Title: Curriculum Review
12009 MCAS Analysis
Prepared by Scott R. Morrison Director of
Curriculum and Instructional Technology 11/3/09
2Presentation Objectives
- Spring 2009 Results
- Trends Areas of Opportunity
- DESE Growth Model
3Spring 2009 Results
ELEMENTARY
Grade 3
Grade 4
Grade 5
4Spring 2009 Results
MIDDLE SCHOOL
Grade 6 (part of elem. last year)
Grade 7
Grade 8
5Spring 2009 Results
HIGH SCHOOL
Grade 10
6TRENDS (Elem.)
- ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS (areas of opportunity)
- ELA
- Nonfiction inferencing, ID story facts, story
sequence ID main idea topic development - MATH
- Fractions extending patterns working with
values (determine totals find missing) using
proportional relationships interpreting data
sets and tables length conversions - SCIENCE
- Life Science Only 2 of 9 questions released
- Earth/Space Rocks minerals (change processes)
50 of items released - Beginning in 2009, approximately 50 of common
test items in grades 3-8 will be released.
7TRENDS (MS)
- MIDDLE SCHOOL (areas of opportunity)
- ELA
- Non-fiction ID non-fiction components story
facts, poetry, inferencing reason for word use
style and language (figurative language) - MATH
- Equivalent expressions determining data values
selecting table computing weight conversion - SCIENCE
- Measurements reading tables graphing
understanding heat transfer substance vs.
mixture - Beginning in 2009, approximately 50 of common
test items in grades 3-8 will be released.
8TRENDS (HS)
- HIGH SCHOOL (areas of opportunity)
- ELA
- Nonfiction style/language
- MATH
- Corresponding values determining median value in
a table value computation - SCIENCE
- Cells genes body system
- Beginning in 2009, approximately 50 of common
test items in grades 3-8 will be released.
9The GROWTH MODEL
Performance Achievement Growth
10What is it?
- Describes a method of measuring individual
student progress on statewide assessment (MCAS)
by tracking student scores from one year to the
next. - Starting next year, each student with at least
two consecutive years of MCAS scores will receive
a student growth percentile (SGP), which measures
how much the student changed relative to other
students statewide with similar score histories - Student growth percentiles range from 1 to 99,
where higher numbers represent higher growth and
lower numbers represent lower growth. This method
works independently of MCAS performance levels. - All students, no matter the scores they earned on
past MCAS tests, have an equal chance to
demonstrate growth - Growth percentiles are calculated in ELA and
Mathematics for - students in grades 4 through 8 and for grade 10.
11Why measure growth?
- A way to measure progress for students at all
performance levels - - A student can perform at a low level but still
improve relative to his/her academic peers - - Another could perform well but not improve
much from year to year - Provides evidence of improvement even among those
with low performance - Gives high performing students and schools
something to strive for beyond proficiency
12Student Growth Percentiles (SGP)
- Student Growth Percentiles A measure of student
progress that compares changes in a students
MCAS scores to changes in MCAS scores of other
students with similar performance profiles. - The DESE refers to students with similar score
histories as academic peers. - While student growth percentiles enable educators
to chart the growth of an individual student
compared to that of academic peers, student
growth percentiles can eventually be aggregated
to understand growth at the subgroup, school, or
district level. - The rate of change is expressed as a percentile.
In interpreting - these data, it is important to note that
differences in growth - scores from year to year less than 10 points
should not be - considered meaningful or significant.
13DESE Growth ModelDistrict Achievement and Growth
(ELA)
According to the growth model results, "high
growth" is defined as growth in a subject at or
above the 60th percentile, typical growth is
between the 40th and 60th percentile, and low
growth is below the 40th percentile.
14DESE Growth ModelDistrict Achievement and Growth
(MATH)
According to the growth model results, "high
growth" is defined as growth in a subject at or
above the 60th percentile, typical growth is
between the 40th and 60th percentile, and low
growth is below the 40th percentile.
15Best Practices for Using Growth Data
- Dont allow growth data to obscure achievement
data. Use it to complement achievement data. - Growth data is best used to add context to
achievement data. - Use two years of data if its available.
- The Department has gathered two years of growth
data for students in grades 4 through 8. The
10th grade results could only be calculated for
the first time in 2009 hence, only one year of
growth data is available for grade 10. - Look at differences across grades as well as
between grades. - Because every student has an equal opportunity
to grow at a relatively high or low level,
regardless of their grade, it is appropriate to
combine grades at the school, district, or group
level. - Differences in medians of less than 10 points are
not likely to be meaningful. - As rule of thumb, differences in medians of
less than 10 are not likely to be educationally
meaningful at the school or district level. - Medians above 60 or below 40 are relatively
unusual. - Roughly one school in five had a median growth
percentile higher than 60 and a slightly smaller
proportion had medians below 40. About five
percent had medians above 70 or below 30 and
less than one percent had growth scores higher
than 80 or below 20.
16REPORT CARD UPDATE
- Report Card Committee
- Scott Morrison Wendy Manninen Emily MacRae
Nicole Curcuru Laurie Colpoys Kimberly Field
Margaret Sears Jeff Bodmer-Turner Joyce
Swedberg Elise O. Dudley - Meetings
- Committee meetings, grade level meetings,
elementary district meetings, specialist meetings - All meeting have been ongoing since the August
2009 - Key Accomplishments
- 1) New trimester reporting system
- 2) New reporting system of conferences and
portfolios for kindergarten - 3) New aligned pilot progress report for grades
1-5 - 4) New Parent Guide to Progress Reports for
families