Title: The Writing COE: Student Performances
1The Writing COEStudent Performances
Scoring WERA/OSPI Assessment Conference
- Steve Pearse, Ed.D.
- COE Writing Specialist
- CAA Options / OSPI
2What is the Writing COE?
- A Legislature-approved alternative to WASL for
meeting graduation requirements and the
Certficate of Academic Achievement (CAA) - As per WASL, it represents what students should
know and be able to dowriting concepts
skillsas per Grade 9/10 GLEs. - More information is available on the COE Web
site http//coe.k12.wa.us
3Who is Eligible?
- February Seniors, plus all students eligible to
submit augmented Collections - June All students who have taken WASL one or
more times and who likely possess the knowledge
and skills assessed by the WASL, but have not
demonstrated proficiency under large-scale
testing conditions
4What are the Writing COE Requirements?
- Work Sample Documentation Form (WSDF)
- (See COE Guidelines, revised Red BookOctober,
08) - 6-8 Work Samples demonstrating two assessed
traits - Content, Organization, Style (COS)
- Conventions (CONV)
- On-demand and extended-time Work Samples
- Evidence of the specific writing process for
each Work Sample
5What Does the Work Look Like?
- Prompts/Tasks OSPI-published, district/school,
teacher/student - 3-5 Work Samples in response to expository (to
explain) and 3-5 Work Samples in response to
persuasive purpose prompts/tasks - Final Drafts (as indicated) to be scored
- Evidence of process for each Work Sample
(not scored) - documents (pre-writing, drafts, revisions,
edits) AND/OR - explanations of process
6What Constitutes an Augmented Writing Collection?
- Eligibility 15 or 16 points earned on the
submitted Collection - (meeting standard 17 of 24 possible points)
- Requirements
- 4 Work Samples (2 Expository, 2 Persuasive)
- No on-demand Work Samples required
- Regular Collection scores are banked
7The Writing COE
8What Constitutes a COE Writing Prompt/Task?
- Topic, Audience, Purpose (TAP) Form
- Sample Prompt/Task Special Song
9What are some additional examples of Writing COE
prompts/tasks?
10Creating or Selecting Prompts/Tasks for the
Writing COE
- An invitation to write!Topic
- Addressing the readerAudience
- Explaining or PersuadingPurpose
- Choosing an appropriate Form
- Letter or Essay
11Writing Work Sample Task FormAdult (Teacher )
Assistance
- Purpose Authenticity and Clarity
- Definition When allowed, Adult Assistance must
be limited to general, non-directive advice
and/or reminders. - Requirement
- On-demand responses may NOT benefit from adult
assistance of any kind.
12Writing Prompts/Tasks Guidelines
- Prompts/Tasks must support writing content
skills - EALR 2 The student writes in a variety of forms
for different audiences and purposes. - EALR 3 The student writes clearly and
effectively. - 3.1Develops ideas and organizes writing.
- 3.2Uses appropriate style.
- 3.3Knows and applies writing conventions.
13Writing Prompts/Tasks Recommendations
- Effective Prompts/Tasks feature
- significance authenticity
- structure or frame
- guidance, opportunity, interest
- on-demand or extended-time?
14Supporting Student-Writers DOs
DONTs
- Key Considerations
- Prompt/task selection, modification
- Purposeful practice
- Effective writing Process Product
- Appropriate student support
- time, opportunity, guidance
- Please note The DOs DONTs of the Writing
COE document. -
15Supporting Teachers OSPI-Developed
Resourcescoe.k12.wa.us
16The Writing COE
- Student Performance
- and Scoring
17How the Writing COE is Assessed
- Final Drafts (as indicated) only
- Work Samples scored holistically, as sets
- Expository set3-5 Work Samples
- Persuasive set3-5 Work Samples
- On-demand Work Samples touchstones for
both sets constituting the Collection -
- COS CONV rubrics informed by Baseline
Anchors (WASL) and scored Collections
18Writing COE Scoring Protocol
- Using the WASL 4-point rubric and
purpose-based COS Baseline Anchor papers,
scorers holistically assess either - the expository or the persuasive purpose Work
Samples - for Content, Organization, Style.
- Using the WASL 3-point (0, 1, 2) rubric and
related CONV Anchor - Papers, scorers holistically assess either the
expository or the persuasive Work Samples for
Conventions. - Each set of Work Samples is scored twice
(different scorers). - When the two scores are non-adjacent, the work
sample set is scored a third time (Director or
Assistant Director).
19Determining a Score for the Writing COE
- The two expository purpose scorers points for
COS - and CONV are added for a total possible of 12
points. - The two persuasive purpose scorers points for
COS and CONV are added for a total possible of 12
points. - 24 points are possible for the Collection.
- Students need 17 points to meet standard, 15
points to be eligible to submit an Augmented
Collection.
20The At-Standard Writing COEWays of Earning 17
Points
EXPOSITORY PERSUASIVE
21Meeting StandardA Composite Collection
- Range 20 - 24 points
- Expository Persuasive Work Samples
- Big Picture Observations?
- _
- _
- _
- _
- _
22Composite COE Writing CollectionExample
Annotations
- Expository Work Sample Set Content,
Organization, Style - strong ability to explain
- reasonably engaging introductions context,
audience, voice - clearly, purposefully organized effective
transitional devices - ample supporting details adequately layered
elaboration - conclusions wrapping up main points clarity,
emphasis - appropriate word choice, often effective for
topic, audience, purpose - often-fluent sentences varied in structure,
length - identifiable voice person behind the words
- Expository Work Sample Set Conventions
- consistently follows rules of Standard English
for usage, spelling of commonly-used words,
capitalization, punctuation, sentence formation,
and paragraphing
23The Writing COE
24The February, 08 Scoring EventWriting COE
Results
- 36.6 of students met the writing standard.
- 13 10th grade students, 127 11th grade students,
and 496 12th grade students participated. - 36 of 12th grade students met standard.
- Writing experienced a low insufficiency rate,
once appropriate teacher assistance was defined.
25June, 2008 Scoring ResultsSubmissions
Sufficiency
- 288 students151 seniors, 133 juniors, and 4
sophomoressubmitted Collections. - Of the 288 COEs, 27 (9.4) represented Special
Education, 101 (35) represented Bilingual/ELL,
and 180 represented (62.5) Low Income students. - 281 Writing Collections (97.6 of submissions)
were sufficient and were scored. - 19 students13 seniors, 6 juniorssubmitted
Augmented Collections 100 were sufficient.
26June, 08 Scoring Results
- 122 students met standard (42.4 of
submissions). - 35 (8) of African-American students, 48 (71)
of Caucasian/White students, 20 (5) of Asian
students and 39 (31) of Hispanic/Latino students
met standard. - 18.5 of Special Education students met
standard 31 of Bilingual/ELL students met
standard. - 13 Augmented Collections met standard (68.4 of
submitted), including 10 seniors (66.7). - 56 Collections were eligible for Augmentation
(19.4 of submitted COEs).
27COE Mean Scores by Purpose Trait
28The Writing COE What Weve Learned
- Prompt/Task selection
- Student-writer support
- Adult Assistance clarity appropriateness
- Teaching tools, resources
- Process-to-Product correlations
- apparent strengths, apparent gaps
- Opportunities for improvement
- -student readiness support
- -content-area participation
- -scorer training support
29The Writing Collection of Evidence
- Important points, facts?
- Additional questions?
- Professional Reflections Possibilities?
- Please note additional Writing COE support
materials posted on the COE Web site
coe.k12.wa.us. Thank you!
30Contact us
- Call us, write us, visit us. Our job is to serve
you. - Steve Pearse, Ed.D. COE Writing Specialist.
caaoptions_at_k12.wa.us. (360) 725-6037 - Lesley Klenk, Ph.D. COE Administrator.
lesley.klenk_at_k12.wa.us. - Amanda Mount, COE Operations Specialist.
amanda.mount_at_k12.wa.us. (360) 725-6507