Title: Evidence for Impact on Student Learning
1Evidence for Impact on Student Learning
- Tony Norman
- Associate Dean, CEBS
Roger Pankratz Assistant to the Dean, CEBS
In P. R. Denner (Chair), Evidence for Impact on
Student Learning from the Renaissance Teacher
Work Sample Assessment. Symposium presented at
the annual meeting of the American Association
for Colleges of Teacher Education, New York, NY,
February 2008.
2WKU Participants
- Fifty-two TWS from two semesters (fall 2006 and
2007) selected to maximize variability in
holistic scores (4 Exemplary, 3 Proficient, 2
Developing, 1 Beginning) - 73 Elementary Education Majors
- 27 Middle Grades/Secondary Education Majors
3 Teacher Work Sample Scores
- The WKU TWS uses an analytic scoring rubric with
7 targeted standards that are assessed using
multiple indicators. - The indicators are scored on a 3-point scale
- 1 Indicator Not Met
- 2 Indicator Partially Met
- 3 Indicator Met
- Summing across indicators, the total TWS scores
can range from 32 to 96.
4Learning Impact Measures
- Percent of students reaching mastery on each
learning goal. - Average Percent Reaching Mastery
- Percent Mastering Learning Goal 1
- Percent Mastering Learning Goal 2
- The candidates chose the learning goals and the
difficulty of mastery level. - Learning Goals had to fit the approved curriculum
and align with Kentucky Core Content standards. - However, the candidates set their own criteria
for success on each learning goal.
5Learning Impact Measures
- Percent of students showing improvement on each
learning goal. - Average Percent Showing Improvement
- Percent Showing Improvement on Learning Goal 1
- Percent Showing Improvement on Learning Goal 2
Note Candidates are encouraged to set Learning
Goal 2 at a higher level in Blooms Taxonomy.
Many of these are measured by candidate developed
rubrics.
6Reported Impacts on Student Learning
7Regression Analyses for TWS Scores on the
Reported Percent of Students Achieving Learning
Goals
8Regression Analyses for TWS Scores on the
Reported Percent of Students Showing Improvement
9A Closer Look at Key TWS Components
- 22 fall 2006 TWS were examined for quality of
assessments - 30 fall 2007 TWS were examines for quality of
assessments and quality of unit learning
objectives
10Criteria for Judging Quality of TWS Assessment
- Alignment with unit objectives
- Addresses depth of knowledge (DOK) level
- Sufficient number of items
- Rubrics provide instructions for judgment
11Criteria for Judging Quality of TWS Learning
Objectives
- Aligned with Kentucky Content Standards
- Student friendly
- Scope contribution to academic year Curriculum
Map - Measurable
12Findings (1)
13Findings (2)
14Where WKU Teacher Candidates Appear to Need
Improved instruction
- Writing clear, student friendly unit objectives
- Writing unit objectives for designated depth of
knowledge (DOK) levels - Developing classroom student assessments most
appropriate for unit objectives - Developing classroom student assessments aligned
with designated DOK levels
15For a Copy of the Presentation
http//edtech.wku.edu/rtwsc/publications-and-resea
rch.htm