Title: Assessment of Oregon
1Assessment of Oregons Students with
Disabilities Information and Updates
- Oregon Department of Education
- Office of Student Learning and Partnerships
- Fall 2010
- Dianna Carrizales
- Brad Lenhardt
2Welcome
- Introductions
- Structure of this session
3Objectives
- Extended Assessment Updates and Opportunities
- Overview of Roles and Responsibilities
- Review Decision-Making
- General Assessment (w/ and w/o accommodations)
- Alternate Assessment based on Alternate
Achievement Standards (AA-AAS) (Scaffold and
Standard) - 2010-11 Test Structure and Expectations
- 2010-11 Training Plan
4Updates and Opportunities
5Changes to Accommodations Recording in OAKS
- Student test records include an accommodations
flag field. This flag is federally required for
students with IEPs who take the general
assessment with an accommodation from the ODE
Accommodations Table however, any student (with
or without an IEP) using an accommodation may be
identified with this field. Use of this flag
(recording Y) indicates that the student
received one or more accommodation. - For 2010-11, a drop-down menu feature will also
be implemented to allow districts to identify up
to six specific accommodations for any student
from a list of unique 4-digit accommodation
codes. Districts may select these accommodations
codes for each test opportunity in addition to
setting the accommodations flag. - For 2010-11, Test Administrators (TAs) can
continue to set the accommodation flag using the
OAKS online student approval screens. However,
identifying specific accommodations via the
drop-down menu is recorded by the district and
can be selected either through the OAKS online
student approval screens, the OAKS Test
Information Distribution Engine (TIDE), or
through Student Centered Staging. Please note
that while districts are currently limited to
recording no more than six accommodation codes,
any administration of accommodations (beyond the
six identified) should continue as appropriate or
as required by IEP. - Your Regional Assessment Support ESD Partner is
trained on Student Centered Staging and the
management of student records. Please follow your
districts protocols when contacting them for
related support. - http//www.ode.state.or.us/wma/teachlearn/testing/
admin/2010-11_tam.pdf (p. 40)
6Extended Assessment 2010-11
- Changes this year
- Same structure for Reading, Writing, Science
- Math (Grades 3-8, 11)
- Science Field Test (Grades 5, 8, 11)
- Similar items
- Embedded Science Field Test Items (aligned to new
science content standards) - Same difficulty
- Math aligned to new content standards
- Training
- Annual re-qualification requirement
- 3-year update for all Qualified Trainers
- TRAINING HANDOUT
7Locations of Live Trainings for New Qualified
Trainers
- Nov 3rd (9a-2p) Northwest Regional ESD
(Hillsboro) - Nov 10th (9a-2p) Willamette ESD (Salem)
- Nov 16th (9a-2p) Southern Oregon ESD (Medford)
- Nov 16th (9a-2p) High Desert ESD (Redmond)
- Nov 18th (9a-2p) Umatilla-Morrow ESD (Pendleton)
- PLEASE NOTE Any site with less than 5
registrees will be handled by V-tel.
8Refresher Sessions (via WebEx) for
Returning Qualified Trainers
- October 19th (9a - Noon)
- January 5th (1p 4p)
- January 26th (9a - Noon)
- PLEASE NOTE Access to the internet and a
phone will be necessary to participate .
9Extended Assessment Opportunities 2010-11
- Science Standard Setting (July 18 19, 2011)
- Online Extended Assessment Items Review
- SMARTER Balanced Assessment Consortium
- Math Cut Scores and Impact Data Review
10SMARTER Balanced Assessment Consortium
- The SMARTER Balanced Assessment Consortium (SBAC)
is a collection of 31 states that have been
working collaboratively since December 2009 to
develop a student assessment system aligned to a
common core of academic content standards to
apply for a Race-to-the-Top Assessment grant. On
the Sept. 2, 2010, the SBAC was awarded a
four-year 160 million Race to the Top assessment
grant by the US Department of Education (USED) to
develop a student assessment system aligned to a
common core of academic standards. - SBAC will create state-of-the-art adaptive online
exams, using open source technology. The online
system will provide accurate assessment
information to teachers and others on the
progress of all students, including those with
disabilities, English language learners and low-
and high-performing students. The system will
include - the required summative exams (offered twice each
school year) - optional formative, or benchmark, exams and
- a variety of tools, processes and practices that
teachers may use in planning and implementing
informal, ongoing assessment. This will assist
teachers in understanding what students are and
are not learning on a daily basis so they can
adjust instruction accordingly.
11Math Cut Scores and Impact Data Review
12Roles Responsibilities
13Office of Student Learning and Partnership (OSLP)
Assessment Role
- Ensure that IDEAs tenets of support and equity
for students with disabilities are upheld and
incorporated in a system that is also governed by
NCLBs tenets of accountability and high
expectations for all - Collect, monitor, and respond to student and
district level data related to this role - Provide evidence to USDE to demonstrate adequate
and appropriate use of federal funds related to
this role
14Office of Assessment and Information Services
(OAIS) Role
- Collect and report data in accordance with
federal accountability reporting requirements
through NCLB to ensure that rigorous student
expectations are upheld - Manage the statewide assessment for all of
Oregons students by developing, maintaining, and
supporting the OAKS System - Ensure the reliability of reporting (source) data
through system security and system consistency
15Interaction Between Offices
- Collaborate on reports and reporting
- Respond to development needs to ensure shared
vision (fit) within the assessment system - Engage in relevant grant opportunities
- OAIS monitors and maintains NCLB requirements and
consults with OSLP to ensure fidelity to IDEA
expectations - OSLP monitors and maintains IDEA and consults
with OAIS to ensure adherence to the appropriate
technical specifications
16District Roles (related to assessment)
- See Oregons Test Administration Manual
http//www.ode.state.or.us/wma/teachlearn/testing/
admin/2010-11_tam.pdf - Assess students in accordance with federal and
state regulation in the context of providing a
free and appropriate public education - Provide accurate and reliable data to ODE
- Use data appropriately when decision making
17Oregons Assessment System (2007-present)
- General Assessment (w/o and w/ accommodations)
- Extended Assessment (Standard or Scaffold)
- Elementary
- Field Test Items
- Middle
- Field Test Items
- High
- Field Test Items
10 CIM
8
7
6
5
4
3
Accommodated General Assessments
Extended Standard Administration
Extended Scaffold Administration
General Assessments
18Decision-making
19Decision-Making
- Among numerous instructional decisions, IEP teams
must also decide - General or Alternate assessment
- If General, what type of supports to provide
during assessment - If Alternate assessmentStandard or Scaffold
administration - If ELL how will they participate in ELPA
- A decision to use unapproved accommodations, is
a decision - to invalidate the students test for all
reporting purposes.
20Consider General Assessment without or with
accommodations if
- Student
- Performs at or around grade level
- Has academic difficulties that primarily surround
reading but may be average or close to average in
other subject areas - Has academic difficulties in areas other than
reading that are mild to moderate and can
typically be addressed by using simplified
language - Is reading within two to three grades of his or
her enrolled level - Instruction
- Is primarily general curriculum instruction (but
may also use a specialized curriculum in some
areas) - Some Judgment variables
- What assessment did he take last year?
- How is his attention?
- What types of behaviors should be considered?
21Consider Standard Administration of Extended
Assessment if
- Student
- Performs well below grade level
- Is significantly below grade level in reading
- Has academic difficulties that are generalized
(to all subject areas) and are significant - Benefits from specialized individual supports
- Instruction
- Is primarily a specialized curriculum or
- From general curriculum must be significantly
reduced in breadth, depth, and complexity - Some Judgment variables
- What assessment did he take last year?
- How is his attention?
- What types of behaviors should be considered?
- Previous relevant experiences
22Consider Scaffold Administration of Extended
Assessment if
- Student
- Performance is significantly impacted by a
disability - Does not read
- Has academic, mobility, and receptive and
expressive language difficulties that are
generalized and significant - Relies on individual and significant supports to
access reduced content materials - Instruction
- Is from a specialized curriculum and has
functional components and/or - Includes academic goals that are significantly
reduced in depth, breadth, and complexity from
grade level content - Some Judgment variables
- Is the student able to interact with
instructional material in a way that provides
meaningful feedback?
23General Assessments
24OAKS Online
- All Students
- Reading Grades 3 8 11
- Mathematics Grades 3 8 11
- Writing Grades 4, 7, 11
- Science Grades 5, 8, 11
- Contractor AIR
- Format Online
- Accommodations Can be administered with or
without accommodations
25Providing Accommodations
26Instructional Domain
- The classroom is a learning environment
structured to effectively convey information - Varied methods of instruction based on
professional judgments of evidence-based
practices are permitted - Universal design used by teachers allows for
multiple, creative approaches - Presentation, Expression, Engagement/Participation
- http//www.projectforum.org/docs/UDLImplementation
inSixLEAs.pdf
27Professional Judgment with Evidence Based
Practices and Procedures
supports
Strategies
changes
creative methods
Techniques
On the spot decisions
Hunches
Accommodations
28Assessment Domain
- Assessment occurs in a testing environment and is
structure to efficiently measure information
previously conveyed - Structured methods of administration are required
- Universal design features inherent in the test
are designed to allow for precision of
measurement and to ensure comparability of
outcomes - Presentation, Expression, Engagement/Participation
29Practices and Procedures
- Allowable resources
- Administration instructions as detailed in the
appropriate manual - Approved Accommodations
- Anything else is a modification and will
invalidate the score for all reporting purposes
30Accommodations
- Accommodations are Practices and procedures in
presentation, response, setting, and timing or
scheduling that, when used in an assessment,
provide equitable access to all students. - Accommodations do not compromise the learning
expectations, construct, grade-level standard,
and/or measured outcome of the assessment. - In Oregon, Accommodations are those specific
practices and procedures that the panel has
approved and which are listed in the
Accommodations Tables.
31Accommodations Flag
- 300.160 Participation in assessments (f) (1)
- An SEA (or, in the case of a district-wide
assessment, an LEA) must make available to the
public, and report to the public with the same
frequency and in the same detail as it reports on
the assessment of nondisabled children, the
following (1) The number of children with
disabilities participating in regular
assessments, and the number of those children who
were provided accommodations (that did not result
in an invalid score) in order to participate in
those assessments.
32Accommodations Manual
- Structure Full manual 68 pages
- Purpose To clarify the numerous issues related
to providing technically appropriate supports in
an assessment environment - Posted at http//www.ode.state.or.us/search/page/?
487 - How used
- To support the current accommodations tables
- As a resource to guide teachers in the provision
of supports during assessment
33AA-AAS
34Extended Assessment
- Alternate Assessment based on Alternate
Achievement Standards (AA-AAS) - Allowances for a state to create an alternate
assessment for students with the most significant
cognitive disabilities. - IEP team decides who participates
- Up to 1 of the students who are found proficient
(meets and/or Exceeds) can count toward state
AYP performance reports (see Guidance section on
ODEs Extended Assessments website
http//www.ode.state.or.us/search/page/?id2690) - Contractor Behavioral Research and Teaching
(BRT) at University of Oregon (Dr. Jerry Tindal)
35Training Outline
- Qualified Trainers (QTs) and Qualified Assessors
(QAs) - 2010-11 network will consist of returning QTs
and QAs from 2009-10 and new QTs and QAs trained
in 2010-11 - New and Returning QT/QA Training options
- Training info posted at http//www.ode.state.or.u
s/search/page/?id2689
36Do previously trained QTs and QAs need to be
re-trained this year?
- Individuals trained and qualified in the prior
school year must update their status and
re-qualify for the current school year by
reviewing the updates and passing the refresher
proficiency test on the training and proficiency
website. The process will take under two hours
(for either QTs or QAs) - The training and proficiency website will be
available beginning mid-October. - Any individuals who entered the system in
previous years but did not re-qualify are dropped
from the system and must undergo the complete
training for the current school year. - Untrained individuals are relying on you to tell
them what they need to do, when, where, and why.
37Basic Training Options
- NEW QTs
- Attend one of the five live regional trainings
- Returning QTs
- Participate in one of the three Refresher
Webinars or attend a live regional training - AND
- Review updates and pass the refresher proficiency
test on the training and proficiency website
after mid-October
- NEW QAs
- Attend one of the live trainings hosted by a
local trainer who has re-qualified for the
current school year.
- Returning QAs
- Review updates and pass the refresher proficiency
test on the training and proficiency website
after mid-October - OPTIONAL Get district approval to attend one of
the trainings hosted by a local trainer (who has
re-qualified for the current school year)
38State Capacity for Qualified Trainers
- Last year
- State intent (target) for QTs was 300
- Allocations were committed to districts based on
this estimate - Number of QTs 192 (190 in 2008-09)
- Number of QAs 1187 (1155 in 2008-09)
- Number of students assessed 5400
- Current year
- Districts are responsible for ensuring capacity
to assess all students who will be taking the
Extended Assessments - Funds allocated according to SECC amounts are
similar to last years - In addition to assessment training, funds can be
used toward the enhancement of assessment for
students with disabilities
39Contacts
- Brad Lenhardt (Assessment and Monitoring
Specialist) - Brad.Lenhardt_at_state.or.us
- (503) 947-5755
- Dianna Carrizales (Director of Monitoring,
Systems, and Outcomes) - Dianna.Carrizales_at_state.or.us
- (503) 947-5634