Title: Building a Comprehensive Assessment System
1- Building a Comprehensive Assessment System
- Edward Roeber
- Office of Educational Assessment and
Accountability
2This is the time of assessment.
- This is the era of standards-based reform, based
on student assessment information - Federal laws require much assessment at the state
level - District response more assessment!
- Using assessment information is now high stakes
- school survival now depends on it - Yet, educators are not always prepared to develop
assessments nor use the information provided by
them
3Added Assessments
- New assessments will add even more external
pressures - Michigan Merit Examination
- End-of-course examinations
- With added state level assessment, as well as
district-level assessments, our assessment
systems may be out of balance - too much external
testing, too little classroom-based assessment
4Whats Needed
- We need a balanced assessment system - one that
honors the work in classroom assessment and is
aligned to the state and district assessments - A variety of approaches to assessment are needed
- perhaps more assessment, but of different kinds - All assessments needs to work in the same
direction - a coordinated system of assessment
5What is a Balanced Assessment System?
- Formative
- Supports on-going learning in the classroom
- Interim
- Provides periodic snapshots of student
achievement at the district level - Summative
- Assesses student learning at the conclusion of a
phase of learning - All parts work together and are equally important
6Balanced Assessment Systems
- Are all elements of the assessment system
coordinated? Are all three types present? - Formative
- Interim
- Summative
- Are the content and skills measured compatible?
- Are standards, curriculum, instruction, learning,
assessment and professional development aligned
7Balanced Assessment Systems
- Is assessment continuous - do the assessments
measure student progress over time (days, weeks,
months, school years, and school careers)? - Are a variety of formal and less formal
assessment methods used on an on-going basis? - Is assessment integrated - does the assessment
system fit in the larger educational system? - Is assessment seamlessly integrated into
instruction?
8Balanced Assessment Systems
- Are a variety of high quality assessments being
used? - Do all assessments meet professional standards
(reliability, validity, and so forth)? - Are the assessment purposes clearly spelled out
and are assessments used that can achieve these
purposes? - Do all students participate in assessments
appropriate for them? - Do assessments have positive consequences - for
students, educators, parents, and others?
9What are Summative Assessments?
- State Level
- Michigan Educational Assessment Program
- Michigan Merit Examination
- MI-Access
- English Language Proficiency Assessment
- Secondary Credit Assessments?
- District Level
10Uses of Summative Assessments
- District
- Prioritize schools for improvement assistance
efforts - Provide data for the local school board to
understand student and school achievement - Report academic progress of the district to
parents and other taxpayers, including key
community decision-makers - Increase community support for schools and for
school improvement efforts - Key Question Did students learn what they should
have?
11Uses of Summative Assessment
- State
- Determine priority schools for the interventions
required by Federal (and state) law - Guide state-level assistance to high priority
schools - those continuing not to make adequate
yearly progress - Fund schools - could be general state aid and/or
special programs to impact struggling schools - Allocate human resources - such as providing
staff or consultants to provide supportive
management advice and strategies to schools
12What are Interim Assessments?
- Periodic assessments given school- or district-
wide at fixed times during the school year - Measure the schools or districts curricula in
important content areas - Provide evidence that all students have been
taught key skills - Serve to reinforce a common curriculum and sets
of learning experiences
13Interim Assessments
- District-constructed assessments, or
- Commercially-available assessments
- Replicas of the MEAP assessments
- Pacing assessments that follow the curriculum
- Assessments that do not follow MEAP nor the
district curriculum - Key Question Are students in each school on
track for proficiency?
14Interim Assessments
- Examples
- Quarterly tests based on the instructional
sequence(s) used to measure the pacing guides
used instructionally - Advantages
- May determine if students are learning the
enabling skills - Might catch students who are experiencing
difficulties in learning before they fall far
behind - Challenges
- Instructional sequences are not always universal
- are multiple forms of the assessments needed? - Are the assessments of high quality and/or match
instruction?
15Uses of Interim Assessment
- Increase instructional alignment - horizontal and
vertical - Inform parents of all students about the level of
student achievement and improvement efforts under
way - Assure consistency of instruction across schools
and the district - Program evaluation - evaluate the effectiveness
of new initiatives
16What is Formative Assessment?
- Classroom-based assessments used on an on-going
basis in every classroom - Carefully-thought-out strategies to engage
students in learning in and outside of the
classroom - May encourage different ways of learning - moving
from passive to active student learning - May encourage student self-assessment/self-monitor
ing
17Formative Assessment
- Teachers are engaged actively in the assessment
process by - Sharing instructional targets with students
- Questioning students
- Observing students
- Examining and evaluating student work
- Providing feedback to students
- Determining instructional implications of the
assessments - Conferencing with students, other teachers and
parents
18Formative Assessments
- Students are actively engaged in the assessment
process by - Learning what is expected of them
- Taking responsibility for their own learning
- Actively participating in the learning process
- Participating in how students document what they
have learned and how they learned it - Demonstrating their learning to peers, educators
and their parents
19Uses of Formative Assessment
- Guide student learning on a daily basis by
providing information about what critical skills
were and were not learned - Provide extra learning opportunities to students
who are struggling academically - Provide additional learning opportunities for
students who are doing well academically - Report student progress to students, parents, and
other educators - Key Question Has each student learned?
20Characteristics of Both Large-Scale and Classroom
Assessments
- Shared model of student learning
- Should include learning progressions over time
- Shared concept of disciplinary knowledge and
competence - Focus assessment on the most valued knowledge and
skills - Focus on understanding and reasoning, not recall
- Assess enabling skills and procedural knowledge
- Signal to teachers and students what is most
important - Base assessment on clearly written standards
21Characteristics of Both Large-Scale and Classroom
Assessments
- Measure a manageable body of knowledge and a
limited number of the most important skills - Target general forms of cognition
- problem solving and inductive reasoning
- skills that are more domain-specific
- Move from single-answer assessments towards
greater use of tasks - content based
- measure rich and well-structured knowledge
- are open to multiple approaches
22Characteristics of Both Large-Scale and Classroom
Assessments
- Designed to be valid and useful to support
decisions (large-scale and classroom) - Are technically sound and timely
- Are designed in accordance with the purpose for
which results will be used
23Characteristics of Both Large-Scale and Classroom
Assessments
- Measure the knowledge and skills they purport to
measure - Are designed to be reliable, valid, and fair for
the inferences that will be drawn from results - Report results in enough detail to reveal needed
instructional changes and highlight deficiencies
in the system or in instruction - Focus on student learning in school, rather than
what students have learned outside of school
24Characteristics of Both Large-Scale and Classroom
Assessments
- Provide opportunities for students of different
backgrounds to connect their knowledge to
relevant school expectations. - A range of measurement approaches are used to
provide a variety and range of evidence of
student achievement - Provide multiple opportunities for students to
demonstrate competence - Look at differences in how students perform in
different assessments as rich data about
students, not error
25Unique Characteristics of Large-Scale Assessment
- Provide comparative data (normative or
standards-based) - judge the adequacy of performance
- determine specific curricular/instructional areas
for improvement - Provide quality feedback to educators about
patterns of errors that could be target for
instruction in the future
26Unique Characteristics of Large-Scale Assessment
- Must be cost-effective and feasible
- instructional uses must be worth the time taken
from instruction - Results must be reported to stakeholders
27Unique Characteristics of Classroom Assessments
- Must be on-going and integrated seamlessly into
instruction so teachers and students receive
frequent feedback on their progress - Assess some desired proficiencies that cannot be
effectively assessed on large-scale assessments - Provide quality ongoing feedback to teachers
about patterns of errors that could indicate the
need for modification of future instructional
strategies
28Unique Characteristics of Classroom Assessments
- Help teachers to identify and reconstruct
students misconceptions - Provide quality feedback to students about their
performance and specific guidance about how to
improve - Help students learn how to assess their current
levels of understanding in relation to learning
goals learn to recognize and produce quality
work
29What are ways we can assess students?
- Selected-response tests
- Forced-choice - multiple-choice, true-false,
matching - Written response - short-answer, extended
response - Observation
- Structured
- Unstructured
- Samples of Student Work
30What are ways we can assess students?
- Performance Events
- Individual interviews
- Hands-on performance assessments
- Performance Tasks
- Individual assessments
- Group performance assessments
- Projects
- Datafolios
- Portfolios
31Forced-Choice Items
- Examples
- multiple-choice, true-false, matching
- Advantages
- Can cover much content in little time
- Inexpensive
- Easy to score - Objective
- Challenges
- Difficult to write high-quality items
- May stress memorization over understanding and
application - Could encourage instruction that emphasizes
content coverage over deep understanding of
concepts
32Written Response Items
- Examples
- essays, short-answer, solve math problems, fill
in the blank - Advantages
- Tap student understanding
- Can measure application of knowledge
- Can be administered in group settings
- Challenges
- More time-consuming, expensive to score
- Scoring may not be objective
- Students may not respond
33Structured Observation
- Examples
- A topic for group discussion question by small
groups of students - Teamwork exercise with observation protocol
- Science laboratory exercise
- Advantages
- Assess application of skills
- Can observe students using skills in real
contexts - Challenges
- Difficult to observe multiple groups (or
individuals) at the same time - Time consuming labor intensive
34Unstructured Observation
- Examples
- Student classroom participation
- Quality of student responses to teachers
questions - Advantages
- Naturalistic observation of students
- Collect data (systematically) not usually
collected or used - Challenges
- Lack of opportunity for all students to be
observed - Anecdotal in nature - how generalizable?
35Samples of Student Work
- Examples
- Daily classroom work
- Term papers
- Advantages
- Captures work already being done in the classroom
- Could reinforce the on-going creation of products
by students - Challenges
- The information from each student may be
different - May be difficult to standardize across multiple
students
36Performance Events
- Examples -
- Musical performance sing, play a musical
instrument - Science experiment
- Solve mathematical problem
- Advantages
- Often, these assess the most important skills
- Challenges
- Time consuming to assess all student
- Expensive to develop, use, and score
37Performance Tasks
- Examples
- Paper on an English topic
- Compose a song
- Plan for a school or community improvement
project - Advantages
- Sustain and extend classroom learning
- Encourage students to work deeply in the content
area - Challenges
- Time consuming - for students and teachers
- Students need support and assistance
38Projects
- Examples
- Senior project on a topic of the students
interest - Implementation of a plan to improve the school or
community - Advantages
- Students can engage actual work that interests
them - Challenges
- Very time consuming for both students and
teachers, to carry out, to present, and to score
39Datafolios
- Examples
- Collection of data from one or more sources, such
as observation, ratings of student work, test
scores in one folio - Advantages
- Captures and organizes information about a
student in one place - Challenges
- Time consuming for students and/or teachers to
select and organize the information - Data itself may not tell much of a story
narrative commentary may also be needed
40Portfolios
- Examples
- Showcase of best arts products
- Collection of essays written in English class
- Advantages
- Show student progress
- Capture best work of the student
- Encourage students to produce work
- Challenges
- Very time consuming to develop, collect,
organize, and score - May be idiosyncratic to the individual students
41Questions to Consider First
- Do we know what students need to learn?
- Do we understand what students need to learn?
- How do students best learn?
- What instructional strategies are most effective?
- How do we know that students have learned?
- Can state, district, and classroom assessments
work together to promote quality student
learning?
42Questions to Consider First
- What work on assessment is needed to improve how
assessment contributes to student learning? - What professional learning needs to occur for
this work to happen? - How can the state encourage work on all three
parts of the balanced assessment system?
43Choosing Assessment Methods
- Each educator and school should use a variety of
assessment methods (multiple methods) - The methods selected locally (district, school,
and classroom) should complement and build on the
assessments used at the state and national level - Coordinated assessments are most useful, since
they can present a more complete picture of
student achievement and other accomplishments
44Coordinated Assessment Systems
- Use both large-scale and classroom-based
assessments - Measure the same skills or related skills using
different measures of related skills - One possible model
- State or district end-skills
- Classroom learning progressions leading to the
accomplishment of end skills
45Coordinated Assessment Systems
- Developed to provide comprehensive information
on learning and achievement - Different assessment methods may or may not yield
consistent information - If the results are consistent, still use multiple
methods - If not consistent, look for reasons - may yield
insights into student behavior and/or the quality
of the measures used. - Avoid using multiple assessments as a
multiple-choice item - selecting one source and
ignoring the others
46Developing the Needed System
- Examine the academic content standards valued at
the state level - Format - end-skills or learning progressions?
- Breadth and depth - how thorough?
- Completeness - few or many in number?
- Determine how the state will assess these
- What types of measures will be used?
- What types of measures are missing?
- What other types of data do classroom teachers
need?
47Developing the Needed System
- If the skills being measured are end-skills, then
create the desired learning progressions in
grade-level expectations - Work should involve educators from all levels to
assure horizontal and vertical alignment - Determine the assessments methods to be used to
assess the learning progressions - Determine assessment methods needed to gauge
student learning - Develop the needed assessments
48Developing the Needed System
- Create and implement instructional plans to
provide the instruction on learning progressions - Make sure all teachers are on the same page
- Horizontal alignment
- Vertical alignment
- Use assessments to determine student learning
- Embed assessments in on-going instruction
- Review and use assessment results to improve
instruction - Examine assessment results to determine
individual student and group instructional needs
49Michigans Assessment System
- In Michigan, the assessment system needs to be
more fully balanced - Summative assessments play a major role
- Interim assessments are needed
- Formative assessments are also needed
- Teachers need to be given time to actively
discuss instructional strategies - Assessments need to be embedded in good
instruction - Teachers need to be formally prepared to work on
the assessments to be used
50Secondary Credit Assessment Program
- State and districts need to determine whether
students have learned enough to receive credit in
a variety of high school credit areas - This could be done in conventional end-of-course
exams or through a different manner - We propose to do both - to develop a balanced
assessment system in Michigan - We invite interested districts, schools, and
educators to become partners in this effort
51An Opportunity to be Different
- The Secondary Credit Assessments provide an
opportunity to develop something very different - Re-balance the assessment system
- Develop assessments that encourage high levels of
student learning, rather than simply determining
pass-fail - Build a system of interim and formative
assessments to go with the summative assessments
52A Modest Proposal
- We propose to develop a series of formative
(classroom), interim, and summative assessments
for each of the key high school credit areas - Develop these assessments using interested local
educators across the state - The system will present good local educator
work made available to others in the state
53Areas to be Developed
- English Language Arts
- English 9, 10, 11, and 12
- Mathematics
- Algebra I
- Geometry
- Algebra II
- Pre-Calculus
- Data and Statistics
54Areas to be Assessed
- Science
- Biology
- Chemistry
- Physics
- Earth Science
- Social Studies
- American History and Geography
- World History and Geography
- Economics
- Civics
55How Will Work be Carried Out?
- Develop ISD/RESA teams to sponsor work groups of
local educators - Leadership team from one or more ISDs/RESAs
- Working groups of teachers and curriculum
specialists in the four content areas - Professional development assistance provided by
MDE and others - Use other existing resources with an interest in
improved instruction and assessment
56How Will Work be Carried Out?
- There are existing learning communities, formal
and informal, across the state already engaged in
thinking about - How students learn best
- How teachers can draw out the best from students
- How we know whether students have learned
- How educators can learn more about learning,
teaching and assessment - More such learning communities are needed in the
state
57What Work Will be Done?
- Develop model instructional lessons that address
parts of the high school content expectations - Build a variety of assessments within these
instructional ideas - Try out these lessons and assessments with
students - MDE Collect, select and share the ideas
58Target
- Provide instructional and assessment ideas across
the state no later than Fall 2008 - Build an assessment system for use locally
- Deliver the assessments on an on-going basis, so
that students can be assessed before they take a
class, as they are taking it, or at the
conclusion of it
59Summary
- Our goal is to seek to improve how students are
taught, as well as how they are assessed - Emphasize improved student learning, not just
higher test scores. - Continue to seek to improve educator skills in
instruction, as well as assessment - Build a balanced assessment system with
coordination among the parts
60Summary
- The requirement to assess the High School Content
Expectations will be used as the basis for
modeling a balanced assessment system that
includes formative and interim assessments - Engage educators across the state in developing
these formative and interim assessments - Begin this activity this year and support it as
it grows and spreads - Recruit local and ISD educators who want to be
part of building this new system
61For Questions and Comments
- Dr. Edward Roeber
- Michigan Department of Education
- Office of Educational Assessment Accountability
- P.O. Box 30008
- Lansing, MI 48909
- (517) 373-0739 voice
- RoeberE_at_michigan.gov