Title: QCAR
1QCAR Schools Enacting Rich Tasks
2Questions people are asking
- How is the QCAR framework likely to impact on
schools enacting Rich Tasks? - Does QCAR threaten the nature of the work done in
these schools? - Is there work to be done?
- How well prepared are teachers in schools
enacting Rich Tasks to meet the challenges of
QCAR implementation?
3What is the QCAR Framework?
- Queensland Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting
Framework - a response to a range of challenges facing
education in Queensland that was intended to draw
on the work of the Assessment and New Basics
Branch (see Qld State Education 2010) - presents strategies to define essential learnings
set new standards for assessing and reporting
student achievement in the early middle years
of schooling in Queensland
4Aims of the QCAR Framework
- make clear statements about the essential
learnings that must be taught in Queensland
schools - provide a common frame of reference and a shared
language for communicating student achievement - equip teachers with high-quality assessment tools
for collecting evidence of student achievement - introduce state-wide assessment of student
learning in Years 4, 6 and 9
5Aims of the Framework (2)
- provide more meaningful reports of student
achievement - promote teachers professional learning, focused
on good assessment practices and judging the
quality of student achievement against state-wide
standards
6How will QCAR address these?
- focusing learning and teaching on the
essentials - aligning curriculum, assessment and reporting
- building capacity in terms of robust assessment
practices - referencing judgments about student work to
performance standards - facilitating comparability of reported results
state-wide
7How the Rich Tasks measure up against these
goals?
- Look at
- what the QCAR policy says
- Then consider
- relevant experiences that schools enacting Rich
Tasks will be able to draw on - challenges and work to be done
8Focusing learning and teaching on the essentials
- What QCAR says
- Essential Learnings
- what students are expected to know and do at key
points - not the whole curriculum
- schools will continue to organise curriculum in
various ways
- Relevant experiences
- Schools enacting Rich Tasks already organise
curriculum, pedagogy and assessment around
clusters of practices (and their affiliated
knowledges and skills) that are considered
essential for new and future conditions - They may continue to do this.
9Challenges/areas for further attention
- Essential Learnings have been organised in terms
of separate KLAs while the New Basics call upon
broad, transdisciplinary practices. - Schools enacting Rich Tasks will need to audit
total curriculum against Essential Learnings and
address any gaps. - The Rich Tasks have been aligned to the Essential
Learnings this alternative Rich Task format will
be available through the QCAR website
10Building capacity for robust assessment practices
- What QCAR says
- What is needed is an assessment bank
- high quality assessment tools for collecting
valid and reliable evidence - models of good assessment practice
- resources to enhance assessment knowledge and
skills - support consistency of teacher judgements
- Relevant experiences
- The Rich Tasks stand as exemplars of quality
assessment tools. - Rich Task assessment draws on sound assessment
principles. - The Rich Task Blueprints support the design of
high-quality tasks that are assessable against
common standards.
11Quality Assuring Assessment Tasks
12Referencing judgments about student work to
standards
- What QCAR says
- Standards based assessment connects essential
learnings to assessment and reporting practices. - There is a need for a common understanding of
standards a shared language for describing what
is expected of students and the quality of
student achievement. -
- Relevant experiences
- Teachers in schools enacting Rich Tasks are well
positioned in terms of making judgments based on
sound evidence and a shared understanding of
standards. - Internal moderation and Local Consensus Events
(LCEs) have provided forums for building common
understandings of how the standards manifest in
student work.
13Referencing judgments about student work to
standards
- What QCAR says
- Specific descriptions as well as examples of
student work with teacher comments will be used
to illustrate each standard. - Teachers will develop common interpretations of
the standards by working together and sharing how
they apply these standards.
- Relevant experiences
- Teachers in schools enacting Rich Tasks routinely
participate in standards validation events both
in and across schools. - Discussion about features of student work and how
they might relate to standards descriptors is the
basis for dialogue about grades.
14Facilitating comparability of reported results
state-wide
- What QCAR says
- Statewide information about achievement in
essential learnings will be collected Yrs 4, 6
9 through Common Assessment Tasks. -
- QSA will develop processes for state-wide
validation of teacher judgments.
Relevant experiences Teachers involved in the
enactment of Rich Tasks have extensive experience
of working with common assessment tasks.
Standards validation processes for schools
enacting Rich Tasks have been developed,
researched and found to support the consistent
application of standards.
15Reporting against standards
- What QCAR says
- Common elements may include descriptions of what
has been taught, the expected standards of
student achievement, and how well the child has
achieved compared with these standards. - 5-point scale
- Relevant experiences
- Schools enacting Rich Tasks and participating in
LCEs have reported against state-wide standards
using a multi-point scale. - QCAR grades relate to demonstrations of learning
in terms of identified Essential Learnings Rich
Task grades relate to demonstrations of learning
in terms of targeted repertoires of practice.
Both use standards to evaluate the quality of the
collection of work presented.
16How are schools enacting RTs positioned?
- Generally, well.
- ALL schools will have to implement the QCAR
framework, not just those enacting Rich Tasks. - QCAR goals relate to aligning curriculum,
assessment and reporting - robust assessment practices
- using standards to reference teacher judgments
- comparability of reported results
- Much of the work that schools enacting Rich Tasks
routinely do, relates strongly to the big picture
goals of QCAR.