Title: SOL Revisions 1995-Present
1SOL Revisions 1995-Present
- Problem 2
- April 24th, 2004
- Chris, Dee, Mike Scott
2Virginia Standards of Learning1995-2004
- The primary objectives of the Board of Education
in revising the standards were to reaffirm the
Boards commitment to the standards adopted in
1997 and to define a system of consequences and
rewards for students, professional personnel,
schools, and school divisions. Student
achievement on SOL tests will be used as the
primary basis of evaluating schools. (from the
final regulations establishing standards for
accrediting public schools in Virginia)
3How are changes made?
- SOL Content Review Committee meets for five days
in the summer. The committee is made up of
members of Dept. of Education, teachers, and
testing companies. One person sits on committee
for each grade level. - The committee reviews different questions for
each test and Field Test data from previous test. - Statistical information for each question is
reviewed and committee decides whether questions
are biased. - The committee decides whether to keep each
question or delete it from the test.
4Continuation of SOL Revision Committee in the
summer
- The last three days are spent reviewing Field
Tested items that will be assessed next spring. - The committee needs to agree on items. (change,
add, or delete) - The committee has a checklist and writes comments
concerning opinions. - DOE records sessions and documents
statements made by committee members.
5- In fall/winter the English committee reconvenes
for three days to set passing scores for March
testing. - -Review Field Test prompts and
choose -Decide on rubric for writing prompt
6Ongoing Evaluation and Revisions Schedule
- The Board of Education recognizes the need for an
ongoing process of evaluation and revision. In
September 2000, the board approved the following
schedule which adheres to the legislatures
desire that the SOLs in each subject area
undergo review at least once every seven years.
7English SOLs 1995-
CORE 95 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12
English
Math
Science
Social Studies
8Revisions for Testing English SOLs
- 1995- Foundation for SOL Testing Program
- 1999- Field Tests
- 2000- Teacher Resource Guide became part of
testing framework and testing was now scored with
pass/fail - 2001- Supplement to TRG called Technical
Assistance Document for grades 5-11 - 2002- SOLs are changed and explanations are
given for each SOL. The new SOLs combined TRG,
SOLs, and Crosswalk.
9Revisions for Testing English SOLs
- 2003- Testing 1995 SOLs and TRG is now called
Curriculum Framework - 2004- In late spring/early summer committee will
create Field Tested items for new SOLs - 2005- Testing 1995 SOLs but will take Field
Tested items (two curriculum) - 2006- No 1995 SOLs will be tested. 2002 SOLs
will now be tested.
10Revisions to English SOLs
- K-3 1) More specific words were added and
others were deleted (example K.3- a. e.g was
deleted including was added) - 2) New objectives were added.
- 3) Objectives were moved from one
category to another. - 4) Goals in (stem) were changed.
- 5) Major changes in reading for grade 2
(2.4-2.9) New objectives were
added/moved. - 6) New SOL 3.11 was added.
- 3.11 The student will edit writing for
correct grammar,
capitalization, punctuation, and spelling. -
11Revisions to EnglishSOLs
- Grades 4/5
- 1) Objectives were moved from one stem to
another (example 4.4 f moved from 4.6). - 2) Very few changes in oral language.
- 3) Poetry introduced in 4th grade with
Writing-4.7. - 4) Comprehension and nonfiction were
introduced in 5th grade (5.5). - 5) 5.8 g Using available technology has been
added. 5.9-New SOL -
12Revisions to English SOLs
- Grades 6-8
- 1) 6.4-Types of comprehension
introduced (changed from previous SOLs). - 2) 7.1- Oral presentations was added under
oral language. - 3) 7.9-New writing SOL
- 4) 8.7-Under writing, sentence variety was
added and prewriting strategies and
organizing ideas were added.
13Revisions for English SOLs
- Grades 9-12
- 1) 9.4- Gives teacher more flexibility.
- to use computer software, assemble or
construct models or equipment was deleted
and assigned project or task was added - 2) 9.6 h.- Final stage of writing process was
added to include proofreading and
preparing final product. - 3) 9.8- Using APA was added
- 9.9- On-line Resources added
- 4) 10.1 d.- New objective for oral language
- 5) 10.11 f.- More specific for accessing
information from technology - 6) 11.8- New writing SOL
- 7) 11.10- Major revisions
-
14Science SOLs 1995-
CORE 95 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12
English
Math
Science
Social Studies
15Revisions for Science SOLs
- K-3 Very few changes. Words were
deleted/added. - 4/5 1) Major changes to 4.2 involving
characteristics of moving objects. - 2) 5.1 g. and h. added
- 3) 5.3- examples for key concepts
deleted -
16Revisions for Science SOLs
- 6th grade Many SOL changes involving 7th
grade-Life Science. (6.8 and 6.9 are included in
LS.4 and LS.9) - 7th grade Life Science-Few changes other than
add/delete words. - 8th grade Physical Science-PS.1 h-j was added
- 9th grade Earth Science-ES.2 f was moved to
ES.7 ES.4 b-d involving solar system was
moved from ES.14 - 10th grade Biology-BIO.1 k-l was added for
conducting investigations. BIO.4 a was added to
key concepts for investigating and understanding
relationships between cell structure and
function. BIO.8 e was added under key concepts
for investigating and understanding populations. - 11th grade Chemistry.1 h/i was added under key
concepts in investigating and understanding
experiments. CH.6 was deleted. - 12th grade Physics-PH.1 h was added to include
technology in investigations. PH.3 d/e were
added to include new discoveries and scientific
viewpoint. PH.7 duplicated CH.5 and was changed.
17Math SOLs 1995-
CORE 95 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12
English
Math
Science
Social Studies
18Revisions for Math SOLs
- K-3 No major changes or deletions.
- 4th grade No standards deleted. 4.17 New SOL
involving geometry. 4.22-New SOL involves
patterns, functions, and algebra. - 5th grade 5.2-New SOL involving Number and
Number Sense. 5.13-Standard moved from Geometry.
5.15 and 5.16-New SOLs for Geometry. No
deleted standards. - 6th grade Words added and no deleted standards.
Many changes involving related 1995 SOLs
(example 6.20 use to be 7.16/7.17) - 7th grade 7.13-New Geometry standard. 7.14 was
deleted. Many standards were moved to 6th grade. - 8th grade 8.10 standard was deleted. 8.3 was
rewritten to combine 8.1 and 8.4(Computation and
Estimation) - Algebra I A.5 standard was rewritten to combine
A.5 and A.15. No standards were deleted. - Geometry G.5 was deleted.
- Algebra II No standards deleted. Very few
changes. - Trigonometry No standards deleted. Very few
changes. - Computer Mathematics COM.4 This standard is
covered in the Grade 8 Computer Technology SOLs. - Probability and Statistics No changes are
deletions. - Discrete Mathematics No changes are deletions.
- Mathematical Analysis No changes are deletions.
19Social Studies SOLs 1995-
CORE 95 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12
English
Math
Science
Social Studies
20Social Studies SOLs 1995-2001
- 1995 Social Studies SOLs Background
- - Created primarily by board
- Some feel that they were influenced by interest
groups - Not well received by teachers
- Critics feel that the standards represent an
unbalanced view of history - Standards were vague
- Overall the Social Science standards were the
most controversial of all core subjects
particularly the US/VA objectives
21Social Studies SOLs 1995-2001
- 2001 Social Studies SOLs
- - More teacher driven
- Teachers along with other professionals were
members of the committees - Standards were clearer and better received
- Curriculum Framework was added to assist
teachers - From direction of the Board, the new standards
emphasize diversity and differing perspectives
22The Revision Process
- 2000 General Assembly directed Board to
establish a cycle for periodic review of
standards - 2000 In June the Board appointed a Task Force
comprised of educators, legislators, community
representatives and Board members. - Recommendations of the Task Force were given to
the Review Committee.
23The Revision Process
- The Review Committee was comprised primarily of
public school Social Science educators. - Review committees using the Task Force
recommendations revised the standards. - Revisions were made available for public comment
and then approved by the board.
24Social Studies SOLs 1995-2001
- What was the focus of the revision?
- (Task Force Recommendations)
- Quantity of content that can effectively learned
and taught in the instructional time provided - Sequential development of content knowledge and
skills that build on each other and are
appropriate in terms of age - Increased focus on views and contributions of
diverse cultures
25Social Studies SOLs 1995-2001What Really
Changed?
- Many of the standards were reworded or shifted
some to different grades entirely - Over 400 standards were shifted, moved, altered
or re-categorized - 3) The names of historic persons and events
traditionally studied in grades K-3 have been
included - 4) Names of individuals and events in grades 4-12
are only included if they are crucial to the
understanding of concepts according to the Task
Force recommendations -
26Social Studies SOLs 1995-2001What Really
Changed?
- 5) History categories are subdivided within the
grade/subject - 6) Removed Computer/Technology Standards from
Social Science standards - 7) At the high school level some subjects changed
titles and some changed time periods covered. - 8) History standards were designed to emphasize
the intellectual skills required for responsible
citizenship. - 9) In other areas (Civics, Geography) application
to real life is emphasized, especially
citizenship.
27Social Studies SOLs 1995-2001What Really
Changed?
- U.S. History typically studied in 11th grade,
was the most controversial of the old standards. - Now entitled Virginia and United States History
- - Broken down into 6 chronological categories
- New Skills standards created - an entire new
section dealing with the analysis, interpretation
and evaluation of information and its application
to daily living. - New standard created addressing the creation of
the constitution including the process,
compromises and the influence of previous
documents on the U.S. Constitution
28Social Studies SOLs 1995-2001What Really
Changed?
Notable omissions of the new US/VA
Standards -Military advantages of the Union and
the Confederacy -Impact of the expanded role of
the government since the 30s -Strategic and
economic factors in Middle East
policy -Affirmative action -Comparing
conservative and liberal economic
strategies -Locate new states as they were added
to the Union Notable additions of the new US/VA
Standards -Key features of the Jacksonian
Era -Changing US policies toward Asia and Latin
America -Geneva Convention and treatment of
prisoners -Effects of increased participation of
women in workplace -Acknowledging impacts on
African Americans (in addition to Native
Americans and Europeans) during colonization
29Where do we go from here?
- When will we revise again?
- How does Federal legislation fit in?
30Core SOLs 1995-
CORE 95 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12
English
Math
Science
Social Studies
31Proposed Changes in SOLs
- 2005-2006-NCLB mandates grades 3-8 must be
tested in reading and math annually. - 2007-2008- grades 3-8 for science will be added
-
32SOLs and School Accountability
- The Virginia SOLs were adopted in June 1995
- Students (grades 3,5,8, and high school) began
taking SOL tests in the Spring of the 1997-98
school year. This gave local school divisions
nearly three years to realign their curriculum
before these tests were administered. - The Board determined that all eligible students
must be tested. The accrediting standards define
eligible students as any student enrolled in
the school at the grade level of the SOL tests
except for those whose IEP, 504 plan, or LEP
committee excludes them from the testing program.
33SOLs and School Accountability
- Passing scores for the SOL tests were originally
set by the Board of Education in the Fall of
1998. These scores were based on the results of
the tests administered to students the previous
Spring. - Student performance will be reported as one of
three levels pass/advanced, pass/proficient,
fail. - Student performance will be reported as a scaled
score (0-600), with 400 required to achieve
pass/proficient. - Student performance will also be reported for the
reporting categories that make up each test, as
outlined in the test blueprints. Student
performance will be reported as scaled scores so
that progress over time may be measured.
34SOLs and School Accountability
- Refinements to the regulations for accrediting
public schools in Virginia. - Results on tests such as AP or IB test can count
in a schools pass rates for accreditation
purposes. - Schools can receive bonus points when students
are successful in remediation recovery programs. - A series of intermediate annual benchmarks for
SOL test pass rates in the four core areas
between 2000-01 and 2003-04 were established.
These annual benchmarks increased in a
stair-step approach allowing schools to be
Provisionally Accredited. - A new accreditation category, Provisionally
Accredited/Needs Improvement was established for
schools who do not reach the annual benchmarks,
but which are within 20 percentage points of the
benchmarks. Schools that are more than 20
percentage points below the annual benchmarks
will be Accredited with Warning in specified
academic areas.
35SOLs and School Accountability
- Refinements to the regulations for accrediting
public schools in Virginia. - There will be an academic review conducted and
supervised by the DOE of each school that is
Accredited with Warning. Each school in this
category must also file an annual report
detailing its progress in its improvement plan. - Schools must achieve pass rates of 70 in all
applicable core academic areas to be Fully
Accredited. The provisionally accredited
ratings may not be earned after 2002-03. - Accreditation will be determined using a
three-year rolling average of student pass rates
or the current years scores, whichever is
greater. - Beginning 2003-04 the pass rate for schools to be
fully accredited in third and fifth grade English
will be 75. - Beginning 2005-06, only schools that achieve 70
in the four core areas (except third and fifth
grade English 75 and third grade science and
History 50) will be fully accredited. - In summary, From 1998-2004, Virginia schools
earned their accreditation based upon an
improvement model. Beginning in 2004, all
schools will be held to a fixed model.
36SOLs and School Accountability
37SOLs and Student Accountability
- Each student (K-8), where SOL tests are
administered, is expected to take the SOL tests.
Schools are to use the SOL test results as part
of a multiple set of criteria for determining the
promotion or retention of students (SOA 8 VAC
20-131-30). - Each student in middle and secondary school shall
take all applicable end-of-course SOL tests
following course instruction. Middle and
secondary schools may consider the students
score in determining the students final course
grade (SOA 8 VAC 20-131-30).
38SOLs and Student Accountability
- Students who were below the eighth grade level in
the 1998-99 school year are no longer required to
pass the Literacy Passport Test in order to
receive a standard or advanced studies diploma. - Beginning with the 9th graders of the 2000-01
school year, students must pass end-of-course SOL
tests to earn verified units of credit towards a
high school diploma. - Six verified credits are required for a standard
diploma - Nine verified credits are required for an
advanced studies diploma
39SOL passing Scores (cut scores)
Note These are the passing scores revised by
the State Board of Education on November
27,2001.       Note  Theseare the pasing
scores revised by the State Board of Education
for 2003-2004. Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â
                                                 Â
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 SOL Test  Pass (proficient)  Pass (advanced)
Grade 3   English   Mathematics    History Social Science   Science  32 out of 45 items (71) 36 out of 50 items (72) 27 out of 40 items (60) 27 out of 40 items (68)  42 out of 45 items (93) 45 out of 50 items (90) 35out of 40 items (90) 36 out of 40 items (90)
Grade 5    English Reading,      Literature, Research     English Writing     Mathematics     History Social Science     Science     Computer/Technology   28 out of 42 items (67) 32 out of 44 items (73) 34 out of 50 items (68) 25 out of 40 items (63) 26 out of 40 items (65) 17 out of 30 items (57)   39 out of 42 items (93) 41 out of 44 items (93) 46 out of 50 items (92) 37 out of 40 items (93) 37 out of 40 items (93) 27 out of 30 items (90)
Grade 8     English Reading,        Literature, Research     English Writing     Mathematics     History Social Science     Science     Computer/Technology   27 out of 42 items (64) 30 out of 44 items (68) 37 out of 60 items (62) 28 out of 50 items (56) 29 out of 50 items (58) 26 out of 40 items (65)   37 out of 42 items (88) 41 out of 44 items (93) 55 out of 60 items (92) 45 out of 50 items (90) 45 out of 50 items (90) 36 out of 40 items (90)
High School     English Reading,       Literature, Research     English Writing     Algebra I     Algebra II     Geometry     Earth Science     Biology     Chemistry     World History (I) to 1000         A.D. World        Geography     World History (II) from 1000        A.D. to the Present         World Geography     U. S. History    World Geography   24 out of 42 items (57) 37 out of 54 items (69) 27 out of 50 items (54) 31 out of 50 items (62) 27 out of 45 items (60) 30 out of 50 items (60) 26 out of 50 items (52) 27 out of 50 items (54) 33 out of 61 items (54)   32 out of 63 items (51)   34 out of 61 items (56) 28 out of 60 items (47)   37 out of 42 items (88) 49 out of 54 items (91) 45 out of 50 items (90) 45 out of 50 items (90) 41 out of 45 items (91) 45 out of 50 items (90) 45 out of 50 items (90) 45 out of 50 items (90) 55 out of 61 items (90)   57 out of 63 items (90)   55 out of 61 items (90) 49 out of 60 items (82)
40SOLs and Student Accountability
- The Board has established a transition period
covering students who entered the ninth grade
during 2000-03, requiring these students to pass
the two end-of-course English tests and any other
four tests to earn a standard diploma. - To earn an advanced studies diploma students must
pass the two end-of-course English tests, two
tests each in Math, History, Science, and one
test of their own choosing for a total of nine
verified credits.
41SOLs and Student Accountability
- Beginning with students entering ninth grade in
2003-04, students must pass the two end-of-course
English tests, one test each in Math, History,
Science, and one other test of their choosing for
a standard diploma. - Requirements for the advanced studies diploma
remain the same (9 verified credits, 2 from
English, Math, History, Science and one of their
choosing).
42SOLs and Student Accountability
- A verified unit of credit is awarded for a course
in which the student earns a standard unit of
credit and achieves a passing score on a
corresponding end-of-course SOL test or a
substitute assessment approved by the Board. - Students may retake high school end-of-course
tests as often as a local school divisions
testing schedule will permit. - Students within 25 points of passing or have
extenuating circumstances may be eligible to
retake a test before the next scheduled
administration. - Transition students who after remediation and
failure of a retake in History or Science, but
have scored (375), may be awarded a verified
unit of credit by their local school board
pending a review of their work.
43SOLs and Student Accountability
- A modified standard diploma may be earned by
students who are unlikely to meet the credit
requirements of a standard diploma. - To earn a modified standard diploma, students
must earn a total of 20 standard units of credit
and verified credits are not required. The
student is required to take any end-of-course
tests that apply even though it is not required
for their diploma.
44SOLs and Student Accountability
- Provisions have been made for students who
transfer into Virginia schools and can be found
in the SOA (8 VAC 20-131-60). - Provisions are also made for students with
disabilities who cannot participate in the
statewide assessment program. Information on the
VAAP can be found at - http//www.pen.k12.va.us/VDOE/Instruction/Sped/spe
dsol.html
45SOLs and Student Accountability
- Students (K-8), have the right to participate in
a remediation recovery program in English and
Math or both. - Students (9-12), the remediation recovery program
includes all retakes of end-of-course SOL Math
tests only, however ninth grade participants may
be retested on the eighth grade English and Math
SOL tests.
46Future SOL Accountability
- Annual SOL testing in Reading and Math for grades
three through eight by 2005-06, and in Science by
2007-08 to comply with NCLB. - Possible revision of the SOL tests so that
reporting category scaled scores from different
forms and years may be compared.
47Curriculum Development
- Since the implementation of tested SOLs, the
state of Virginia has provided several resources
to help school divisions align their curriculum
to the standards. These include crosswalks, scope
and sequence guides, and curriculum frameworks.
48- Crosswalks
- - Curriculum modification
- Curriculum Framework
- - Previously Teacher Resource Guide
- - Alignment of the curriculum to standards
- Scope and Sequence
- - Development of new curriculum
- - Reorganization of current curriculum
49- Best source of curriculum development and
alignment . -
- TEACHERS !
50Aligning the Curriculum
- Step 1 Vertical alignment
- Involve individuals from all levels of a
particular discipline. - Use framework, as well as scope and sequence to
ensure all SOLs are covered in at least one
grade level or course.
51Aligning the Curriculum
- Step 2 Horizontal Alignment
- Include all individuals who teach a particular
grade level or subject. - Using the scope and sequence guide, as well as
the data from the vertical alignment session,
develop a division wide curriculum that includes
input from all committee members.
52SOLs
Curriculum
53Curriculum
SOLs
54SOLs
Curriculum
55SOLs
Curriculum
56Resources
- Lewis, Susan -Director of Testing for RCS.
Personal Interview. April 13. 2004 - McCracken, Dr. Robert.
- Oliva, Peter. Developing the Curriculum. New
York Addison Wesley Longman. 5th ed. 2001. - Payne, Lynn -Dept. Head in English at HVM/Served
on State Content Review Committee for English
SOL's. Personal Interview. April 14, 2004 - Regulations Establishing Standards for
Accrediting Public Schools (FAQ), - http//www.pen.k12.va.us/VDOE/VA_Board/Standards
/soaqa.html - SOL Test Results and Promotion Policies, 6/11/99,
- http//www.pen.k12.va.us/VDOE/suptsmemos/1999/in
fl20.html - Standards of Learning (SOL) Test Scaled Scores
and Equating, 11/20/98, - http//www.pen.k12.va.us/VDOE/suptsmemos/1998/infl
79.html - Thurston, Dr. Beverly (DOE). Personal Interview.
- Virginia DOE website
- Virginia SOL Passing Scores, 11/27/01,
- http//www.pen.k12.va.us/VDOE/News/solpass.html
- Williams, Ben (Roanoke County Schools). Personal
Interview.