Title: Standards-Based Education
1Standards-Based Education
- By Chris Garland, Julie Gay and Kim Tooley
2Prominence in United States
- -Standards-Based Education became prominent in
the late 1980s and 1990s - -this reform movement calls for clear, measurable
standards for all students - -a standards-based system measures each student
against a concrete standard instead of against
each other - -all states, except Iowa, have developed a set of
educational standards for students
3Philosophical Base
- -Standards-based education began in the 1980s and
early 1990s as Outcome Based Education - -education reform model that has a student
centered philosophy that focuses on measuring
student outcomes - -also known as mastery education or
performance-based education
4Core Goals of SBE programs
- -the creation of curriculum frameworks which
outline specific knowledge or skills which
students must acquire - -an emphasis on criterion-referenced assessments
which are aligned to the frameworks - -the imposition of some high-stakes tests, such
as graduation examinations requiring a high
standard of performance to receive a diploma
5Intention
- The vision of the standards-education movement is
that every student will receive a meaningful high
school diploma that serves essentially as a
public guarantee that they can read, write, and
do basic mathematics. - -NO student then regardless of poverty, race,
gender, cultural or ethnic background,
disabilities, or family situation will be exempt
from learning the required material, although it
is acknowledged that individual students may
learn in different ways and at different ways - -Ultimately the vision is the backbone of NCLB
6Initial Action
- In 1994 Congress passed the Goals 2000 Educate
America Act - -this was the beginning of the Standards-Based
Education push in the US - -this act enacted the education goals into law
and provided resources for the development of
standards and assessments - -suggestions for implementing standards-based
education reform were as followed - Conduct ongoing research on standards-based
education reform - Establish a national organization to communicate
SBE efforts across the nation - Address systemic inequities
7Standards-Based Ed. Programs
- -measures its success based on student learning
(the achievement of standards) rather than
compliance with rules and regulations - -aligns policies, initiatives, curriculum,
instruction, and assessments with clearly defined
academic standards - -criterion-references tests based on these
standards rather than norm-based rankings
(comparing students) - -a requirement that attention be paid to
narrowing academic gaps between groups such as
races, income or gender - -consistently communicates and uses standards to
focus on ways to ensure success for all students - -uses assessment to inform instruction on a
continually and consistent basis
8Components 2
- Standards-based education has assessment as a key
part of the movement - -the first part is to set new, higher standards
to be expected of EVERY student - -a criterion is set up for what EVERY student is
expected to know and a score is set compared to
those benchmarks - -thus curriculum must be aligned with the new
standards - -students must then be assessed based on what is
expected of EVERY student - -gauges individual student progress
9Components 3
- It is fully expected that every child will become
proficient in all areas of academic skills by the
end of a specified period - -typically within 10 years in the United States,
but sometimes longer, after the passing of an
education reform bill by a state government - -such as in the US with the No Child Left Behind
legislation that further requires that all
schools must demonstrate improvements among all
students, even if all students in the school are
all already above the proficient level
10Differences Between Standards-Based and
Norm-References Systems
- NORM REFERENCED
- -Believe some students are naturally smarter than
others - -Content subject matter varies with different
groups of students - -Assessments compare what students know to what
other students know - -No objective criteria to distribute resources so
students who need the most often get the least - -Professional development tend to be one time
workshops
- STANDARDS-BASED
- -Believe virtually all students can get smart
through effort - -Subject matter is the same for all groups of
students - -Assessments compare what students know to
standards and benchmarks - -Resources are distributed as needed for all to
meet standards so students who need more get more - -Professional development focuses on improving
instruction so all students meet standards -
11Advantages
- Students are compared to standards
- Humans, not computers evaluate the value of
responses on assessments - A criterion-based test is worth teaching to
- Only a standards based test is aligned with
standards-based education reform - Ensures that all students will graduate with the
skills they need to succeed in the 21st century - Students will no longer be cheated by passing
them on to the next grade with obtaining the
knowledge that is needed at each grade level - No longer will schools produce graduates that
cannot read their own diplomas
12Lingering Impacts
- NCLB
- End of Course Exams
- Common Assessments
- Backwards Design
- MAP test in Missouri
- Assessment Driven Instruction
- Assessment for Learning
13Standards-Based Education
- When all students pass all standards, as is the
central belief of standards-based education
reform, all students will achieve the same test
score, eliminating the mysterious achievement gap
which has previously been shown to occur between
all groups on tests
14Three Critical Components
- Standards based reporting and formative
assessment - Ensuring effective teaching in every classroom
- Enhancing the academic background knowledge of
students who do not have advantaged backgrounds
15Robert Marzano Classroom Assessment and Grading
- Marzano, along with a few others are leading the
nation in the standards based movement and
grading. - Marzano believes that every child can learn and
be proficient with a system that measure specific
performance based off of specific criteria
16Marzano Consequences of Performance Based System
- Students do not have to figure out the rules from
teacher to teacher. - To catch up or move ahead at an accelerated pace,
students do not have to spend a specific amount
of time in class. Rather, they must demonstrate
competence in important content. - There are fewer dropouts and more students
completing graduation.
17Marzano
- Research shows that good teaching begins with
clear learning goals. - Goals are the reason classroom activities are
designed. Without clear goals, classroom
activities are without direction. Researchers
Joseph Krajcik, Katherine McNeill, and Brian
Reiser (2007) explain that good teaching begins
with clear learning goals from which teachers
select appropriate instructional activities and
assessments that help determine students
progress on the learning goals. - Marzano, R. (2009). Designing teaching learning
goals objectives (p. 4). Bloomington, IN
Marzano Research Laboratory.
18Guskeys Research
- To make a real difference for students, learning
standards and performance assessments must become
an integral part of the instructional process at
the classroom level.
19Guskey
- Two fundamental questions
- 1. What do I want students to learn?
- 2. What evidence would I accept to verify their
learning?
20Guskey
- Ensures that assessments become an integral part
of the instructional process. - Quizzes and tests should be learning tools
- Not simply evaluation devices that mark the end
of learning - They are tools that start and continue the
learning process
21Guskey and Marzano
- With proper assessments that are scored from a
rubric or specific set of criteria, prescriptive
and corrective instruction occurs increasing
student learning and closing achievement gaps.
22Stiggins and Chappuis Assessment of and for
Learning
- Orientation for thinking
- The key gap between those who meet and dont
meet standards - All students must meet standards for our society
to evolve productively. - Assessment, as previously conceived and
conducted, has sustained the gap. - Nevertheless, assessment can become the most
powerful narrower..
23Stiggins and Chappuis Assessment of and for
Learning
- Clear learning targets
- Formative and summative assessment, along with
student self assessment - prescriptive and corrective teaching
- The students emotional reaction to results will
determine what that student does in response.
24Guskey, Marzano, Stiggins, and Chappuis
- All believe that standards based learning,
formative and summative assessments, student self
evaluation, and prescriptive and corrective
teaching will close learning gaps moving students
to higher achievement.
25Stiggins and Chappuis Assessment of and for
Learning
- Essential Actions
- Balance assessments
- Refine standards
- Assure assessment quality
- Turn learners into assessors
- Rethink feedback strategies
- Build on learner success
- Assure assessment literacy
26Stiggins and Chappuis Assessment of and for
Learning
- Essential Question
- How do you close the achievement gap without
quality classroom assessment effectively used to
support learning?
27Discussion Prompts
- Many districts and schools are facing the
implications of NCLB. Discuss with your group
some of the challenges your school or district is
facing and how state standards factor into the
results of NCLB. - Reflect on your district since you have been
there. Discuss with your group how the trends in
education/standards-based reform have changed the
culture of instruction within your district or
building. - When looking at district, school or classroom
data, discuss how the standards based movement
has helped shape the framework for Professional
Learning communities and ensuring the success of
the individual child.