Title: SCHOOL READINESS ASSESSMENT
1SCHOOL READINESS ASSESSMENT
March 10, 2005 CCPRC meeting
2Five Major Purposesof Early Childhood Assessments
- Improve/support childrens learning
- Identify special needs
- Evaluate programs
- Monitor trends
- High-stakes accountability
NEGP report, Principles Recommendations for
Early Childhood Assessments
3Purpose 1 Support Learning
- Audience teachers
- Methods observation, work samples
- Timing ongoing
- Closely tied to curriculum
- Lowest level of technical accuracy
- Assess all children
- Low stakes
4Purpose 2 Identify Special Needs
- Audience parent, teachers, specialists
- Methods standardized, norm-referenced
assessments - Two stages of data collection
- brief screening for all
- in-depth assessment
5Purpose 2 Identify Special Needs
- Timing periodically
- Not tied closely to curriculum
- Higher level of technical adequacy
6Purpose 3 Evaluate Programs
- Audience policymakers, public
- Methods mixture
- Low stakes--consequences for programs
- No decisions about individuals
7Purpose 3 Evaluate Programs
- Timing beginning and end of program (usually)
- High standards of technical accuracy
- Assess sample of children
- Child data just one part of evaluation
8Purpose 4 Monitor Trends
- Audience policymakers, public
- Timing snapshot, repeated every few years
- Methods mixture
- High standards of technical accuracy
- Assess sample of children
- Accountability in the large sense
- How well is a state doing?
9Purpose 4 High Stakes Accountability
- Audience policymakers, public
- Data collection standardized assessments
- High stakes--consequences for individuals
(children, teachers) - Assess all children, usually
10Purpose 4 High Stakes Accountability
- Before age 8, standardized achievement measures
are not sufficiently accurate to be used for
high-stakes decisions about individual children
and schools. - p. 29 of Principles and Recommendations for Early
Childhood Assessments, NEGP report
11Purpose 4 High Stakes Accountability
- Accountability ? Testing
- Require monitoring
- Require an intervention plan
12Agreements in the Field aboutEarly Childhood
Assessment
- Paper and pencil tests wont work.
- Assessing younger children is harder than
assessing older children. - School readiness assessments should cover more
than 1 area of development.
13Agreements
- Were better at measuring some things (cognitive
development) than others (social). - Our assessment tools are very limited for
children who do not speak English.
14Disagreements in the Field aboutEarly Childhood
Assessments
- Which type of assessment is betternaturalistic
assessments vs. standardized assessments? - Is it OK to use assessments of young children for
high-stakes purposes?
15Disagreements
- Should we use teacher-reported child assessment
data to make decisions about programs and
teachers? - Can we use one assessment tool for multiple
purposes?
16Resources
- Principles Recommendations for Early Childhood
Assessments, NEGP report - Available at
- http//www.negp.gov/Reports/prinrec.pdf
- Assessing Kindergarten Children What School
Systems Need to Know, SERVE report - Available at
- http//www.serve.org/publications/rdakcg.pdf
17Resources
- Assessing Kindergarten Children A Compendium of
Assessment Instruments, SERVE report - Available at
- http//www.serve.org/publications/rdakcc.pdf
- Readiness for School A Survey of State Policies
and Definitions (2000). Saluja, Scott-Little,
Clifford - Available at
- http//ecrp.uiuc.edu/v2n2/saluja.html
18Resources
- Child and Program Assessment Tools for
Educators. January 2004 Issue of Young Children - Available at
- http//www.journal.naeyc.org/btj/200401/