. Teaching Key Literacy Skills • Teachers must create a plan for integrating these Common Core skills into instruction. • Teachers should collaborate with other teachers to create lessons around key skills across the content areas. • Teachers might visit other classrooms to see skill instruction. What are your first ideas on how to assure that these key literacy skills are being taught in classrooms?

  41. Smarter Balanced Assessment • Pilot Test • Field Test • Practice Test • Training Test • Spring 2013 • Spring 2014 • 37 questions per grade level • 7 questions per grade level www.smarterbalanced.org

  42. Additional Information • Revised SBAC Writing Rubrics (3 traits) released in August 2013. • The rubrics have not been field tested. • These are not final drafts. Expect revisions. • Anchor papers are expected in fall 2014.

  43. Estimated testing times for Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments Times are estimates of test length for 75% of students. Accommodations and modifications will be finalized after the Field Test in the spring of 2014.

  44. SBAC Timeline Field testing of summative assessment, training school- and district-level staff in formative tools Technology readiness tool available Teams of teachers evaluate formative assessment practices and curriculum resources Full implementation of assessment system Writing and Review of Pilot Items/Tasks (including Cognitive Labs and Small-Scale Trials) Pilot Testing of Summative and Interim Items/Tasks Conducted Formative tools available to teachers Content and Item Specifications Development Writing and Review Items/Tasks for Field Testing (throughout the school year)

  45. ODE Staff on SBAC Work Groups • Kathleen Vanderwall: Item Development • Doug Kosty: Sustainability • Rachel Aazzerah: Test Administration • Holly Carter: Accessibility & Accommodations • Mark Freed: Reporting • Steve Slater: Scoring and Psychometrics

  46. Common Core Solutions • SBAC Practice Test • Sample Performance Tasks • Frequently Asked Questions • CCSS Documents • Professional Development Tools • And more! www.bit.ly/CommonCoreSolutions

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