Title: Imagine It
1Imagine It!
2Assessment General Outcome
Measurement
- Standardized classroom assessment whereby
students overall competence is measured. - The testing methods and content of general
outcome measurement remain constant over the
course of the academic year. - Each test is of equivalent difficulty and
represents competence in the entire school years
curriculum.
3Assessment
- The assessment system of Imagine It! consists of
- Screening
- Progress monitoring
- Diagnosis
4Imagine It!Formal Assessment System
- Benchmark Assessments
- For all students
- Given regularly throughout the year
- Lesson Assessments
- For all students
- Weekly
- Progress monitoring and diagnostic
5Benchmark Assessments
- Administrated at the beginning of the year for
screening. - Administrated after every unit to show student
mastery of the curriculum and identify students
at risk for failure. - Benchmark test assess(depending on grade level)
- Phonics
- High-frequency word recognition
- Vocabulary
- Spelling
- Grammar, usage and mechanics
- Comprehension
- Fluency
6Benchmark AssessmentUnit Cutoffs
- Schedule 1 at the start of the year for
screening and then 1 after every unit. - Benchmark Skills
- Phonics
- High-Frequency Word Recognition
- Grammar, Usage and Mechanics
- Spelling
- Comprehension
- Vocabulary
- Oral Fluency Passage Reading
7Lesson Assessment
- Lesson Assessments are given weekly.
- Lesson Skills
- Phonics
- Grammar, Usage and Mechanics
- Comprehension
- Selection Vocabulary
- Writing
- Oral Fluency
- Spelling
8Assessment General Outcome
Measurement
- Two basic approaches to general outcome
measurement - Curriculum-Sampling Approach
- Skills that constitute the annual curriculum are
specified - A set of procedures for measuring each skill
- The proportion of each item type is determined so
that each test samples the various skills to
reflect the relative importance of each skill
9Assessment General Outcome
Measurement
- Each alternate form of the test is created the
same way. - The difficulty and content of the test remain
constant and we expect the students scores to
gradually increase over the course of the year. - Incorporated into the Benchmark Assessments with
the 100-point Skills Battery.
10Assessment General Outcome
Measurement
- The Performance Indicator Approach
- A single task for measurement that is correlated
with the various skills addressed in the annual
curriculum. - The content and difficulty of the task remains
constant across the school year although the
testing material differs across alternate forms
of the test. - Example- passage reading fluency
- Although this is a direct measure of oral reading
fluency, it also functions well as an indicator
of a students overall reading competence.
11Assessment General Outcome
Measurement
- Formal assessment is addressed in the form of
Benchmark Assessments and Lesson Assessments - The Benchmark and Lesson Assessments incorporate
the performance indicator approach with their
Fluency Assessments
12Assessment General Outcome
Measurement
- Measures have been validated to accurately
reflect overall reading competence and those
measures differ by grade level. - Kindergarten
- Phoneme segmentation- The examiner says a word,
the student says its constituent sounds - Rapid letter naming- The examiner presents a page
of lower- and upper-case letters randomly
ordered- students says as many as they can in one
minute - Letter-sound fluency- The examiner presents a
page with lower- and upper-case letters randomly
ordered, this time the student says sounds for
one minute
13Assessment General Outcome
Measurement
- First Grade
- Combining nonsense word fluency and passage
reading- Students begin with nonsense word
fluency and move to the more difficult passage
fluency where students are presented with
grade-level text and they read aloud for one
minute. - Word identification fluency- Students read as
many words as possible in one minute. - The advantage of nonsense word fluency is that it
maps onto beginning decoding instruction. - The downside of the nonsense word fluency/passage
reading fluency combination is that getting a
good picture of development over the course of
first grade is problematic because teachers
cannot compare scores collected in the first half
of the year.
14Assessment General Outcome
Measurement
- Second - Fourth Grade
- Passage reading fluency measure provides the
strongest source of information on reading
development as a form of performance indicator
general outcome measurement. - Each week one test is administered with the
student reading aloud from a different but
equivalent passage for one minute. - The examiner counts the number of words read
correctly within the one-minute time frame. - The reliability,validity, and instructional
utility of this simple measure have been
demonstrated repeatedly.
15Assessment General Outcome
Measurement
- Fifth- Sixth Grade
- Research indicates that the validity of the
passage reading fluency performance indicator
begins to decrease somewhere around Grade 5. - So, beginning in the 5th grade (or in Grade 4 for
high-performing schools), teachers should
consider using a different measure that more
directly taps comprehension. - One alternative for the higher grades is maze
fluency. With maze fluency students are
presented with a passage from which approximately
every seventh word has been deleted and replaced
with three possible replacements, only one of
which is semantically tenable. - Demonstrates strong reliability and validity and
models reading development beginning at Grade 4
and continuing through grade 8.
16Assessment 3 Types of Formal Classroom
Assessment
- Screening
- Progress monitoring
- Diagnosis
17Assessment
Screening
- Screening is the process of measuring all
students in a class to identify the subset of
students who, without special attention, are in
danger of scoring poorly on the end-of-year
high-stakes tests and long-term reading failure.
18Assessment
Screening
- Students are identified as having potential
problems early. - Teachers can then allocate special attention to
these students as quickly as possible. (Catch-up
Time) - Once a screening assessment has been selected, a
cut-point is determined. - Performing below the cut-point signals the
teacher to pay extra attention to this student. - When periodic screening is used, the cut-point on
each subsequent screening gradually increases.
19Assessment Progress
Monitoring
- SRA Imagine It! uses the term progress monitoring
to refer to specifically systematic formal
assessments in which students are assessed on a
regular basis. - Teachers can use results from progress
monitoring - To formulate decision about how to make
classroom-level instruction more responsive to
individual student needs - To determine whether a student is responding
adequately to the instructional program - For students who are unresponsive to validated or
researched-based instructional program, to
inductively design individualized instructional
plans
20Assessment Progress
Monitoring
- In most reading programs, progress monitoring is
accomplished via mastery measurement. SRA
Imagine It! does not use mastery measurement. - With mastery measurement, teachers assess mastery
of a sequence of skills. - Most basal reading assessments provide unit test
to assess mastery of skills addressed in each
unit. Nevertheless, research indicates that few
classroom teachers adhere to mastery rules, based
on those tests, for advancing students to new
instructional content. - High-stakes tests do not rely on single-skill
measurement.
21Assessment Progress
Monitoring
- Benchmark Assessments- 6 or 7 administered
through out year - Student will encounter 5 lesson assessments
before the next Benchmark assessment which will
allow the teacher to use the information to
reinforce the opinion of a students at-risk
status or it can provide data of growth and
greater comfort within instructional strands. - Not all students receive fluency progress
monitoring. Weekly progress monitoring for those
students who do can help teachers gain insight
about the effectiveness of their attempts at
remediation for these at-risk students. - Once a student is designated as at risk they
should receive weekly progress monitoring for the
remainder of the year even if the student scores
above the risk cut-point on a subsequent
screening.
22Assessment
Diagnosis
- Diagnosis means assessment that describes a
students strengths and weaknesses with respect
to skills or strategies. - Goal is to identify productive targets for
instruction - A curriculum-sampling approach to general outcome
measurements provides teachers with a strong
basis for describing students strengths and
weaknesses in the curriculum because all the
skills embedded in the annual curriculum are
assessed on each testing occasion
23Assessment
Diagnosis
- Because each of the segments of the Benchmark
Assessments provide a separate score in each of
the strands of the curriculum, they can be used
to identify the specific curriculum areas that
are strengths or weaknesses for a student or
across a classroom. - If students score below the cutoff for any
Benchmark Assessment, use one or more of the
following options to help students get back on
track - Re-teach
- Intervention
- Workshop
- Leveled Readers
24Assessment Benchmark
Assessments
- Benchmark Assessments show how students
knowledge of essential skills grows over the
course of the year as these benchmarks are
periodically administered. Each Benchmark
Assessment is of equivalent difficulty, content
covered, and question formats and each samples
the entire years curriculum.
25Assessment Benchmark
Assessments
- At each grade level there are periodic Benchmark
Assessments. - Kindergarten and grade 1 6 assessments
- Grades 2-6 7
assessments - Assessments are timed
- One assessment is administered at the beginning
of the year and then one after each unit the
remainder of the year.
26Assessment Benchmark
Assessments
- The specific test items vary from assessment to
assessment. - Rising test scores reflect increased student
competence in the curriculum. - These assessments differ from traditional
assessments that - cover only the material in the most recently
taught unit - become increasingly difficult over the course of
a school year
27Assessment Benchmark
Assessments
- Benchmark Assessments include the following
components - 100- Point Skills Battery- Students answer
questions relating to comprehension, vocabulary,
grammar, usage, and mechanics, spelling, phonics,
and phonemic-phonological awareness. Each strand
has been assigned a weight in accordance with its
importance in the curriculum to reach the total
of 100 points. - Fluency Assessment- A general overall indicator
of a students reading ability. - Writing Assessment- Grades 2-6 , a writing
assessment is included with the first, fourth,
and seventh Benchmark Assessments. These prompts
are similar to the type of prompt found in
high-stakes tests.
28Assessment Benchmark
Assessments
- At the beginning of the year and then
periodically throughout the year, any student who
falls below the cutoff score on the 100-Point
Skills Battery, Fluency Assessment, and
Expository Writing Assessment should be
considered for intervention. That students
progress should be closely monitored through
weekly fluency assessments.
29Assessment Lesson
Assessments
- Lesson Assessments at the end of each lesson
assess students understanding of the
instructional content and the literature in each
lesson. They cover the most important skills
featured in the lesson of a given unit-skills
that are closely related to reading success and
are typically in state and national standards.
30Assessment Lesson
Assessments
- These assessments will help you determine how
well students are grasping the skills and
concepts as they are taught and will help inform
you about any additional instruction they might
need.
31Assessment Lesson
Assessments
- As students complete each lesson, they will be
assessed on their understanding of the
instructional content and the literature in each
lesson. - The results of the assessments will then be used
to inform subsequent instruction. - The Lesson Assessments are in a structure similar
to that of the Benchmark Assessments in terms of
assessments sections that equal 100-points, a
fluency assessment, and a writing assessment.
32Assessment Informal Assessment
Opportunities
- Informal Assessment throughout the Teachers
Edition provides tips for informal assessment on
a daily basis for each part of the lesson. These
include - decoding skills
- vocabulary
- comprehension
- grammar- usage, and mechanic skills
- listening, speaking, viewing
- handwriting skills.
33Assessment
- Because a one time-screening assessment,
especially at kindergarten and first grade,
typically makes too many errors of these types,
SRA suggest that the initial screening assessment
constitute only the first step in the process
designating risk status.