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Aligning Science Assessment to Content Standards

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Title: Aligning Science Assessment to Content Standards


1
Aligning Science Assessment to Content Standards
  • George DeBoer, Arhonda Gogos, Cari Herrmann
    Abell, Kristen Lennon, An Michiels, Tom Regan, Jo
    Ellen Roseman,
  • Paula Wilson
  • Center for Curriculum Materials in Science
  • Knowledge Sharing Institute
  • Ann Arbor, Michigan
  • July 10-12, 2006
  • This work is funded by the National Science
    Foundation
  • ESI 0352473

2
Thanks to
  • Abigail Burrows for organizing the pilot testing
    with schools.
  • Ed Krafsur for developing the assessment data
    base.
  • Brian Sweeney for developing illustrations for
    test items.

3
Strand 6 Part I
  • Examining the Project 2061 Criteria for Aligning
    Middle School Assessment Items to Learning Goals

4
Aligning Student Assessment to Content Standards
  • What We Are Doing Project Background
  • Creating a bank of middle and early high school
    science assessment items that are precisely
    aligned with national content standards
  • Providing resources to support the creation and
    use of assessment items aligned to content
    standards
  • Developing a data base for these resources and a
    user interface to access the resources
  • In this session, we will focus on the criteria we
    use for judging alignment of assessment items to
    content standards.

5
Resources We Will Provide
  • Clarifications of the content standards
    (elaboration, boundary setting, i.e., whats in
    and whats out). To add precision to the
    alignment of assessment items.
  • Summaries of research on student learning
    (misconceptions and other ideas students hold)
    related to the ideas in the content standards. To
    serve as distractors in assessment items.
  • Assessment maps (which include prerequisite
    ideas, related ideas, ideas that come later in
    the learning trajectory). Useful for developing
    test instruments on a specific topic. Also useful
    in item development for deciding what knowledge
    is reasonable to expect students to have (e.g.,
    bedrock).

6
List of Topics
  • Atoms, Molecules and States of Matter
  • Substances, Chemical Reactions and Conservation
  • Processes that shape the Earth / Plate Tectonics
  • Weather and Climate
  • Solar System
  • Energy Transformations
  • Force and Motion
  • Forces of Nature
  • Sight and Vision
  • Mathematics Summarizing Data
  • Mathematics Relationships among Variables

7
List of Topics, Continued
  • Basic Functions in Humans
  • Cells and Proteins
  • Evolution and Natural Selection
  • Interdependence, Diversity and Survival
  • Matter and Energy Transformations in Living
    Systems
  • Sexual Reproduction, Genes and Heredity
  • Cross-cutting Themes Models
  • Nature of Science Claims of Causal Relationships
  • Nature of Science Inductive Reasoning
  • Nature of Science Empirical Validation of Ideas
    about the World
  • Nature of Science Uncertainty and Durability

8
Examples of
  • Clarification statements
  • Summaries of research on student learning
  • Assessment maps
  • How each is used in the item development work.

9
Idea B All atoms are extremely small (from BSL
4D/M1a).
  • Students are expected to know that atoms are much
    smaller than very small items with which they are
    familiar, such as dust, blood cells, plant cells,
    and microorganisms, all of which are made up of
    atoms. Students should know that the atoms are
    so small that many millions of them make up these
    small items with which they are familiar. They
    should know that this is true for all atoms. The
    comparison with very small objects can be used to
    test students qualitative understanding of the
    size of atoms in relation to these objects.
    Students will not, however, be expected to know
    the actual size of atoms.

10
Student Misconceptions Related to the Size of
Atoms
  • Atoms and/or molecules are similar in size to
    cells, dust, or bacteria (Lee et al., 1993
    Nakhleh et al., 1999 Nakhleh et al., 2005).
  • Atoms and/or molecules can be seen with
    magnifying lenses or optical microscopes
    (Griffiths et al., 1992 Lee et al., 1993).

11
(No Transcript)
12
Steps in the Item Development Procedure
  • Select a set of benchmarks and standards to
    define the boundaries of a topic
  • Tease apart the benchmarks and standards into a
    set of key ideas
  • Create an assessment map showing how the key
    ideas build on each other conceptually
  • Review the research on student learning to
    identify ideas students may have about the ideas
  • Design items
  • using student misconceptions as distractors
  • using the assessment analysis criteria
  • following a list of design specifications

13
Steps in the Item Development Procedure, cont
  • Use open-ended interviewing to supplement
    published research on student learning
  • Use mini item camps to get feedback on items
    from staff
  • Revise items
  • Pilot test items and conduct think aloud
    interviews
  • Analyze pilot test data
  • Revise items
  • Conduct formal reviews of approximately 25 items
    using the assessment analysis criteria
  • Revise items
  • Conduct national field test of items

14
Demonstration of the Database and User Interface
  • Items
  • Misconception List
  • Topics, key ideas, clarifications
  • Assessment Maps
  • Item Specifications

15
  • The Project 2061 Assessment Analysis Procedure

16
There are six parts to the analysis procedure
  • Exploring the Learning Goal
  • Determining Content Alignment
  • Determining Whether the Task Accurately Reveals
    What Students do or do not Know
  • Considering the Tasks Cost Effectiveness
  • Suggesting Revisions
  • Assessment Item Rating Form (not included in this
    version)

17
Reviewers use the following materials
  • Assessment Items
  • The content standard that is being targeted
  • Clarification statements
  • Lists of common student misconceptions and other
    ideas students may have.
  • Results of student interviews or field test
    results if available

18
I. Exploration Phase
  • Determining the alignment of an assessment task
    to a learning goal requires a precise
    understanding of the meaning of the learning goal
    and what knowledge and skills are needed to
    successfully complete the task.

19
A. The Learning Goal
  • Reviewers carefully read the clarification
    statement written for the targeted learning goal
    (content standard or benchmark).
  • Reviewers examine the list of misconceptions
    related to the targeted learning goal.

20
B. The Assessment Task
  • Reviewers
  • attempt to complete the task themselves.
  • list the knowledge and skill needed to
    successfully complete the task.
  • consider if there are different strategies that
    can be used to successfully complete the task.
  • consider which misconceptions might affect
    student answers.

21
  • II. Determining the Content Alignment between the
    Learning Goal and the Assessment Task

22
A. Necessity
  • To be content aligned, knowledge of the ideas
    described in the learning goal or the
    clarification statement, or knowledge that
    certain commonly held misconceptions are not
    true, must be needed to evaluate each of the
    answer choices.

23
Reviewers are told
  • If the knowledge in the learning goal is not
    needed to decide if the answer choices are
    correct or incorrect, explain how the answer
    choices can be evaluated using other knowledge.

24
Applying the Necessity Criterion
  • Which of the following is the smallest?
  • A.  An atom
  • B.  A bacterium
  • C.  The width of a hair
  • D.  A cell in your body

25
Idea B All atoms are extremely small (from BSL
4D/M1a).
  • Students are expected to know that atoms are much
    smaller than very small items with which they are
    familiar, such as dust, blood cells, plant cells,
    and microorganisms, all of which are made up of
    atoms. Students should know that the atoms are
    so small that many millions of them make up these
    small items with which they are familiar. They
    should know that this is true for all atoms. The
    comparison with very small objects can be used to
    test students qualitative understanding of the
    size of atoms in relation to these objects.
    Students will not, however, be expected to know
    the actual size of atoms.

26
Applying the Necessity Criterion
  • The knowledge in the learning goal is needed to
    evaluate each answer choice.

27
An example of an item for which the targeted
knowledge is not needed
  • Targeted Idea Substances may react chemically
    in characteristic ways with other substances to
    form new substances with different characteristic
    properties (based on NSES 5-8BA2a).

28
  • Which of the following is an example of a
    chemical reaction?
  • A piece of metal hammered into a tree.
  • A pot of water being heated and the water
    evaporates.
  • A spoonful of salt dissolving in a glass of
    water.
  • An iron railing developing an orange, powdery
    surface after standing in air.

29
Applying the Necessity Criterion
  • The knowledge in the learning goal is not needed.
  • Answer choice D, the correct answer, is a
    specific instance of a general principle (SIGP).
    The student can get the item correct by knowing
    that rusting is a chemical reaction without
    knowing the general principle that new substances
    are formed that have different characteristic
    properties.

30
B. Sufficiency
  • To be content aligned, knowledge of the ideas
    described in the learning goal or the
    clarification statement, or knowledge that
    certain commonly held misconceptions are not
    true, must be all that is needed to evaluate
    each of the answer choices. Students should not
    need any additional science knowledge.

31
Reviewers are told
  • If the knowledge in the learning goal is not
    enough to evaluate each of the answer choices,
    indicate what additional knowledge is needed.
    (Do not include as additional knowledge those
    things that can be assumed as general knowledge
    and ability of students this age.)
  • An example of additional knowledge might include
    science or mathematics terminology that students
    are not expected to know.

32
Applying the Sufficiency Criterion
  • Which of the following is the smallest?
  • A.  An atom
  • B.  A bacterium (clarification statement says
    microorganism)
  • C.  The width of a hair
  • D.  A cell in your body

33
Applying the Sufficiency Criterion
  • The sufficiency criterion is not met. Students
    need to know the term bacterium, which is
    additional knowledge. Although a listed
    misconception includes the word bacteria, in
    pilot testing, 25 of 193 students indicated that
    they did not know what a bacterium was (even
    though most knew what bacteria were). The item
    should say microorganism or bacteria to match
    the clarification statement and/or misconception
    list.

34
Applying the Sufficiency Criterion
  • Approximately how many carbon atoms placed next
    to each other would it take to make a line that
    would cross this dot ? ?
  • A.  6
  • B.  600
  • C.  6000
  • D.  6,000,000
  • Note This item assumes a 1mm dot and a diameter
    of 1.5Ã… for a carbon atom.

35
Applying the Sufficiency Criterion
  • The sufficiency criterion is met. Students need
    to know that like the other small things
    mentioned in the clarification statement, e.g.,
    dust, plant cells, blood cells, and
    microorganisms, this small visible dot is also
    made of millions of atoms.
  • Note This item assumes a 1mm dot and a diameter
    of 1.5Ã… for a carbon atom.

36
Idea B All atoms are extremely small (from BSL
4D/M1a). (Not included in the workshop packet.)
  • Students are expected to know that atoms are much
    smaller than very small items with which they are
    familiar, such as dust, blood cells, plant cells,
    and microorganisms, all of which are made up of
    atoms. Students should know that the atoms are
    so small that many millions of them make up these
    small items with which they are familiar. They
    should know that this is true for all atoms. The
    comparison with very small objects can be used to
    test students qualitative understanding of the
    size of atoms in relation to these objects.
    Students will not, however, be expected to know
    the actual size of atoms nor the
    order-of-magnitude relationships to other
    objects.

37
III. Determining Whether the Task Accurately
Reveals What Students Do and Do Not Know
  • Its a validity issue. Students should choose
    the correct answer when they know the idea and
    they should choose an incorrect answer when they
    do not know the idea.
  • Getting rid of factors not related to the
    knowledge being measured (construct irrelevant
    factors)
  • Reducing false negatives and false positives

38
A. Comprehensibility
  • 1. It is not clear what question is being
    asked. Explain.
  • 2. The task uses unfamiliar general vocabulary
    that is not clearly defined. List potentially
    unfamiliar vocabulary and explain. (Note This is
    referring to general language usage, not
    technical scientific or mathematical terminology,
    which is addressed under Sufficiency.)
  • The task uses unnecessarily complex sentence
    structure or ambiguous punctuation that makes the
    task difficult to comprehend when plain language
    could have been used. Explain.
  • (Note Rebecca Kopriva, C-SAVE, Maryland.)

39
Comprehensibility Continued
  • The task uses words and phrases that have
    unclear, confusing, or ambiguous meanings. This
    may include commonly used words that have special
    meaning in the context of science. For example
    the word finding could be unfamiliar to
    students when referring to a scientific
    finding. Note all places where words, both
    general and scientific) do not have clear and
    straightforward meanings.
  • There is inaccurate information (including what
    is in the diagrams and data tables) that may be
    confusing to students who have a correct
    understanding of the science. Explain.
  • The diagrams, graphs, and data tables may not be
    clear or comprehensible. (For example, they may
    include extraneous information, inaccurate or
    incomplete labeling, inappropriate size or
    relative size of objects, etc.) Explain.
  • Other. Provide a brief explanation.

40
Comprehensibility
  • An item with comprehensibility issues.

41
Most sidewalks made out of concrete have cracks
every few yards as shown in the diagram below. 
These are called expansion joints as labeled in
the diagram below.  What happens to the width of
the cracks during a hot day in the summer and
why?
  • A.  The cracks get wider because the concrete
    shrinks.
  • B.  The cracks get wider because the concrete
    gets softer.
  • C.  The cracks get narrower because the concrete
    expands.
  • D.  The cracks get narrower because the ground
    underneath the sidewalk shrinks.

42
Most sidewalks made out of solid concrete have
spaces between the sections as shown in the
diagram below.  What happens to the width of the
spaces during a hot day in the summer and why?
 
  • A.  The spaces get wider because the concrete
    shrinks.
  • B.  The spaces get narrower because the concrete
    expands.
  • C.  The spaces get stay the same because the
    concrete does not shrink or expand.
  • D.  Some spaces get narrower and some get wider
    because some concrete expands and some concrete
    shrinks

.
43
B. Appropriateness of Task Context
  • a. The context may be unfamiliar to most
    students. Explain.
  • b. The context may advantage or disadvantage one
    group of students because of their interest or
    familiarity with the context. Explain.
  • c. The context is complicated and not easy to
    understand so that students might have to spend a
    lot of time trying to figure out what the context
    means. Explain.

44
Appropriateness of Task Context, Continued
  • The information and quantities that are used are
    not reasonable or believable. Explain.
  • e. The context does not accurately represent
    scientific or mathematical realities or, if
    idealizations are involved, it is not made clear
    to students that it is an idealized situation.
    Explain.
  • f. Other. Explain.

45
C. Resistance to Test-Wiseness
  • 1. Some of the distractors are not plausible.
    Explain.
  • 2. One of the answer choices differs in length
    or contains a different amount of detail from the
    other answer choices. Explain.
  • 3. One of the answer choices is qualified
    differently from the other answer choices, using
    words such as usually or sometimes, or an
    answer choice uses different units of
    measurement. Explain.
  • 4. The use of logical opposites may lead
    students to eliminate answer choices. Explain.

46
Resistance to Test-Wiseness, Continued
  • One of the answer choices contains vocabulary at
    a different level of difficulty from the other
    answer choices that may make it sound more
    scientific. Explain.
  • 6. The language in one of the answer choices
    mirrors the language in the stem. Explain.
  • 7. There are other test-taking strategies that
    may be used in responding to this task. Explain

47
An item with test-wiseness issues
  • This item is targeted to Idea A from Matter and
    Energy Transformations in Living Systems
  • Food is a source of molecules that serve as
    fuel and building material for all organisms.
  • Is the oxygen that animals breathe a kind of
    food?
  • Yes, because oxygen enters the body. M-A2
  • Yes, because all animals need oxygen to survive.
    M-A3
  • No, because animals do not get energy from
    oxygen. From clarification of Idea A.
  • No, because oxygen can enter an animals body
    through its nose. M-A1, M-A2.

48
Misconceptions and other Ideas students may have
Matter and Energy Transformations Idea A
  • Many children associate the word food with what
    they identify as being edible (Driver, 1984
    Driver, Squires, Rushworth, Wood-Robinson,
    1994 Lee Diong, 1999).
  • Students see food as substances (water, air,
    minerals, etc.) that organisms take directly in
    from their environment (Anderson, Sheldon,
    Dubay, 1990 Simpson Arnold, 1982).
  • Some students think that food is what is needed
    to keep animals and plants alive (Driver et al.,
    1994).

49
Analyzing test-wiseness issues
  • Conclusion Answer choice D (No, because oxygen
    can enter an animals body through its nose), is
    not a plausible explanation for why oxygen is not
    food. The answer choice is likely to be
    eliminated because of its implausibility, which
    is one of the factors (C1) used in assessing
    test-wiseness. (In pilot testing, 5 of 29
    students selected this, thinking that the point
    of entry is what determines if something is food.
    Many others questioned how the nose is relevant
    in a question about food.)
  • The answer choice could be improved by changing
    it to say that oxygen is not food because it is
    not edible (M-A1) or because it does not enter
    through an animals mouth.

50
IV. Considering the Tasks Cost Effectiveness
  • Does the task require an inordinate amount of
    time to complete? Ask whether the time needed
    for students to read the question, make
    calculations, interpret a data table, or read a
    graph is warranted. Provide a brief explanation
    of why the task is not cost effective and how the
    same information might be elicited more
    efficiently.

51
V. Suggesting Revisions
  • Based on your analysis of the task, make your
    suggested revisions or indicate if you think the
    task should be eliminated from consideration.

52
Begin Content-Focused Activities
53
Aligning Science Assessment to Content Standards
  • George DeBoer, Arhonda Gogos, Cari Herrmann
    Abell, Kristen Lennon, An Michiels, Tom Regan, Jo
    Ellen Roseman,
  • Paula Wilson
  • Center for Curriculum Materials in Science
  • Knowledge Sharing Institute
  • Ann Arbor, Michigan
  • July 10-12, 2006
  • This work is funded by the National Science
    Foundation
  • ESI 0352473

54
Thanks to
  • Abigail Burrows for organizing the pilot testing
    with schools.
  • Ed Krafsur for developing the assessment data
    base.
  • Brian Sweeney for developing illustrations for
    test items.

55
Strand 6 Part II
  • Using Student Data to Inform the Design of
    Assessment Items in Middle School Science

56
Steps in the Item Development Process
  • Select a set of benchmarks and standards to
    define the boundaries of a topic
  • Tease apart the benchmarks and standards into a
    set of key ideas
  • Create an assessment map showing how the key
    ideas build on each other conceptually
  • Review the research on student learning to
    identify ideas students may have about the
    content
  • Design items
  • using student misconceptions as distractors
  • following the assessment analysis criteria
  • following a list of design specifications

57
Steps in the Item Development Process, cont
  • Use open-ended interviewing to supplement
    published research on student learning
  • Use mini item camps to get feedback on items
    from staff
  • Revise items
  • Pilot test items and conduct think aloud
    interviews
  • Analyze pilot test data
  • Revise items
  • Conduct formal reviews of approximately 25 items
    using the assessment analysis criteria
  • Revise items
  • Conduct national field test of items

58
Using Pilot Testing and Think Aloud Interviews
  • We use pilot testing and interviewing to probe
    student thinking about the targeted ideas and the
    test items.
  • We compare student answer choices to their
    explanations.
  • When answer selections and explanations dont
    match, we look for problems with the item that
    could produce these mismatches.

59
Interviewing Snapshot for 2005 and 2006
  • 7 schools (urban, suburban) 200 interviews
  • Free and reduced lunch ranged from 2 to 78
  • Some think-aloud some open-ended
  • Open-ended interviews were used to inform item
    development. Student comments helped in the
    writing of distractors.
  • All interviews done by the item writers.

60
Think-Aloud Interview Procedure
  • Please read the question aloud, think about the
    answer choices, and circle the best one. Feel
    free to write down anything on the test paper
    that helps you to answer the question.
  • Could you tell me in your own words what the
    question is asking?
  • Why did you choose the answer you chose?
  • Were there other answer choices that you almost
    chose? (Why?)
  • Continued

61
  • Were there any answer choices that you did not
    even consider? (Why?)
  • Was there an answer choice you were expecting to
    see but did not? What was it?
  • Were there any words or diagrams you did not
    really understand or situations that made the
    question confusing? Do you think anything would
    be confusing to your classmates?
  • Are you familiar with the situation that is
    presented in the question?
  • Where did you learn about the topic in this
    question? Have you seen a question like this
    before?

62
Getting permission to conduct interviews
  • We inform the school administrators that
  • The students responses will be used only to
    judge the quality of the test questions and will
    NOT be used as a measure of students knowledge
    or ability, instructional quality, or the quality
    of the school.  
  • The students are coded to protect their identity.
  • The parents are asked to sign a permission
    letter.
  • Some school districts require Institutional
    Review Board (IRB) approval.

63
We provide incentives
  • The revised versions of the items are made
    available to the teachers and administrators. 
  • We provide a report on what we learned regarding
    student knowledge of the targeted ideas and
    misconceptions students may have.
  • We offer a workshop on developing assessment
    items aligned to content standards to
    volunteering teachers and/or participating
    schools.
  • As a token of our appreciation, students receive
    a gift certificate to Borders bookstore for each
    interview.

64
Limitations
  • Considerable time requirement
  • Small student sample
  • Hard to get access to students

65
Piloting snapshot
  • Total of 112 classrooms across 5 content areas.
  • Atoms and Molecules 726 students
  • Force and Motion 610 students
  • Flow of Matter and Energy 312 students
  • Plate Tectonics 568 students
  • Control of Variables 462 students

66
Pilot Test Schools District-level Demographics
  • Northeast Suburban/Small Town. Middle School and
    High School.
  • 40 White, 48 African American, 8 Hispanic
    25 Free and Reduced Lunch.
  • 2. Northeast Suburban. Middle School. 95
    White 10 Free and Reduced Lunch.
  • 3. Northeast Rural. (K-8). 98White 49 Free
    and Reduced Lunch.
  • 4. Southern Small Town. Middle School (6-8) 70
    White, 24 African American 33 Economically
    Disadvantaged.
  • 5. Southwest Small Town. Middle School (7-8).
    95 Hispanic, 95 Free and Reduced Lunch.

67
Teacher Feedback Questionnaire
  • Does the class have a special designation (e.g.,
    honors, AP, ELL, special needs, etc.)? Please
    describe.
  • Please note the approximate number of students in
    this class with Individualized Education Plans
    (IEPs).
  • Approximately how much exposure have your
    students had to the topics hat these assessment
    items test?
  • How long did it take to administer the test?
  • Was it difficult for the students to understand
    the instructions? Please document on any
    difficulties they had.
  • Please add any comments or suggestions you may
    have.

68
Pilot-test questions
  • Is there anything about this test question that
    was confusing? Explain.
  • Circle any words on the test question you dont
    understand or arent familiar with.
  • Is answer choice A correct? Yes No Not Sure
  • Is answer choice B correct? Yes No Not Sure
  • Is answer choice C correct? Yes No Not Sure
  • Is answer choice D correct? Yes No Not Sure
  • For items 3-6, students are asked to explain why
    an answer choice is correct or not.

69
Pilot-Test Questions, Continued
  • Did you guess when you answered the test
    question? Yes No
  • Please suggest additional answer choices that
    could be used.
  • Was the picture or graph helpful? If there was no
    picture or graph, would you like to see one?
  • Have you studied this topic in school?
    Yes No Not Sure
  • Have you learned about it somewhere else? Yes
    No Not Sure
  • (TV, museum visit, etc)? Where?

70
Results of Teacher Feedback
  • Test took 45min. to an hour to complete on
    average.
  • Students sometimes had difficulty providing an
    explanation for each answer choicecognitively
    and motivationally. Not used to doing that.
  • Only a very small number of students did not take
    the task seriously for a variety of reasonsend
    of the year, not graded, etc. Most were very
    cooperative.
  • Students with learning disabilities expressed
    more difficulty.
  • The unfamiliar format was a challenge to some.
  • Teachers appreciated the depth of understanding
    that was expected.

71
Examples
  • What we learn from pilot testing

72
Targeted Idea Substances may react chemically
in characteristic ways with other substances to
form new substances with different characteristic
properties (based on NSES 5-8BA2a).
  • Which of the following is an example of a
    chemical reaction?
  • A piece of metal hammered into a tree.
  • A pot of water being heated and the water
    evaporates.
  • A spoonful of salt dissolving in a glass of
    water.
  • An iron railing developing an orange, powdery
    surface after standing in air.

73
Students who Selected Each Answer Choice
74
Results of piloting
  • Only 5 of the 43 students who chose the correct
    answer D said that a new substance formed.
    Approximately half of the 43 students who chose D
    said they recognized it as an example of rusting
    or oxidation. Maybe these students know that
    rusting is a chemical reaction that produces new
    substances with different properties, but they
    may also know rusting only as a specific instance
    of a chemical reaction without knowing that
    chemical reactions involve the formation of a new
    substance.
  • None of the students chose answer choice A,
    suggesting that hammering a piece of metal into a
    tree is not a plausible answer choice. Similar
    results were found during interviews.
  • A significant number of students (42.1) chose
    either B or C. This supports other research that
    shows that students hold the idea that phase
    change and/or dissolving are chemical reactions.

75
Suggested revisions
  • Replace A with a more plausible distractor such
    as Sand being removed from sea water by
    filtration.
  • Replace D with a reaction that students are not
    so familiar with, for example, a white solid
    forming when two clear liquids are mixed
    together.

76
Targeted Idea
  • Organisms use molecules from food to make complex
    molecules that become part of their body
    structures.

77
When a baby chick develops inside an egg, the
yolk in the egg is its only source of food. As
the chick grows, the yolk becomes smaller.  Why
does the yolk become smaller?
  • A. The yolk enters the chick, but none of the
    yolk becomes part of the chick.
  • B. The yolk is broken down into simpler
    substances, some of which become part of the
    chick.
  • C. The yolk is completely turned into energy for
    the chick.
  • D. The yolk gets smaller to make room for the
    growing chick.

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Students who Selected Each Answer Choice
79
Results of piloting
  • 6 students commented that they did not understand
    the phrase simpler substance in answer choice
    B.
  • Only 8 of the 16 students who chose the correct
    answer B explained that yolk is broken down to
    provide building material that becomes
    incorporated into the body of the chick. The rest
    of the students indicated that the yolk is needed
    for the chick to grow or to become bigger. It
    is not clear that these students understand the
    idea that is being assessed, i.e., that food is
    broken down into smaller molecules that provide
    building material for the chick, which become
    part of the body structures of the chick.
  • One of the students who selected answer choice A
    commented that Just like humans, pieces of food
    do not become part of us. This student might
    have a correct molecular understanding of how
    food is made part of body structures but got the
    question wrong because of the students focus on
    the yolk as being broken down into pieces of
    food.

80
Suggested revisions
  • Change answer choice A to read The yolk is
    broken down into simpler molecules but none of
    the atoms of these simpler molecules become part
    of the chick.
  • Change answer choice B to read The yolk is
    broken down into simpler molecules that are used
    to make the body structures of the chick.

81
The expansion of alcohol in a thermometer
AM42-4 The level of colored alcohol in a
thermometer rises when the thermometer is placed
in hot water.  Why does the level of alcohol
rise?                    A.  The heat molecules
push the alcohol molecules upward. B.  The
alcohol molecules break down into atoms which
take up more space. C.  The alcohol molecules get
farther apart so the alcohol takes up more
space. D.  The water molecules are pushed into
the thermometer and are added to the alcohol
molecules.
82
Student data from pilot testing
83
Student Responses
  • 87 students from grades 7-9 at 3 different
    schools
  • 6 students not familiar with alcohol / colored
    alcohol (7)
  • 44 chose answer choice A (plausible distractor)
  • 6 students wrote heat rises as their
    explanation for A.
  • 12 students may have the heat molecules
    misconception.
  • Answer choice A is the only one that has the word
    heat in it. (Perhaps add as it is heated to
    the end of one or more answer choices.)

84
Sample student responses
  • Answer choice A
  • No, because heat molecules cant push alcohol
    molecules because alcohol molecules are denser.
  • Yes, I remember learning about heat molecules
    and knew they bump other molecules upward.
  • Yes, makes sense heat rises.
  • Yes, because heat rises and it is being heated.
  • Answer choice B
  • No "The molecules dont break down they stay the
    same"
  • Answer choice C
  • Yes "The space between molecules expands with
    the increase in temperature."
  • Answer choice D
  • No "Because there is no way that the water can
    get pushed into the thermometer."
  • No "Because how could water get through a glass,
    a solid glass."

85
  • Examples from plate tectonics of
  • Determining appropriateness of terms used in
    assessment items
  • Identifying misconceptions
  • Identifying implausible ideas for distractors

86
Key Idea a The solid crust of the earth -
including both the continents and the ocean
basins - consists of separate plates.
  • Students are expected to know that the rigid,
    outer layer of the earth is made of separate
    sections that are called plates and that the
    plates fit together so that the edge of one plate
    directly touches an adjacent plate with no gaps
    between them. They should know that plates are
    made of solid rock. Students should know that
    each of the major plates encompasses very large
    areas of the earths surface (e.g., an entire
    continent plus adjoining ocean floor or a large
    part of an entire ocean basin) and that the
    boundaries of continents and oceans are not the
    same as the boundaries of plates.

87
1. Determining appropriateness of terminology in
items
  • Two items were piloted in order to test student
    knowledge of the term bedrock (after typical
    instruction, i.e., not necessarily targeted to
    the meaning of the word bedrock) to determine if
    the word should be used in assessment and thus be
    part of a clarification statement.
  • The two items are identical except one uses the
    term bedrock and the other uses the descriptive
    phrase solid rock.
  • These items were piloted at two different middle
    schools in two eastern states at grades 7 and 8.
    Interviews of 9th graders (10 students) in a
    third school in a western state where bedrock is
    readily visible are consistent with these
    findings, but are not presented here.

88
Which of the following are part of earths
plates? A. Solid rock of continents but not
solid rock of ocean floors. B. Solid rock of
ocean floors but not solid rock of continents.
C. Solid rock of both the ocean floors and the
continents.D. Solid rock of neither the ocean
floors or the continents.
  • Number of Students 33 (3 classes, two 7th
    grade and one 8th grade)

89
Student data from pilot testing (solid rock)
90
Which of the following are part of earths
plates? A. Bedrock of continents but not
bedrock ocean floors.  B. Bedrock of ocean
floors but not bedrock of continents. C.
Bedrock of the ocean floors and the
continents.D. Bedrock of neither ocean floors
nor continents.
  • Number of Students 34 (3 classes, one 7th
    grade and two 8th grade)

91
Student data from pilot testing (bedrock)
92
Student answers to Bonus Question What is
bedrock?
  • Twenty-one of 34 students responded that they did
    not know.
  • Students who attempted to define the term said
  • The bed of rocks on the ocean floor
  • The bottom layer of a rock
  • Like the ocean floor
  • The bare rock under dirt and sand
  • The deep rock of the crust
  • Bedrock is rock that is in the ground
  • A type of layering of loose pebbles that have
    been fused together
  • Rocks and sediments that are on the bottom of
    the continent or ocean
  • Rocks on the bottom of the ocean
  • Rock Maybe
  • It is the rock that is on the bottom of an ocean
    plate

93
  • Analysis
  • There is a greater number of unsure responses
    when bedrock is used. The item using bedrock
    has 12 to 15 responses of unsure to each answer
    choice, while the item using solid rock has 4
    unsure responses to each of the answer choices.
    Uncertainty about the meaning of the term could
    interfere with student thinking about the idea
    being tested.
  • Thirty-two out of the thirty-four students wrote
    responses indicating that they do not know what
    bedrock is. Despite this lack of understanding of
    the term, 50 of the students were able to
    correctly answer this item, compared to 57.6 of
    students answering the item using solid rock.
    Students are apparently translating bedrock to
    mean rock without knowing for sure what it is.
  • For now, we have decided not to include the term
    bedrock in the clarification of this idea (even
    though the word is used in a grade 3-5 benchmark)
    and not use it for assessment purposes.

94
2. Identifying misconceptions
  • In written comments, a number of students
    expressed misconceptions.
  • Which of the following are part of earths
    plates?
  • Solid rock of continents but not solid rock of
    ocean floors.
  • Plates can be seen and aren't under water.
  • The plates do not go down that far.
  • Ocean water and solid rock from the bottom is not
    part of a plate.
  • B. Solid rock of ocean floors but not solid rock
    of continents.
  • Yes, it's only made of rock from the ocean
    surface.

95
3. Identifying implausible distractors
  • Which of the following are part of earths
    plates?
  • D. Solid rock of neither the ocean floors nor
    the continents.
  • None of the 33 students selected this answer
    choice.
  • D.  Bedrock of neither ocean floors nor
    continents.
  • Three of the 34 students selected this answer
    choice.
  • Although students have misconceptions about
    either ocean floors or continents being part of
    plates, the idea that neither ocean floors nor
    continents is part of plates is not plausible.
    This distractor is not informative and should be
    replaced.

96
An example from physics
  • Idea d Friction is a force that makes it
    difficult for one object to slide on another
    object (from SFAA 4F-3h).
  • From the clarification statement
  • Students should know that friction is a force
    that acts in the opposite direction to the
    sliding of one surface on another surface.

97
Alignment/SIGP
FM62-1 (Sixth Grade, n 25, Eighth Grade of
different school, n18) A box slides across the
floor. The arrow labeled "Motion" represents the
box's direction of motion. Which force could be
the force of friction acting on the box?
                                                  
                                         
A.  Force A (40 Sixth / 17 Eighth) B.  Force B
(16 / 0) C.  Force C (40 / 44) D.  Force D
(0 / 17)
98
Possible Misconceptions
  • Forces always act in the direction of motion
    (Kuiper, 1994). (Answer choice A)
  • Friction is a force in the vertical direction,
    holding an object down (Horizon Research, Inc.).
    (Answer choice B)
  • Friction is an upward force gravity is a
    downward force. (Answer choice D)

99
Two routes to the correct answer
  • 1. Use targeted learning goal
  • Friction opposes the sliding of two surfaces.
  • 2. Combine two other ideas
  • A backward force slows things down.
  • Friction slows things down. (This is a specific
    instance of a general principle-SIGP)
  • Therefore, friction is a backward force.
  • If students use 2. they have not demonstrated
    knowledge of the learning goal.


100
Student Responses
  • Sixth Grade Of the 10 students choosing the
    correct answer
  • 2 indicated that they used targeted learning goal
  • 2 indicated that they used the other route (false
    positive)
  • Eighth Grade Of the 8 students choosing the
    correct answer
  • 4 indicated that they used the targeted learning
    goal
  • Zero indicated that they used the other route

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Conclusions
  • Pilot testing can be used successfully to reveal
    what students are thinking about the ideas we are
    testing.
  • Pilot testing provides access to a large number
    of students around the country, but what we learn
    is limited by the questions we ask and what
    students choose to write. Follow-up isnt
    possible.
  • Student interviews allow for flexibility to
    follow up students comments with more probing
    questions, but one-on-one interviews are limited
    to smaller numbers of students.
  • A combination of the two methods is being used to
    provide insights into student thinking and the
    effectiveness of the assessment items that we are
    developing.
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