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STATE OF TEXAS ASSESSMENTS OF ACADEMIC READINESS (STAAR TM ) READING Grades 3–8 English I, II, and III Victoria Young Director of Reading, Writing, and Social Studies Assessments Texas Education Agency

STATE OF TEXAS ASSESSMENTS OF ACADEMIC READINESS (STAAR TM ) READING Grades 38 English I, II, and III Victoria Young Director of Reading, Writing, and

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The Big Picture—What Students Have to Know How To Do Think critically/inferentially about different types of texts (in essence, know how to do more than literally read the lines: know how to read “between” the lines and “beyond” the lines) Make connections—at differing levels of depth and complexity—both within and across texts Understand what makes a connection between texts thematic or meaningful (and what doesn’t) Understand and be able to apply the specific academic vocabulary associated with literary and informational reading 3

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Page 1: STATE OF TEXAS ASSESSMENTS OF ACADEMIC READINESS (STAAR TM ) READING Grades 38 English I, II, and III Victoria Young Director of Reading, Writing, and

STATE OF TEXAS ASSESSMENTS OF ACADEMIC READINESS

(STAARTM)

READINGGrades 3–8

English I, II, and III

Victoria YoungDirector of Reading, Writing, and Social Studies AssessmentsTexas Education Agency

Page 2: STATE OF TEXAS ASSESSMENTS OF ACADEMIC READINESS (STAAR TM ) READING Grades 38 English I, II, and III Victoria Young Director of Reading, Writing, and

STAAR Reading Performance Spring 2012 Statewide Results

Phase-in and Recommended Standards2

Grade/Course Phase-inStandard

RecommendedStandard

Grade 3 76% 39%Grade 4 77% 42%Grade 5 77% 40%Grade 6 75% 38%Grade 7 76% 39%Grade 8 80% 43%English I 68% 46%

Page 3: STATE OF TEXAS ASSESSMENTS OF ACADEMIC READINESS (STAAR TM ) READING Grades 38 English I, II, and III Victoria Young Director of Reading, Writing, and

The Big Picture—What Students Have to Know How To Do

Think critically/inferentially about different types of texts (in essence, know how to do more than literally read the lines: know how to read “between” the lines and “beyond” the lines)Make connections—at differing levels of depth and complexity—both within and across textsUnderstand what makes a connection between texts thematic or meaningful (and what doesn’t)Understand and be able to apply the specific academic vocabulary associated with literary and informational reading

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Page 4: STATE OF TEXAS ASSESSMENTS OF ACADEMIC READINESS (STAAR TM ) READING Grades 38 English I, II, and III Victoria Young Director of Reading, Writing, and

The Big Picture—What Students Have to Know How To Do

Understand that the way an author crafts a piece drives the way the reader reads it. Know that authors use different “tools” to craft different types of pieces (e.g., genres). Be able to identify these tools and pinpoint/articulate how they affect meaning.Understand the difference between effective text evidence and flawed text evidence. Know how to stay “inside” the text to find evidence that truly confirms the validity of an idea. Know how to find and use text evidence for different genres of reading.

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Page 5: STATE OF TEXAS ASSESSMENTS OF ACADEMIC READINESS (STAAR TM ) READING Grades 38 English I, II, and III Victoria Young Director of Reading, Writing, and

STAAR Short Answer Reading Performance Labels Based on the Rubric

Score Point 0—INSUFFICIENTScore Point 1—PARTIALLY SUFFICIENT Score Point 2—SUFFICIENTScore Point 3—EXEMPLARY

The goal: moving all students from the lower half of the score-scale range (0 or 1) to the upper half of the range (2 or 3)

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Page 6: STATE OF TEXAS ASSESSMENTS OF ACADEMIC READINESS (STAAR TM ) READING Grades 38 English I, II, and III Victoria Young Director of Reading, Writing, and

What Short Answer Questions Require(and why they are essential to reading

development at all levels)To become good readers, students must understand what constitutes a credible IDEA in response to a question about a text or texts.

An IDEA represents the quality and depth of thinking and understanding

IDEA in a score of 3 on STAAR: perceptive, coherent, discerning, clearly analyticalIDEA in a score of 2 on STAAR: reasonable and specific; goes beyond literal reading (even if it’s only slightly beyond)

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Page 7: STATE OF TEXAS ASSESSMENTS OF ACADEMIC READINESS (STAAR TM ) READING Grades 38 English I, II, and III Victoria Young Director of Reading, Writing, and

What Short Answer Questions Require(and why they are essential to reading

development at all levels)

IDEA in a score of 1 on STAAR: lacks explanation or specificity; represents only a literal reading of the textIDEA in a score of 0 on STAAR: doesn’t answer the question; incorrect or invalid reading of the text; too general, vague, or unclear to judge whether it is reasonable

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Page 8: STATE OF TEXAS ASSESSMENTS OF ACADEMIC READINESS (STAAR TM ) READING Grades 38 English I, II, and III Victoria Young Director of Reading, Writing, and

What Short Answer Questions Require(and why they are essential to reading

development at all levels)

To become good readers, students must by able to use TEXT EVIDENCE to prove that their ideas are valid/credible.

TEXT EVIDENCE substantiates the reader’s ideas; it reflects the degree to which the reader can connect his or her own ideas with the pieces of the text that best support the analysis.

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Page 9: STATE OF TEXAS ASSESSMENTS OF ACADEMIC READINESS (STAAR TM ) READING Grades 38 English I, II, and III Victoria Young Director of Reading, Writing, and

What Short Answer Questions Require(and why they are essential to reading

development at all levels)

TEXT EVIDENCE in a score of 3 on STAAR: specific and well chosenTEXT EVIDENCE in a score of 2 on STAAR: accurate and relevantTEXT EVIDENCE in a score of 1 on STAAR: only a general reference, too partial, weakly linked, or wrongly manipulates the meaning of the textTEXT EVIDENCE in a score of 0: either missing or not attached to an idea

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Page 10: STATE OF TEXAS ASSESSMENTS OF ACADEMIC READINESS (STAAR TM ) READING Grades 38 English I, II, and III Victoria Young Director of Reading, Writing, and

Why We Have to Include Text Complexity in the Conversation

If we want students to do on-grade-level work, we must teach them how to “tackle” increasingly complex texts each year. Text complexity is driven by a variety of factors:

The author’s vocabulary/use of language may be more varied and challenging because it is nonliteral/figurative, abstract, academic, or technicalSentence structures may be more varied, dense, and sophisticated

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Page 11: STATE OF TEXAS ASSESSMENTS OF ACADEMIC READINESS (STAAR TM ) READING Grades 38 English I, II, and III Victoria Young Director of Reading, Writing, and

Why We Have to Include Text Complexity in the Conversation

The author’s use of literary elements/devices, rhetorical strategies, organizational patterns, and text features may be more nuanced or sophisticatedThe topic/content may be less familiar or more cognitively demandingRelationships among ideas may be less explicit and require more interpretation, reasoning, and inferential thinking to understand the subtlety, nuances, and depth of ideas

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Page 12: STATE OF TEXAS ASSESSMENTS OF ACADEMIC READINESS (STAAR TM ) READING Grades 38 English I, II, and III Victoria Young Director of Reading, Writing, and

What Students Have to Know for STAAR Reading—Some Specifics

Why does the author use a particular genre (e.g., literary nonfiction vs. expository, expository vs. persuasive)?Why does the author include a particular paragraph or paragraphs?Why does the author begin or end a piece in a particular way?Why does the author include a description of XX?

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Page 13: STATE OF TEXAS ASSESSMENTS OF ACADEMIC READINESS (STAAR TM ) READING Grades 38 English I, II, and III Victoria Young Director of Reading, Writing, and

What Students Have to Know for STAAR Reading—Some Specifics

How do a character’s relationships with other characters or motivations to take certain actions affect the plot/conflict/ outcome of a story?How does the author use dialogue to develop a particular character or the relationship between characters?How does the point of view from which the story is told affect the reader’s understanding of characters and events?

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Page 14: STATE OF TEXAS ASSESSMENTS OF ACADEMIC READINESS (STAAR TM ) READING Grades 38 English I, II, and III Victoria Young Director of Reading, Writing, and

What Students Have to Know for STAAR Reading—Some Specifics

What is the effect of setting on events/ characters/outcome of a story?How does a poet, playwright, or author use imagery, simile, metaphor, hyperbole, personification, time disruptions (flashback, foreshadowing) to create meaning?Why is XX ironic? How is XX symbolic?Which sentence best indicates, suggests, establishes, illustrates, describes, explains, expresses, supports, reflects, reveals, shows (“shows” at lower grades only)?

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Page 15: STATE OF TEXAS ASSESSMENTS OF ACADEMIC READINESS (STAAR TM ) READING Grades 38 English I, II, and III Victoria Young Director of Reading, Writing, and

What Students Have to Know for STAAR Reading—Some Specifics

What is significant (important) about XX?How does the author organize the selection? Why does the author organize the information in a particular way?Why does the author include a particular section (under a subheading) of an expository piece?What is the author’s attitude toward his/her subject? (attitude tone)

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Page 16: STATE OF TEXAS ASSESSMENTS OF ACADEMIC READINESS (STAAR TM ) READING Grades 38 English I, II, and III Victoria Young Director of Reading, Writing, and

What Students Have to Know for STAAR Reading—Some Specifics

How does the author’s use of particular words or phrases create a particular tone? How does the use of particular words affect meaning?Why does the author include quotations from particular people/entities/publications?Why does the author use particular rhetorical strategies—e.g., italics, ellipses, questions, comparisons/analogies, repetition, exaggeration?

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Page 17: STATE OF TEXAS ASSESSMENTS OF ACADEMIC READINESS (STAAR TM ) READING Grades 38 English I, II, and III Victoria Young Director of Reading, Writing, and

What Students Have to Know for STAAR Reading—Some Specifics

How does the author support each of his/her arguments?What is the author’s most convincing reason (and why)?Does the author make a convincing case for his position/opinion?

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Page 18: STATE OF TEXAS ASSESSMENTS OF ACADEMIC READINESS (STAAR TM ) READING Grades 38 English I, II, and III Victoria Young Director of Reading, Writing, and

What Students Have to Know for STAAR Reading—Some Specifics

Media/ProceduralWhat is the tone of the photograph?What can the reader infer from the photograph and its caption? (At lower grades: The photograph helps the reader know XX.)Why does the author include the boxed information?Why does the author include a map? What can the reader conclude from the map?How does the embedded media or procedural element add to the reader’s understanding of the piece (or a section of the piece)?

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Page 19: STATE OF TEXAS ASSESSMENTS OF ACADEMIC READINESS (STAAR TM ) READING Grades 38 English I, II, and III Victoria Young Director of Reading, Writing, and

What Students Have to Know for STAAR Reading—Some Specifics

Connecting SelectionsWhat is one similarity or difference between the two selections or between the narrators/ speakers/characters/authors in the two selections?What is a theme or idea explored in both selections? Is the central message of the two selections the same?How does a particular quotation from one selection link/correspond thematically to a quotation from the other selection?

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Page 20: STATE OF TEXAS ASSESSMENTS OF ACADEMIC READINESS (STAAR TM ) READING Grades 38 English I, II, and III Victoria Young Director of Reading, Writing, and

The Link between Reading and Analytical Writing

The analytical writing task is an interpretive essay about one aspect of a literary or informational text.The analytical essay requires students to demonstrate the skills required in expository and persuasive writing as well as those required on short answer reading questions. The writer’s thesis statement must be a reasonable (though contestable) assertion about one aspect of a text that can be supported with textual evidence.

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Page 21: STATE OF TEXAS ASSESSMENTS OF ACADEMIC READINESS (STAAR TM ) READING Grades 38 English I, II, and III Victoria Young Director of Reading, Writing, and

The Link between Reading and Analytical Writing

The analytical writing task is an interpretive essay about one aspect of a literary or informational text.The analytical essay requires students to demonstrate the skills required in expository and persuasive writing as well as those required on short answer reading questions. The writer’s thesis statement must be a reasonable (though contestable) assertion about one aspect of a text that can be supported with textual evidence.

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Page 22: STATE OF TEXAS ASSESSMENTS OF ACADEMIC READINESS (STAAR TM ) READING Grades 38 English I, II, and III Victoria Young Director of Reading, Writing, and

The Link between Reading and Analytical Writing

Ineffective approaches confuseanalysis and summarygeneral text references and specific text evidence

Students must integrate their analysis and their text evidence so that their essay is coherent. (This will also help their short answer reading responses—and their reading and writing performance in the lower grades.)Analytical essays are scored on the quality of the interpretation, the strength of the text evidence, and the overall effectiveness of the essay.

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Page 23: STATE OF TEXAS ASSESSMENTS OF ACADEMIC READINESS (STAAR TM ) READING Grades 38 English I, II, and III Victoria Young Director of Reading, Writing, and

CONTACT INFORMATION

Victoria YoungDirector of Reading, Writing, and Social

Studies AssessmentsTexas Education Agency

[email protected]

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