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1 Connecticut Mastery Test Connecticut Mastery Test (CMT) (CMT) Steve Martin, CMT Program Manager Steve Martin, CMT Program Manager Bureau of Research, Evaluation, and Student Bureau of Research, Evaluation, and Student Assessment Assessment Connecticut State Department of Education Connecticut State Department of Education

1 Connecticut Mastery Test (CMT) Steve Martin, CMT Program Manager Bureau of Research, Evaluation, and Student Assessment Connecticut State Department

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Connecticut Mastery Test (CMT)Connecticut Mastery Test (CMT)Connecticut Mastery Test (CMT)Connecticut Mastery Test (CMT)

Steve Martin, CMT Program ManagerSteve Martin, CMT Program Manager

Bureau of Research, Evaluation, and Student AssessmentBureau of Research, Evaluation, and Student Assessment

Connecticut State Department of EducationConnecticut State Department of Education

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CMT Background Information: What is the CMT, and why does

Connecticut Administer this test?

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State Legislation

• Connecticut General Statutes Section 10-14n currently mandates a statewide mastery test to be administered annually in the spring to all public-school students enrolled in grades 3,4, 5, 6, 7 and 8.

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Federal Legislation (NCLB)

Requires all states to test public-school students in these grades (and one high-school grade). One goal of this federal legislation is for all students to perform at the proficient level or above on state administered tests by 2014.

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History of CMT Subjects Tested

Year Subjects Grade

Beginning 1986

(State Initiative)

Mathematics,Reading andWriting

4, 6 and 8

Beginning 2006

(as required by NCLB)

Mathematics,Reading, andWriting

3, 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8

Beginning 2008

(as required by NCLB)

Add Science 5 and 8

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The Four Item Types• Multiple-Choice

– Usually four answer options– DRP gives five answer options

• Grid-In (mathematics only)7 x 42 = ?

• Short-AnswerCan including drawing graphs

and shapes• Extended-Response

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The Connecticut Mastery Test

• Mathematics• Reading

Reading ComprehensionDegrees of Reading Power

(DRP)• Writing

Direct Assessment of WritingEditing and Revising

• Science

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Number of CMT Subtests by Grade in 2007

Grade Math Reading Comp

DRP E&R DAW Sci. TOT

3 2 2 1 1 1 0 7

4 2 2 1 1 1 0 7

5 3 2 1 1 1 1 9

6 3 2 1 1 1 0 8

7 3 2 1 1 1 0 8

8 3 2 1 1 1 1 9

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Reporting Student Results

Five Performance Levels

• Advanced• Goal• Proficient• Basic• Below Basic

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Reporting Student Results

Five Performance Levels

• Advanced• Goal• Proficient• Basic• Below Basic

According to NCLB, all students must be scoring at Proficient or above in mathematics and reading by 2014.

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Current Goal for NCLB Accountability

• CMT Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP)

Reading: 68% at/above ProficientMath: 74% at/above ProficientParticipation: 95% must participate

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Consequences of the results for students, schools and

districts

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All schools in Year 1 of school improvement must implement a school improvement plan:

If a school or subgroup does not achieve Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) in the same content area for two consecutive years, the school is identified as “in need of improvement.” This will put the school in Year 1 of school improvement. The law is specific to schools and district who receive federal Title I funding:

School Improvement: Year 1

Title I schools in Year 1 of school improvement, in addition to creating a school improvement plan, must also provide the opportunity for all students in the school to transfer to another public school within the district that has not been identified as “in need of improvement.”

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must continue to implement the Year 1 consequences, but must also begin to offer supplemental educational services.

School Improvement: Year 2

School Improvement: Year 3

must continue to implement the Year 1 and Year 2 consequences, but must also take corrective action measures such as instituting a new curriculum or appointing an outside expert to advise the school.

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must continue corrective action, but must also begin planning for restructuring.

School Improvement: Year 4

School Improvement: Year 5

must implement the restructuring plan they developed during the course of the last year. The restructuring plan must reflect major reforms, such as significant changes in staffing, leadership, structure and governance.

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CMT Resources

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For a Complete Listing Visit the Department

Website

http://www.sde.ct.gov/sde/Then click: “Student Assessment”

Then click: “Connecticut Mastery Test (CMT)”

Then click: “CMT Resources and Publications”

Or click: “CMT Assessment Data”

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ASSESSMENT DATA

CMTReports.com provides a robust data source for CMT reports. Through this website, you can build reports that are highly customized.

For example…

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This report shows the difference between grade 5 males and females for the whole state on mathematics and reading performance with respect to proficiency scores in 2007.

Notice that females have better scores than males statewide, not only in reading, but in mathematics as well.

Remember that this year’s AYP targets are:Reading: 68% at/above ProficientMath: 74% at/above ProficientThis year, statewide, the students are achieving these goals, but fall short of the 100% Goal called for by 2014.

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These data are for the same statewide group (grade 5, 2007) but show subgroup performance for race/ethnicity, poverty, special education and for English language learners. I have highlighted subgroups that do not hit current AYP targets statewide.

AYP= 68%AYP = 74%

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Questions?