Title: NAEP Writing Resources
1NAEP WritingResources
2NAEP measures the writing skills of fourth-,
eighth-, and twelfth-grade students. According to
the NAEP Writing Framework, developed by the
National Assessment Governing Board, the NAEP
writing assessment should have the following
objectives
What Does the NAEP Writing Assessment Measure?
3- Students should write for a variety of purposes
narrative, informative, and persuasive.
4Narrative Writing
- Involves the production of stories or personal
essays. - The narrative topics in the 2002 assessment
encourage writers to use their creativity and
powers of observation to develop stories that can
capture a reader's imagination.
5Informative Writing
- Communicates information to the reader to share
knowledge or to convey messages, instructions,
and ideas. - The informative topics in the 2002 writing
assessment required students to write on
specified subjects in a variety of formats, such
as reports, reviews, and letters.
6Persuasive Writing
- Seeks to influence the reader to take some action
or bring about change. - The persuasive topics in the 2002 writing
assessment asked students to write letters to
friends, newspaper editors, or prospective
employers, as well as to refute arguments or take
sides in a debate.
7- The writing assessment prompts presented
students with a variety of tasks, such as writing
a letter to the editor of a newspaper, offering
advice to younger students, reporting to a school
committee, and writing a story based on a poem.
8The Writing Framework
- Specifies the distribution of questions by grade
and writing purpose.
9The assessment is designed around the following
six overarching objectives
- Students should write for a variety of purposes
narrative, informative, and persuasive. - Students should write on a variety of tasks and
for many different audiences. - Students should write from a variety of stimulus
materials, and within various time constraints.
10The assessment is designed around the following
six overarching objectives
- Students should generate, draft, revise, and edit
ideas and forms of expression in their writing. - Students should display effective choices in the
organization of their writing. They should
include detail to illustrate and elaborate their
ideas, and use appropriate conventions of written
English. - Students should value writing as a communicative
activity.
11The Writing Framework
- To access the writing framework, go to
lthttp//www.nagb.org/pubs/writing.pdfgt - To access sample writing prompts, use the NAEP
Questions Tool.
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13Score Description Excellent
- Takes a clear position and develops it
consistently with well-chosen reasons and/or
examples across the response. - Well organized with strong transitions.
- Sustains variety in sentence structure and
exhibits good word choice. - Errors in grammar, spelling, and punctuation are
few and do not interfere with understanding.
14 Skillful
-
- Takes a clear position and develops it with
reasons and/or examples in parts of the response.
- Clearly organized, but may lack some transitions
and/or have occasional lapses in continuity. - Exhibits some variety in sentence structure and
some good word choices. - Errors in grammar, spelling, and punctuation do
not interfere with understanding.
15Sufficient
- Takes a clear position and supports it with some
reasons and/or examples. - Organized with ideas that are generally related,
but there are few or no transitions. - Exhibits control over sentence boundaries and
sentence structure, but sentences and word choice
may be simple and unvaried. - Errors in grammar, spelling, and punctuation do
not interfere with understanding.
16Uneven May be characterized by one or more of
the following
- Takes a position and offers support, but may be
unclear, repetitive, list-like, or undeveloped. - Unevenly organized the response may be
disjointed. - Exhibits uneven control over sentence boundaries
and sentence structure may have some inaccurate
word choices. - Errors in grammar, spelling, and punctuation
sometimes interfere with understanding.
17Insufficient May be characterized by one or
more of the following
- Takes a position, but may be very unclear, very
undeveloped, or very repetitive. - Very disorganized thoughts are tenuously
connected OR the response is too brief to detect
organization. - Minimal control over sentence boundaries and
sentence structure word choice may often be
inaccurate. - Errors in grammar or usage (such as missing words
or incorrect word use or word order), spelling,
and punctuation interfere with understanding in
much of the response.
18Unsatisfactory May be characterized by one or
more of the following
- Attempts to take a position (addresses topic) but
is incoherent OR takes a position but provides no
support may only paraphrase the prompt. - Has no apparent organization OR consists of a
single statement. - Minimal or no control over sentence boundaries
and sentence structure word choice may be
inaccurate in much or all of the response. - A multiplicity of errors in grammar or usage
(such as missing words or incorrect word use or
word order), spelling, and punctuation severely
impedes understanding across the response.
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24Questions and Comments