Title: CSO Meeting
1CSO Meeting
September 27, 2012
2Todays Objectives
- Introduce new DDOE and district leadership
- Share DDOE updates
- Learn more about Delawares participation in
SBAC, transition plan and timeline, operational
details, and resources available - Report on statewide SAT school day results and
review individual district data - Provide feedback on Chiefs meetings for the
coming year
3Agenda
800-900 Optional Chiefs Meeting with the
Secretary 900-915 Welcome and DDOE Updates
915-1030 Presentation Smarter Balanced
Assessment Consortium 1030-1045 Break 1045-1
115 Presentation College Board SAT School Day
Data 1115-1145 District PLCs Examine SAT
School Day Data, Discuss Results and Next
Steps 1145-1200 Feedback on Future Meetings and
Wrap-up 1200 Optional QA with DDOE Staff
4DOE Leadership Team Some New Names and Faces
David Blowman Deputy Secretary Susan
Haberstroh Acting Associate Secretary, College
Workforce Readiness Branch Christopher
Ruszkowski Chief Officer, Teacher Leader
Effectiveness Unit Keith Sanders Chief Officer
School Turnaround Unit John Hindman Legal
Counsel
Mark Murphy Secretary of Education Karen Field
Rogers Associate Secretary Chief Financial
Officer, Financial Reform Resource Management
Branch Sara Kerr Chief Performance
Officer Delivery Unit Alison Kepner Public
Information Officer Mary Cooke Human Resources
Officer Ryan Fennerty Special Projects
Mary Kate McLaughlin Chief of Staff MaryAnn
Mieczkowski Acting Associate Secretary, Teaching
Learning Branch Shelley Rouser Special
Assistant to the Secretary of Education John
Carwell Charter School Office Paul
Harrell Public / Private Partnerships
5DDOE Updates (1/2) ESEA and RTTT
ESEA
RTTT
6DDOE Updates (2/2)
7Agenda
800-900 Optional Chiefs Meeting with the
Secretary 900-915 Welcome and DDOE Updates
915-1030 Presentation Smarter Balanced
Assessment Consortium 1030-1045 Break 1045-1
115 Presentation College Board SAT School Day
Data 1115-1145 District PLCs Examine SAT
School Day Data, Discuss Results and Next
Steps 1145-1200 Feedback on Future Meetings and
Wrap-up 1200 Optional QA with DDOE Staff
8The Smarter BalancedAssessment System An
Overview
- Joe Willhoft, Ph.D.
- Executive Director
- Delaware District Superintendents
- September 27, 2012 Dover, DE
9Common Core State Standards
- Define the knowledge and skills students need for
college and career - Developed voluntarily and cooperatively by
states more than 40 states have adopted - Provide clear, consistent standards in English
language arts/Literacy and mathematics
Source www.corestandards.org
10A Next Generation of Assessments
US Dept. of Ed has funded two consortia of states
with development grants for new assessments
aligned to Common Core State Standards
- Rigorous assessment of progress toward college
and career readiness - Common cut scores across all Consortium states
- Provide both achievement and growth information
- Valid, reliable, and fair for all students,
except those with significant cognitive
disabilities - Administered online
- Use multiple measures
- Operational in 2014-15 school year
(Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 68 / Friday,
April 9, 2010 pp. 18171-85)
11Smarter BalancedA State-led Consortium
12A National Consortium of States
- 25 states representing 40 of K-12 students
- 21 governing, 4 advisory states
- Washington state is fiscal agent
- WestEd provides project management services
13The Smarter BalancedAssessment System
14A Balanced Assessment System
Summative College and career readiness
assessments for accountability
Teachers and schools have information and tools
they need to improve teaching and learning
All students leave high school college and
career ready
Common Core State Standards specify K-12
expectations for college and career readiness
Interim Flexible and open assessments, used for
actionable feedback
Formative resources Supporting classroom-based
assessments to improve instruction
15Summative Assessments for Accountability
?
16Interim Assessments to Signal Improvement
?
17Summative and Interim Use ofComputer Adaptive
Technology
?
?
- Reports for classrooms and schools draw from the
- full range of items seen by many students
18Formative Tools for Classroom- Based Assessment
Practices
?
19A Balanced Assessment System
English Language Arts/Literacy and Mathematics,
Grades 3-8 and High School
School Year
Last 12 weeks of the year
DIGITAL CLEARINGHOUSE OF FORMATIVE TOOLS,
PROCESSES AND EXEMPLARS Released items and tasks
Model curriculum units Educator training
Professional development tools and resources
Scorer training modules Teacher collaboration
tools Evaluation of publishers assessments.
Optional Interim Assessment
Optional Interim Assessment
- PERFORMANCE TASKS
- ELA/Literacy
- Mathematics
- COMPUTER ADAPTIVE TESTS
- ELA/Literacy
- Mathematics
Computer Adaptive Assessment and Performance Tasks
Computer Adaptive Assessment and Performance Tasks
Scope, sequence, number and timing of interim
assessments locally determined
Re-take option
Time windows may be adjusted based on results
from the research agenda and final implementation
decisions.
20Engaging Educators
21K-12 Educator Involvement
- Support for implementation of the Common Core
State Standards (2011-12) - Write and review items/tasks for the for the
pilot test (2012-13) and field test (2013-14) - Development of educator leadership teams in each
state (2012-14) - Evaluate formative assessment practices and
curriculum tools for inclusion in digital library
(2013-14) - Score portions of the interim and summative
assessments (2014-15 and beyond)
22Higher Education Collaboration
- Involved 175 public and 13 private
systems/institutions of higher education in
application - Two higher education reps on the Executive
Committee - Higher education lead in each state and higher
education faculty participating in work groups - Goal The high school assessment qualifies
students for entry-level, credit-bearing
coursework in college or university
23Progress and Timeline
24Assessment Claims for ELA / Literacy
Overall Claim (Gr. 3-8)
Overall Claim (High School)
Reading
Writing
Speaking and Listening
Research/Inquiry
25Assessment Claims for Mathematics
Overall Claim (Gr. 3-8)
Overall Claim (High School)
Concepts and Procedures
Problem Solving
Communicating Reasoning
Modeling and Data Analysis
26Technology Guidelinesfor New Purchases
(v1.0 Apr. 2012)
Minimum for New Hardware Processor Speed RAM Available Memory/Storage Resolution Display Size
Minimum for New Hardware 1.0 GHz 1 GB 1 GB 1024x768 10 Class
Operating Systems Windows 7 Mac 10.7 Linux (Ubuntu 11.10 Fedora 16) Chrome Apple iOS Android 4.0
Desktops, laptops, netbooks (Windows, Mac,
Chrome, Linux), thin client, and tablets (iPad,
Windows, and Android) will be compatible devices
provided they are configured to meet the
established hardware, operating system, and
networking specifications -- and are able to be
locked down.
27Major Milestones
All-Call for Pilot Testing
Interim Formative Available for Use
All-Call for Field Testing
State Educator Teams Begin
Item/Task Writing Begins
Set Performance Standards (Cut Scores)
Operational Summative Assessment
Verify Performance Standards
IT Readiness Reports
IT Readiness Reports
IT Readiness Reports
Small Scale Trials
Field Test 37,000 Items/Tasks
Pilot of 10,000 Items/Tasks
28Released Items Tasks
29Item Development Process
- Early 2012 Assessment claims for ELA/literacy
and mathematics approved - April 2012 Item/task specifications and review
guidelines complete - June 2012 Training modules available for item
writers/reviewers - Summer 2012 Educators from Governing States
begin writing items and tasks cognitive labs /
small scale trials begin - October 9 Sample items available
- February / May 2013 Pilot Test of initial 10,000
items and performance tasks
30Purpose of the Sample Items Tasks
- Display rigor and complexity of ELA/literacy and
math items and tasks on Smarter Balanced
assessments - Signal to educators instructional shifts are
needed for students to meet the demands of the
Common Core - Showcase variety of item types
- Selected response
- Constructed response
- Technology enhanced
- Performance tasks
31Exploring the Sample Items Tasks
- Accessed online using a simulated test platform
- Viewable by
- Grade band (3-5, 6-8, and high school)
- Content claim
- Select types (technology enhanced and performance
tasks) - Themes to illustrate learning across grades and
difficulty progressions - Metadata for each item/task includes
- Grade level
- Smarter Balanced content claim assessment
target - Alignment to Common Core State Standards
- Brief descriptions
- Selected scoring rubrics
- Selected response and technology enhanced items
are machine scorable - Online feedback and phone support available
32Accessibility and Accommodations
- Sample items/tasks do not include accessibility
and accommodations features - Full range of accessibility tools and
accommodations options under development guided
by - Magda Chia, Ph.D., Director of Support for
Under-Represented Students - Accessibility and Accommodations Work Group
- Students with Disabilities Advisory Committee
- Chair Martha Thurlow (NCEO)
- English Language Learners Advisory Committee
- Co-Chairs Jamal Abedi (UC Davis) Kenji Hakuta
(Stanford)
33Visit us at SmarterBalanced.org
34Agenda
800-900 Optional Chiefs Meeting with the
Secretary 900-915 Welcome and DDOE Updates
915-1030 Presentation Smarter Balanced
Assessment Consortium 1030-1045 Break 1045-1
115 Presentation College Board SAT School Day
Data 1115-1145 District PLCs Examine SAT
School Day Data, Discuss Results and Next
Steps 1145-1200 Feedback on Future Meetings and
Wrap-up 1200 Optional QA with DDOE Staff
35Agenda
800-900 Optional Chiefs Meeting with the
Secretary 900-915 Welcome and DDOE Updates
915-1030 Presentation Smarter Balanced
Assessment Consortium 1030-1045 Break 1045-1
115 Presentation College Board SAT
School Day Data 1115-1145 District PLCs
Examine SAT School Day Data, Discuss Results
and Next Steps 1145-1200 Feedback on Future
Meetings and Wrap-up 1200 Optional QA with
DDOE Staff
36DelawareSAT School Day Results
37Delaware / College Board Partnership
ReadiStep and PSAT/NMSQT
- (PSAT) State pays for all 10th graders to take
the PSAT. - (PSAT) Most districts pay for all 11th graders to
take the PSAT and some pay for all 9th graders. - (PSAT) Meeting College Readiness Benchmark
Sophomores 15.7 Juniors 21.1 (both below
national average) - (ReadiStep) No participation.
SAT
- State-wide SAT School Day for all juniors.
- SAT School Day significantly opened access to
more students. There was a 54.4 increase in
seniors who took the SAT (at some point in high
school) from 2011 to 2012. - 7,878 students participation in SAT School Day in
2012. - Nearly one in five students (18) met the College
Boards College and Career Readiness Benchmark in
2012.
AP
- State has offered AP Summer Institutes the past
two summers. Attendance has been low. - The number of students taking AP exams increased
by 10.5 in the last year and 31.0 over the past
five years. - The number of exams receiving a 3 or higher
increased by 9.1 in the last year and 24 over
the past five years. - Participation and performance has increased in
key STEM areas including Biology, Chemistry,
Calculus AB, and Statistics.
38Delaware / College Board Partnership (cont.)
SpringBoard
- Thomas Edison Charter School was a 2011-2012
winners of the state's Academic Achievement
Awards program and credited SpringBoard math as
contributing to their success in closing the
achievement gap. - SpringBoard was one of four approved programs
that could be used in the Delaware Middle School
Initiative grant.
District/Charter School Grade(s) ELA Math
Family Foundations Academy 6-8 v v
Laurel School District 6-8 v v
New Castle County Voc Tech School District 9-12 v
Prestige Academy 6-8 v v
Reach Academy for Girls 6-8 v
Red Clay Consolidated School District 6-12 v
Appoquinimink School District 6-8 (supplement) v v
Smyrna School District 6-8 v v
Thomas A Edison Charter School 6-9 v (6-8) v (6-9)
Woodbridge School District 6-8 v v
Research
- Academic Rigor Index Study
- Four participating districts Red Clay,
Brandywine, Polytech, Woodbridge. - The College Board will analyze data to better
understand the level of Academic Rigor in courses
offered in Delaware public schools as well as the
course taking behaviors of students in these
schools. The goal of this research is offer
insight about students preparation for college
and careers.
39State Context
The number of Delaware Public School sophomores
(8,024) and juniors (5,508) taking the
PSAT/NMSQT increased by 28.5 and 16.0
(respectively) in the last year.
More students identified having AP Potential.
Increase in participation AND performance in AP
courses, especially the STEM subjects of Biology,
Chemistry, Calculus AB, and Statistics.
40Increased Participation New Baseline¹
Juniors Seniors
Class of 2010² Number of Test Takers 4,728
Class of 2010² Mean Critical Reading 478
Class of 2010² Mean Mathematics 481
Class of 2010² Mean Writing 463
Class of 2011³ Number of Test Takers 5,228
Class of 2011³ Mean Critical Reading 471
Class of 2011³ Mean Mathematics 475
Class of 2011³ Mean Writing 455
Class of 20124 Number of Test Takers 7,188 8,067
Class of 20124 Mean Critical Reading 436 437
Class of 20124 Mean Mathematics 449 446
Class of 20124 Mean Writing 427 424
Class of 20135 Number of Test Takers 7,878
Class of 20135 Mean Critical Reading 424
Class of 20135 Mean Mathematics 435
Class of 20135 Mean Writing 418
Academic Year 2009-10
Academic Year 2010-11
Academic Year 2011-12
SAT School Day
- Participation totals for SAT Seniors and SAT
School Day juniors are provided strictly for
informational purposes data should not be used
for formal comparison. - Senior cohort includes Delaware public school
seniors who took the SAT at any time during their
high school years through March 2010. - Senior cohort includes Delaware public school
seniors who took the SAT at any time during their
high school years through June 2011. - SAT School Day Juniors results based on June 2011
student data file results may vary slightly from
the SAT School Day Report. Senior cohort includes
Delaware public school seniors who took the SAT
at any time during their high school years
through June 2012cohort includes students who
participated in SAT School Day as juniors. - SAT School Day Juniors results based on final
June 2012 student data file results may vary
slightly from the SAT School Day Report.
41College and Career Readiness BenchmarkSAT School
Day 2012
The SAT College and Career Readiness Benchmark is
a score of 1550 (critical reading, mathematics
and writing scores combined), which indicates a
65 likelihood of achieving a B grade point
average or higher during the first year of
college. Educators can use the SAT College and
Career Readiness Benchmark to determine what
proportion of their student body is college and
career ready.
N
N 7,878
Percentages may not sum to 100 due to rounding.
Percentages rounded to the nearest whole number.
42Binder Components
Tab 1 State Overview Tab 2 District
Overview Tab 3 District Report Tab 4 School(s)
Report(s) Tab 5 Questions and Answers Tab 6 SAT
Skills Insight Tab 7 College Readiness Pathway
43SAT School Day District Overview
Murphy School District Stetter High School
Wolak Academy
42
44Graduate 2013 Delaware's Education Plan
- Delawares vision is that every student will
graduate college and career ready, with the
freedom to choose his or her lifes course.
Delawares plan outlines objectives in four
areas rigorous standards, curriculum and
assessments sophisticated data systems and
practices effective teachers and leaders and
deep support for the lowest-achieving schools. - Your district plan includes how you will
- v Implement college and career ready standards
and assessments - v Improve access to and use of data systems
- v Build the capacity to use data
- v Improve the effectiveness of educators based
on performance - v Ensure equitable distribution of effective
educators - v Ensure that educators are effectively prepared
- v Provide effective support to educators
- v Provide deep support to the lowest-achieving
schools - v Engage families and communities effectively in
supporting students academic success
45District Strategic Plan
- Needs identified and addressed through Race to
the Top - Improve reading and math proficiency for all
grades and subgroups close achievement gaps
particularly in special education and ELL math
provide early education for students feeding into
high-need schools - Major initiatives and investments
- Establishment of STEM and IB programs at middle
and high schools and expansion of Career
Technical Education offerings - Academic Deans assigned to ten schools where they
will focus on instruction and evaluation of
teachers - Building Leadership Teams in all schools and
teacher leaders in all high-need schools - New educator pipelines for hard-to-staff subject
areas - School Data and Test Coordinators to promote
data-driven instruction - An enhanced pre-school program to offer students
the opportunity for early interventions and
instruction, allowing them to enter kindergarten
with tools necessary for academic success - A professional development plan complemented by
the School Support Team, which will include
district-trained administrators conducting
walk-through visits of schools to help identify
areas of professional growth
46SAT School Day District Overview
112 Test Takers
124 Test Takers
415 Test Takers
47Class of 2013 Percentage Meeting the CR
Benchmark on PSAT and SAT
What are the College and Career Readiness
Benchmarks? The College and Career Readiness
Benchmarks are the scores that students should
meet or exceed to be considered on track to be
college ready. They are one part of a series of
indicators that help educators gauge college
readiness at different points in a students
career. The benchmarks are associated with a 65
percent likelihood of achieving a B- first year
college grade point average. The College and
Career Readiness Benchmarks should not be used
for tracking purposes, to discourage students
from pursuing college, or to keep students from
participating in rigorous courses.
Note District PSAT Juniors does not
represent an inclusive testing cohort.
Delaware School DistrictClass of 2013 Number of Test Takers District State
PSAT/NMSQT - Sophomores 424 16.3 15.7
PSAT/NMSQT - Juniors 112 20.9 21.1
SAT - Juniors 415 22.0 18.0
48Critical Reading
Skill Areas With Lowest Performance
Skill Percent Correct Suggestion from SAT Skills Insight
Understanding Literary ElementsUnderstand literary elements such as plot, setting and characterization. 40 When reading a novel, short story or play, try to identify the different ways authors create character. What is revealed about a character through his or her dialogue and interactions with other characters?
Reasoning and Inference Understand assumptions, suggestions and implications in reading passages and draw informed conclusions. 42 When reading a longer text, notice how the author develops an idea. Think about how the idea is introduced and how the idea is developed throughout the text. When reading a text, think about why the author chose to write it. Consider both what the author says in the text and what can be inferred.
49Mathematics
Skill Areas With Lowest Performance
Skill Percent Correct Suggestion from SAT Skills Insight
Algebra and Functions Solve problems using algebraic expressions and symbols to represent relationships, patterns, and functions of different types. 45 Formulate and solve problems involving proportions Solve multistep problems involving linear and quadratic relationships Use and interpret graphs, including graphs of step functions Solve problems involving algebraic inequalities Evaluate an operation in three variables represented by unfamiliar symbols
Geometry and Measurement Solve problems based on understanding the properties of shapes, such as triangles and circles, and the spatial relationships between angles and lines. 43 Recognize and use the following - Simple inscribed and circumscribed figures - The Pythagorean Theorem - Coordinate geometry (e.g., slope calculations) - Parallelism and perpendicularity - Two- and three-dimensional figures Interpret and solve two-step problems involving geometric proportions
50Writing
Skill Areas With Lowest Performance
Skill Percent Correct Suggestion from SAT Skills Insight
Managing Grammatical Structures Used to Modify or CompareUnderstand correct use of adjectives or adverbs, comparative structures (such as neither and nor), and phrases used to modify or compare. 45 When reading, choose a paragraph and identify the adjectives and adverbs in the sentences and the words they modify. When writing, check to see that adjectives are used to modify nouns and that adverbs are used to modify verbs. When reading, focus on sentences that contain comparative phrases (e.g., as strong as or more fit than). When writing, check to see that appropriate structures are used to compare things and ideas.
Recognizing Correctly Formed SentencesRecognize correct sentence structure. 46 In your reading, pay attention to the parts of speech and how they agree in well-formed sentences notice modifying words and phrases and how they function when used correctly and note the relationships between phrases and clauses in well-formed sentences. In your own writing, make sure that subjects agree in number with their associated verbs and that main verbs are used to construct complete sentences that pronouns agree in number, gender and person with their logical antecedents and that verb forms are used consistently and logically.
51District Support Using SAT Reports Tools
52Navigating the Reports
- Performance Summary
- Year-Over-Year
- Mean Score Report
- Skill Categories Report
- Score Distribution Report
- Mean Score Year-over-Year Report
- Skill Categories Report Year-over-Year
53Agenda
800-900 Optional Chiefs Meeting with the
Secretary 900-915 Welcome and DDOE Updates
915-1030 Presentation Smarter Balanced
Assessment Consortium 1030-1045 Break 1045-1
115 Presentation College Board SAT
School Day Data 1115-1145 District PLCs
Examine SAT School Day Data, Discuss Results
and Next Steps 1145-1200 Feedback on Future
Meetings and Wrap-up 1200 Optional QA with
DDOE Staff
54PLC Agenda
Component
Guiding questions
Time
Resources District-specific binders and
performance summaries Format Individual district
teams College Board and DDOE team members will
circulate
55College Readiness Pathway
Three integrated assessments one powerful
tool The College Boards College and Career
Readiness Pathway is a series of integrated
assessments that measures college and career
readiness from the eighth through the 12th grades
56College Board in Your District
- Set up a meeting for the College Board to come to
your district!!! - Alison Procopio, Education Manager
- aprocopio_at_collegeboard.org
57Agenda
800-900 Optional Chiefs Meeting with the
Secretary 900-915 Welcome and DDOE Updates
915-1030 Presentation Smarter Balanced
Assessment Consortium 1030-1045 Break 1045-1
115 Presentation College Board SAT
School Day Data 1115-1145 District PLCs
Examine SAT School Day Data, Discuss Results
and Next Steps 1145-1200 Feedback on Future
Meetings and Wrap-up 1200 Optional QA with
DDOE Staff
58Feedback on Future Chiefs Meetings
- Feedback
- Please complete the feedback forms on your table,
and include your suggestions for future Chiefs
meeting topics (on reverse side of feedback form)
pass forms to the center of your table once
completed. - Wrap Up
- There will be an optional QA session with DDOE
staff at noon please plan to join if you have
questions, comments, or feedback - Thank you!