1. Climbing to Success with Data Creating a Culture of Data at
P3A Using MAP Data to Measure Growth and Set Goals March26, 2014
Angelita Davis, MikkiZackary and Renae Williams: Presenters Palmer
Park Preparatory Academy Data Dialogue
2. Objectives Explore the Districts Mandated MAP Assessment Set
Classroom Goals for all student, focusing on the bottom and top %
Ideas and resources for Student Data Binders Web 2.0 Resources that
target the Deficient Parent Reports Teacher training Resources
(knowlegeacademy.nwea.org, free webinars, Quick Reference, and
Spark community etc.
3. Socrative Student Engagement m.socrative.com Room number :
773257
4. MAP Understanding The What and Why Measures of Academic
Progress Purpose Identifies instructional level of each student
Monitors academic growth Adjust instruction to fit the
instructional level of the student Engage students Students
understand what their scores mean and have a target to shoot for on
the next assessment
5. MAP is a Norm & Criterion Reference Test A norm
referenced test gives %-ile scores. A criterion referenced test,
like STAR, gives levels of achievement (advanced, proficient,
basic, etc.) based on actual skills a student has achieved, rather
than comparison to a group of other students. NWEA gives both.
6. Locating the Sweet Spot The test will continue adapting
items, to find the students sweet spot. It is the goal to get to
the point where students are 50% correct and 50% incorrect. MAP
gives teachers a more accurate assessment of where students are
academically, especially for those students at the extreme end of
the scale.
7. What Is RIT RIT is the measurement used by the MAP testing
system Student scores are reported as a RIT, which is an acronym
for Rausch Instructional Unit. Map suggests looking at it as Ready
for Instruction Today Higher the student RIT Score the less growth
you will see Lower the student RIT Score the more room they have to
grow
8. RIT Scale The RIT scale is equal intervals A 3 point RIT
growth represents the same growth no matter where the student fall
on the RIT scale and no matter what grade they are in Example : A
RIT scale of 175 for a 3rd grader maybe the same score for an 11th
grader.
9. Student Expected Growth A students expected growth depends
on what RIT score they received. The higher the student is on the
RIT scale, the less growth you will see. The lower they are, the
more room they have to grow. Example, you measure a 3rd graders
physical height in the doorway and measure an 11th graders physical
height. You expect the 3rd grader to grow more because he/she has
more room to grow.
10. Normative RIT Values
11. Student Lockdown Browser
12. Teacher site
13. Classroom Reports Login https://detroitps-admin.mapnwea.org
User Name and Password
14. ASG Report
15. Class Breakdown by Goal
16. DesCartes: A continuum of Learning Instructional
Resources
17. Projected Proficiency Summary Report
18. Teacher/Class Report
19. Teacher Activity
20. School-Wide Goal Setting
21. Setting Growth Goals For All Students
22. Developing an Student Action Plan Goals without an action
plan are just wishful thinking
https://nwea.adobeconnect.com/_a203290506/cgicalculator/
Conditional Growth Index Calculator
https://nwea.adobeconnect.com/_a203290506/snc/ Norms School
Calculator
23. Student Goal Setting Worksheet
24. Student Progress Report For Parents
25. School Reports Administration School Leadership Team
26. Project Proficiency Report
27. Total School Growth Report
28. District Summary Report by Goal Performance
29. Grade Report
30. Student Growth Summary Report
31. MAP Resources Improving Academic Achievement
32. Testing Resumes STAR Testing April 2nd-16th MAP Testing
April 28th May 13th