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1 New England Common Assessment Program Guide to Using the October, 2006 NECAP Reports: Companion PowerPoint Presentation February 2007

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New England Common Assessment Program. Guide to Using the October, 2006 NECAP Reports: Companion PowerPoint Presentation February 2007. Welcome and Introductions. Mary Ann Snider Director of Assessment and Accountability RI Department of Education. Welcome and Introductions. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: New England Common Assessment Program

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New England Common Assessment Program

Guide to Using the October, 2006 NECAP

Reports:

Companion PowerPoint

Presentation February 2007

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Welcome and Introductions

Mary Ann Snider

Director of Assessment and Accountability

RI Department of Education

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Measured Progress Service Center: 1-877-632-7774

Welcome and Introductions

Tim Crockett

Assistant Vice-President

1-800-431-8901 x2106

[email protected]

Harold Stephens

NECAP Program Director

1-800-431-8901 x2235

[email protected]

Amanda Smith

NECAP Program Manager – Grade 11

1-800-431-8901 x2259

[email protected]

Elliot Scharff

NECAP Program Manager – Science

1-800-431-8901 x2126

[email protected]

Josh Evans

NECAP Program Manager – Grades 3-8

1-800-431-8901 x2244

[email protected]

Tina Haley

NECAP Program Assistant

1-800-431-8901 x2427

[email protected]

Jennifer Varney

NECAP Program Assistant

1-800-431-8901 x2115

[email protected]

Mellicent Friddell

NECAP Program Assistant

1-800-431-8901 x2355

[email protected]

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• To assist schools and districts in using the variety of reports and support material issued by the NECAP states in conjunction with the release of results

• To provide school and district personnel an opportunity to ask questions regarding the reports and support materials

Purpose of the Workshop

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• Development of Grade Level Expectations

• Test Item Review Committees• Bias and Sensitivity Review Committees• Classroom Teacher Judgment data• Standard Setting Panelists• Technical Advisory Committee

Involvement of Local Educators

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• Fall test – previous year’s GLEs• Reading and Mathematics – grades 3-8• Writing – grades 5 and 8• Variety of Item Types

• Reading: multiple choice and constructed response• Mathematics: multiple choice, short answer (one point), short answer

(two points), and constructed response• Writing: multiple choice, constructed response, and extended

response

• Common and Matrix Items

Basics of Test Design

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Two Basic Types of Educational Tests

• Norm-Referenced: What is the student’s status or rank in a designated group?

• Criterion or Standards-Referenced: Has the student learned the skills or achieved the standard?

NECAP is a Standards-Referenced Test

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The Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA)

• Access to individual student results is restricted to:• the student• the student’s parents/guardians• authorized school personnel

• Superintendents and principals are responsible for maintaining the privacy and security of all student records.

• Authorized school personnel shall have access to the records of students to whom they are providing services when such access is required in the performance of their official duties.

• FERPA website: http://www.ed.gov/policy/gen/guid/fpco/ferpa/index.html

Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act

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National Council on Measurement in Education

Educating Others

Evaluation and Research

Interpretation and Use

Scoring

Development

Marketing and Selling

Selection

Administration

www.ncme.org

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Questions about the purpose of theworkshop and/or NECAP background?

Questions and Answers

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Rhode Island Results

Suburban

Urban Fringe

Urban

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Rhode Island Results

READING MATHEMATICS

2005 2006 2005 2006

All Students

58% 62% 50% 53%

Native Americans

46 49 33 38*

Asian 56 64* 52 59*

Black 35 41* 24 30*

Hispanic 31 38* 24 31*

White 68 71 59 62

Female 63 67 50 53

Male 54 58 50 54*

IEP 24 27 20 23

ELL 17 23* 14 20*

Poverty 38 44* 30 36*

* Indicates that gain exceeds the gain made by all students

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• Student Report• Item Analysis Report• School/District Results Report• School/District Summary Report• District Student Level Data Files

Types of Reports

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Student Report

• Two copies mailed to the school:• color copy for parents/guardians• black and white copy for local use

• Dual sided: text side and data side

• Spanish version of the student report available on the RIDE website for the Office of Assessment and Accountability

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• Review to be sure you have a student report for every student tested in October, 2006.

• Prepare a letter to provide your interpretation of the results for your school and/or district.

• Be sure teachers are prepared and comfortable discussing individual student results with families; including any instructional interventions.

• Use your district data file to analyze growth between students you had last year and this year.

Fun with Student Level Reports!

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Questions about the Student Report?

Questions and Answers

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• Rationale• Inclusion of students in “Teaching

Year” reports

Teaching School vs. Testing School

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Schools Can View Reports for Testing Year (2006-07)

Teaching School vs. Testing School

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Teaching School vs. Testing School

Or Teaching Year(2005-06)

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Testing Year(released this month)

Teaching Year (accountability)

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Item Analysis Report

• Available to schools and districts on-line• These reports are confidential and the

website is password-protected. • One per content area• Use in conjunction with Released Items

documents

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Released Item Documents

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Grade 5 2006 Released Mathematics Item

DOK: 3

GLE: DSP 4.1

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Grade 5 Practice Test Item (page 4)

DOK: 2

GLE: DSP 4.1

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Fun with Released Support Materials!

• Build practice tests

• Share writing samples as models

• Mock scoring sessions to calibrate teacher judgments

• Compare released items (GLE and DOK) with classroom instruction and assessments and student work.

• Map instruction and scaffolding practices to items based on student performance.

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Released Item Documents

• RIDE website at: http://www.ride.ri.gov/assessment/NECAP.aspx

• New information provided in the Released Item Support Materials documents includes:• For all content areas, providing the multiple-choice items

and the GLE code and text that each item is linked to• For math, indicating which items were included in session 1

of the math test by adding a “no calculator” symbol above the items

• For reading, listing the passage name and type of text• For writing, listing passage name and mode of writing

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Questions about the Item Analysis Report or the Released Item documents?

Questions and Answers

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• Available on-line at the Measured Progress website

• Separate report for each grade level tested

• District report contains no individual school data

School/District Results Report

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http://iservices.measuredprogress.org

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New thisyear

Please note:

You must always log in through this page to view confidential

reports and data

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• Page 2 of the NECAP School/District Results Report

• Summary of participation and results

Grade Level Summary Report

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• Review last year’s grade level summary report with this year’s

• If gains were made, identify what strategies, interventions, and programs may have worked

• If no progress was made, hypothesize why and what can be done at the school or district level to help students make progress

• Identify where your results differ from the district and state results. Hypothesize why they may differ

Fun with Grade Level Summaries!

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Questions about the Grade LevelSummary Page?

Questions and Answers

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Historical Data

• Data is included for two years and is combined in the Cumulative Total row

• In the Cumulative Total row for the achievement level columns:• The N columns are summed• The % columns are found by dividing the total

number of students in the level by the total number of students tested

• The Mean Scaled Score column is a weighted average

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Comparisons of NECAP Scores Across Years

• School and District-Level Scaled Scores and Achievement Levels

• Student-Level Scaled Scores and Achievement Levels

• Content Area Subscores

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• Pages 3, 5, and 7 of the NECAP School/District Results Report

• Provides information about achievement in subtopics of tested content areas

Content Area Results

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Number of Scaled Score Points Denoting Minimally Statistically Significant Difference for Average Group Results*

Grade SubjectNumber of Students Tested in Group (Class, School etc.)

10 25 50 100 200

3Reading 6 4 3 2 1

Mathematics 5 3 2 2 1

4Reading 6 4 2 2 1

Mathematics 5 3 2 2 1

5

Reading 5 3 2 2 1

Mathematics 5 3 2 2 1

Writing 7 4 3 2 2

6Reading 6 4 3 2 1

Mathematics 6 4 3 2 1

7Reading 6 4 3 2 1

Mathematics 5 3 2 2 1

8

Reading 6 4 3 2 1

Mathematics 5 3 2 2 1

Writing 6 4 3 2 1

*Standard error of the mean difference with assumption n1=n2 and s1=s2

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Percentage Difference in Student Achievement Level Classification Denoting Minimally Statistically Significant

Differences for Group Results*

Percentages of Students in Achievement Level(s)

Number of Students Tested in Group (Class, School etc.)

10 25 50 100 200

10 9 6 4 3 2

20 13 8 6 4 3

30 14 9 6 5 3

40 15 10 7 5 3

50 16 10 7 5 4

60 15 10 7 5 3

70 14 9 6 5 3

80 13 8 6 4 3

90 9 6 4 3 2

*0.05 level of statistical significance

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Questions About the Content AreaResults Page?

Questions and Answers

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• Pages 4, 6, and 8 of the NECAP School/District Results Report

• Provides information about achievement for different groups in a school/district

Disaggregated Content Area Results

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• Compare last year’s Disaggregated Report with this year• Highlight in yellow, groups that had significant positive

increases• Highlight in blue, groups that remained stable or had decreases

• Establish cross-grade and content groups to hypothesize what the school can do to close gaps and maintain increases• Access to rigorous curriculum?• Professional development in a specific area?• Adequate support programs?• Adequate family involvement?

Fun with Disaggregated Results!

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Questions About the Disaggregated Content Area Results Page?

Questions and Answers

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• Separate report for each grade level tested

• Provides details about student achievement by content area

School/District Summary Report

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School/District Summary Report

• The first line designates the year the test was administered

• The second line is the name of the report• The third line differentiates between

“teaching year” and “testing year”

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• Are there consistent patterns of achievement across grades? Across content areas?

• Compare results to last year’s school summary• Highlight in yellow, areas where there has been

significant growth. Highlight in blue, areas where there has been no growth or decline.

• Establish cross-grade and content groups to hypothesize what the school can do to close gaps and maintain increases

• Develop a school/district plan to address areas of weakness and continue areas of growth

Fun with School Level Summary Data!

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Student Level Data Files

• All demographic information for each student that was provided by the state

• The scaled score, achievement level, and subscores earned by each student in all content areas tested

• Also contain:• Performance on released items• Student questionnaire responses• Optional reports fields data

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Supporting Materials

• Guide to Using the 2006 NECAP Reports and companion PowerPoint

• Grade Level Expectations• Test Specifications documents• Release Item documents• Preparing Students for NECAP: Tips for

Teachers to Share with Students• Technical Report