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TAKS Holistic Scoring

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9:00 Presentation of Scoring Guide. 10:00 Break. 10:15 Continuance of Guide Presentation. 11:45 Lunch. 1:00 Practice Set A. 2:15 Break ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: TAKS Holistic Scoring


1
TAKS Holistic Scoring
  • Region 10 ESC
  • Michelle Green and Jayne Knighton
  • Language Arts Consultants

2
Todays Agenda
  • 830 Welcome Introductory Remarks
  • 900 Presentation of Scoring Guide
  • 1000 Break
  • 1015 Continuance of Guide Presentation
  • 1145 Lunch
  • 100 Practice Set A
  • 215 Break
  • 230 Practice Set B
  • 345 Closing Remarks Evaluation

3
TAAS vs. TAKS
  • Elaboration driven
  • Quantity of ideas
  • Writer silent
  • Run out of room
  • Ideas w/ extension
  • Scorers decoded
  • Contrived devices
  • Disconnected points
  • Add up strategy
  • Driven by writing
  • Quality of Ideas
  • Student voice
  • Sense of completeness
  • Developed Ideas
  • Conventions count
  • Focus on thinking
  • Connectedness
  • Coherence Focus

4
Focused Holistic Scoring
  • Focused because the scorer focuses on an
    established set of criteria
  • Holistic because the scorer takes into
    consideration the whole paper and assigns one
    score

5
Score Points
Ineffective

Somewhat effective
Generally effective
Highly effective
6
Scoring Procedures
  • Ten scorers make up a team.
  • Each paper is scored by two scorers from two
    different teams.
  • If the two scorers assign the same score, then
    the decision is final and the paper is given a
    score.

7
Scoring Procedures, continued
  • If the two scorers assign different scores, then
    the paper is given to a third scorer from another
    scoring team.
  • If there is still a discrepancy, then the paper
    goes to the scoring director and sometimes on to
    Victoria Young and the TEA staff.

8
About the Prompt
  • The prompt is meant to be a springboard to get
    the writer to think and reflect.

We are going to allow the greatest possible
latitude in regard to the way students approach
the prompt. Victoria Young, TEA
9
About the Prompt Page
  • The prompt page has two components
  • The actual prompt in a rectangular box at the top
    of the page
  • A kid friendly version of the rubric

10
About the Prewriting
  • Three or four blank pages will be available at
    the back of student test booklets for prewriting
    with a heading that will read, Use this page for
    prewriting.
  • Scorers will not see the prewriting pages.

11
About Authenticity
  • We want to honor student writers and their
    desire to bring their ideas to the paper in an
    authentic way.
  • Victoria Young, TEA

12
About Scoring
  • The space within score points is a lot bigger
    than the space between scorer points. In other
    words, some low fours look a lot more like high
    threes than high fours.
  • The rubric, while the same at all grade levels,
    plays out differently.

13
About Scoring
  • The push is for depth of thought.
  • Questions to Ponder
  • Does the information thats added help the reader
    understand what the writer is saying to a grater
    capacity?
  • Is there evidence of reflection?

14
Whats the difference between elaboration and
depth of development?
  • Elaboration has many adjectives, uses lots of
    details, tells more, provides horizontal
    development
  • Depth of development provides significance,
    goes deeper into the writers thoughts, provides
    vertical development

15
About Reference Materials
  • Seventh graders will write the composition first,
    then turn in their reference materials
    (dictionaries and thesauruses) before taking the
    editing/revising multiple choice portion of the
    test.
  • Sample questions come before the seal.
  • Students may return to the composition, but they
    may NOT have access to reference tools once the
    seal is broken.

16
About Reference Materials
  • Ratio of 15 constitutes reasonable access
  • Resources may contain biographical, geographical
    information, etc.
  • Students may not have access to a grammar or
    style guide during the revision/editing section
  • Students may not use a bilingual dictionary
  • Students may use resources from home

17
Focus Coherence
  • Central theme
  • Controlling idea
  • Links clearly show relationship of ideas
  • Connectedness apparent
  • Introduction Conclusion add meaning
  • Ineligible for 4 without conclusion
  • Completion within 2 pages allotted

18
Organization
  • Does it make sense?
  • Organizational strategy
  • Sentence to sentence movement
  • Paragraph to paragraph progression
  • Not physical organization (ie., indenting)
  • Thread throughout the flow of ideas
  • Successful planning critical

19
Development of Ideas
  • Depth and substance v. abundance of info.
  • Thorough and specific dev. of each thought
  • Not elaboration driven
  • Beyond plot summary, links to own ideas
  • Quality v. quantity
  • Ideas are interesting and thoughtful
  • Evidence of thought development
  • Compositional risk encouraged

20
Voice
  • Is there a face behind the paper?
  • No certain gimmick that leads to voice
  • Not sparkle words, statistics,
  • A sense of the writer is apparent
  • Evidence of thought and reflection
  • Reflects the writers individuality
  • Dialogue and personal anecdotes

21
Conventions
  • Writing for an outside audience
  • Encourage rich vocabulary
  • Weak conventions can hinder score
  • Strong conventions can help score
  • Sentence boundaries important
  • Spelling remains critical
  • Consistency of conventions key
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