Title: Ohio
1Ohios Report Card System. . . Ohio's
Accountability Scheme
- The yearly Report Card is Ohios way to insure
accountability among its schools and communicate
this accountability to the public. - The Ohio Department of Education (aka, ODE)
publishes an annual guide for understanding the
Report Card. - Have a job interview? The ODE Report Cards
associated with the school and school district
(and the most recent ODE guide) may be worth
downloading. Why?
2Ohio School Performance Designations . . . Part I
- Schools and school districts earn designations
from the State of Ohio based on their
performance. These designations are - Excellent with Distinction
- Excellent
- Effective
- Continuous Improvement
- Academic Watch
- Academic Emergency
- The School Year Report Card contains the evidence
on which these designations are based and
includes four components (next slides).
3State Report Card(Component 1 State Indicators
. . .)
- State Indicators - The State Indicators vary by
year, but are generally based on the number of
state assessments given over all tested grades.
To earn each indicator, a district or school
needs to have a certain percentage of students
reach proficient or above a given assessment. - Eighteen of the 2006-2007 State Indicators are
- Meeting or exceeding the goal of 75 percent
proficient or above on - 3rd-grade achievement tests reading, math
- 4th-grade achievement tests reading, math,
writing - 5th-grade achievement tests reading, math,
science, social studies - 6th-grade achievement tests reading, math
- 7th-grade achievement tests reading, math,
writing - 8th-grade achievement tests reading, math,
science, social studies -
4State Report Card(Component 1 State Indicators
- continued . . .)
- Twelve of the 2006-2007 State Indicators are
- Meeting or exceeding the goal of 75 percent
proficient or above on - Ohio Graduation Test (OGT) 10th-grade reading,
mathematics, writing, science, social studies - Meeting or exceeding the goal of 85 percent
proficient or above on - Ohio Graduation Test (OGT) Cumulative 10th and
11th grade reading, mathematics, writing,
science, social studies - Meeting or exceeding the 90 percent state
requirement in - Graduation Rate
- Meeting or exceeding the 93 percent state
requirement in - Attendance Rate
- On the each district or school report card you
will see the total of State Indicators met plus a
check mark (v) by each met indicator.
5State Report Card(Component 2 Performance
Index . . .)
- Performance Index - This measure looks at the
achievement of every student, not just those who
score proficient or higher. All achievement tests
have five performance levels advanced,
accelerated, proficient, basic and limited. - A student score at the advanced level earns 1.2
points. - An accelerated score earns 1.1 points.
- A proficient score earns 1.0 point.
- A basic score earns 0.6 points.
- A limited score earns 0.3 points.
- Students who are not tested receive zero points.
Each weighted score is multiplied by the
percentage of student scores at that level to
generate a districts or schools Performance
Index.
6State Report Card(Component 3 - AYP . . .)
- AYP (Adequate Yearly Progress) AYP originated
from the federal No Child Left Behind Act of 2001
and the Elementary and Secondary Education Act.
The idea is to measure achievement across groups
so none are left behind. - There are 10 student groups evaluated for AYP
goals in reading and mathematics for the
2007-2008 school year in every school or district
where at least 30 tested students (aggregated
across all tested grades) are in that group.
Student groups are All Students, Black
(Non-Hispanic), Native American, Asian/Pacific
Islander, Hispanic, Multi-Racial, White
(Non-Hispanic), Economically Disadvantaged,
Limited English Proficient, Students with
Disabilities. - To meet AYP, every school and district must test
at least 95 percent of the students enrolled at
the time state tests are given. Additionally,
every school and district must test at least 95
percent of their students in each of the above 10
groups.
7State Report Card(Component 3 AYP - continued
. . .)
- Districts can meet AYP in one of four ways (see
ODE Handbook). - AYP graduation and attendance goals are evaluated
for schools and districts, but not each student
group. Failure to meet any of the proficiency or
participation goals, attendance levels or
graduation targets results in the district or
school missing AYP. AYP is scored MET or NOT
MET. - Consequences
- Ohio law states that a district or school that
meets AYP can be designated no lower than
Continuous Improvement. - Additionally, the law states that a district or
school that does not meet AYP goals for three
consecutive years, and has more than one of the
10 student groups not meeting AYP in the most
recent year, can be rated no higher than
Continuous Improvement. - What happens when schools/districts do not meet
Adequate Yearly Progress and enter
School/District Improvement Status? See
Guidebook once again.
8State Report Card(component 4 Value Added . .
.)
- Value-added (prior to 2008 Ohio used what was
called Performance Index Growth) focus on the
schools contribution to making a difference. - Value-added results are calculated for schools
with grades 4-8 in reading and mathematics.
Additionally, a composite result will be
displayed on the front of the report card. The
composite impacts the districts or schools
rating. Results will be displayed using the
following symbols - ( ) A plus symbol indicates that a district or
school has achieved more than one year of
expected growth in student progress. - ( v ) A check symbol indicates that a district
or school has achieved one year of expected
growth in student progress. - ( - ) A minus symbol indicates that a district or
school has achieved less than one year of
expected growth in student progress.
9State Report Card(component 4 Value Added -
continued . . .)
- Consequences
- A district or school that achieves, on the
composite result, an Above Expected Growth for
two consecutive years may increase its rating by
one category. For instance, a school otherwise
rated as Effective may be raised to Excellent if
it achieves a designation for two consecutive
years. - Beginning with the 2008-2009 report cards,
districts and schools that show Below Expected
Growth for three consecutive years will have
their designation reduced. -
10Ohio School Performance Designations. . . Part
II
- WHEW! Now that we know and understand the four
components of the Ohio System, we can explore how
these four areas come together to produce school
and district report card designations excellent
with distinction, excellent, effective,
continuous improvement, academic watch, or
academic emergency. - See flow chart, page 8, in the Guide for Ohios
Report Card System. (this PDF document is on the
class website)
11On your own, two ways you might continue . . .To
Explore Ohio Report Cards
- The Interactive Local Report Card (iLRC) was
developed to provide public access to current and
historical Local Report Card data. You will be
able to locate information about test results,
graduation rates, financial data, and
demographics. You can sort and create reports to
compare results across districts. - Website http//ilrc.ode.state.oh.us/
- Find box Power Unit Reports click on GO
- Scroll Down to Bottom of page click on BEGIN
- Measure Up is a stand-alone application that can
be downloaded free. It is designed for school
leaders to facilitate understanding and analysis
of report card data. The graphic format creates
visual displays that are easily interpreted and
shared (the camera icon can be used to cut and
paste information into Power Point
presentations). Links are provided to
explanations about Report Card terminology. Key
questions are provided for analyzing each level
of data. - Website http//www.ohioschoolleaders.org/
- Click on Measure Up Data Tool link and download
12But how might you connect instruction to the
State Assessment System . . .
- The following two sites contain useful
information regarding the Ohio Report Card and
connecting information you teach to
accountability standards. There are a number of
other sites, but I like these - D3A2 - Data Driven Decisions for Academic
Achievement - Ohio Graduation Tests
- Lets look at each of these in more detail. By
the way, is this teaching to the test? I think
not. This exploration will help you prepare
lessons in such a way as to impact the successful
long term and short term achievements of your
students . . . and your long term and short term
effectiveness as a teacher.
13D3A2 - Data Driven Decisions for Academic
Achievement
- D3A2 provides systemic access to educational
resources aligned to Ohio's Academic Content
Standards and can connect this to your own
districts student achievement data. Their goal
is to improve instruction and raise student
achievement. - Resources (including videos, lesson plans and
assessments) are made available online, free of
charge, by Ohio content providers who have agreed
to rigorous development, review and alignment
policies. Organizations providing content
include Columbus Zoo COSI (Center of Science
Industry) Northern Ohio Educational Computer
Association Northwest Ohio Educational
Technology ODE Ohio Historical Society/Ohio
Social Studies Resource Center Ohio Resource
Center for Mathematics, Science and Reading WNEO
PBS 45/49 WVIZ Ideastream CET WGTE and WPTD
Think TV. - To search for resources aligned to specific
benchmarks and grade level indicators in the
academic content standards, log into www.d3a2.org
and click the link to the Resource Exchange on
the front page. No password is needed to access
resources. Your school district would need to
provide a password to access the data which would
enable student connection.
14Ohio Graduation Tests
- The link below will take you to an interesting
website section. Here we find a starting point
for building tools that can help in understanding
Ohios statewide assessments for the Ohio
Graduation Tests (OGT). - Website http//reports.success-ode-state-oh-us.
info/ - On that page, find the Ohio Graduation Tests
section - Click on the OGT Success Site link inside this
section - Find and click on the Teacher Tools section on
this new page - From the next page, you can
- build practice tests
- see released questions
- practice scoring constructed response questions
- ZOWEE . . . Would telling a hiring official that
you know about and intend to use this tool in
creating assessments be useful or WHAT!
15Practical Advice
- Have an understanding of the ODE Ohio Report Card
system and where your teaching assignment fits
into this system. - Strive to support your schools and districts
achievement of top designations in the ODE
system. - Strive to teach and assess the things you know to
be important that are NOT considered in the Ohio
Accountability System. - Strive to recognize and create a classroom
learning environment wherein the issue is not
either/or in terms of assessment techniques.
16Terms Concepts to Review andStudy on Your Own
- Academic Emergency
- Academic Watch
- AYP
- Continuous Improvement
- Effective
- Excellent with Distinction
- Excellent
- OGT
- Ohio Report Card
- Performance Index
- State Indicators
- Value Added