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The long and winding road of alternate assessments

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Title: The long and winding road of alternate assessments


1
The long and winding road of alternate assessments
National Center on Educational Outcomes
  • Where we started, where we are now, and the road
    ahead!
  • Rachel F. Quenemoen,
  • Senior Research Fellow, NCEO

2
NCEO STATE SURVEY REPORTS
  • 2005 State Special Education Outcomes Steps
    Forward in a Decade of Change
  • 2003 State Special Education Outcomes Marching
    On
  • 2001 State Special Education Outcomes A Report
    on State Activities at the Beginning of a New
    Decade
  • 1999 State Special Education Outcomes A Report
    on State Activities at the End of the Century
  • Thompson Thurlow (1999, 2001, 2003)
  • Thompson, Johnstone, Thurlow, Altman (2005)

3
Survey topics across years
  • Stakeholder expectations
  • Content coverage (linkage to content standards)
  • Approaches (test format)
  • Scoring criteria and procedures
  • Performance/achievement descriptors and
    achievement standard setting
  • Reporting and accountability

4
Other NCEO reports referenced also Pre IDEA 97
Reports
  • Other NCEO syntheses of State status, slides 5,
    6, 10, 11
  • Devil in the Details NCEO studies, slides 25,
    26
  • Archived NCEO State Reports
  • State Special Education Outcomes 1991-1997

5
Pioneers Kentucky and Maryland
  • Maryland IMAP
  • Kentucky Alternate Portfolio assessment system.
  • BOTH were in response to external demands for
    accountability (legislature, courts)
  • Ysseldyke, J., Thurlow, M., Erickson, R., Gabrys,
    R., Haigh, J., Trimble, S., Gong, B. (1996). A
    comparison of state assessment systems in
    Maryland and Kentucky with a focus on the 
    participation of students with disabilities
    (Maryland-Kentucky Report 1).

6
Ysseldyke, J. E., Olsen, K. R. (1997).
  • 1. Alternate assessments focus on authentic
    skills and on assessing experiences in community
    and other real life environments.
  • 2. Alternate assessments should measure
    integrated skills across domains.
  • 3. If at all possible, alternate assessment
    systems should use continuous documentation
    methods.
  • 4. Alternate assessment systems should include as
    critical criteria the extent to which the system
    provides the needed supports and adaptations, and
    trains the student to use them.
  • Putting alternate assessments into practice
    What to measure and possible sources of data
    (Synthesis Report No. 28).

7
IDEA 1997
  • First Federal requirement of alternate
    assessments, LEA and SEA
  • IDEA Amendments of 1997 Preamble
  • 4) the implementation of this Act has been
    impeded by low expectations, and an insufficient
    focus on applying replicable research on proven
    methods of teaching and learning for children
    with disabilities.
  • (5) Over 20 years of research and experience has
    demonstrated that the education of children with
    disabilities can be made more effective by --
  • (A) having high expectations for such children
    and ensuring their access in the general
    curriculum to the maximum extent possible
    Access AND progress

8
POST IDEA 1997Where did we start? Part 1
  • Stakeholders expectations, principles
  • Content coverage Generic Standards throughout
    content standards linkage understanding and
    focus came later, and later yet, achievement
    standards were differentiated from content
    standards (with great difficulty!)
  • Approaches portfolios, checklists, performance
    assessments, IEP driven, other
  • (Some evidence in survey responses/verification
    of confusion about what terms meant)

9
1999 - Stakeholder estimates of students who
cannot take regular assessment
State provided percentage of students with
disabilities was transformed to a percentage of
all students using the special education rate.
10
Examples of principlesThompson Thurlow, 2000
  • State 1
  • Expectations for all students should be high,
    regardless of the existence of any disability
  • The goals for an educated student must be
    applicable to all students, regardless of
    disability.
  • Special education programs must be an extension
    and adaptation of general education programs
    rather than an alternate or separate system.
  • State 2
  • Meet the law.
  • Nonabusive to students, staff, parents.
  • Inexpensive.
  • Easy to do and takes little time.
  • State alternate assessments Status as IDEA
    alternate assessment requirements take effect
    (Synthesis Report No. 35).

11
Thompson Thurlow (2000).
  • Who involved many states included general and
    special education reps, a small number saw it as
    a special education initiative.
  • Nine states plan to base their alternate
    assessment on separate standards or skill sets
    that are not linked to general education
    standards.
  • Most common approach collection of a body of
    evidence that assesses functional indicators of
    progress toward state standards using a variety
    of performance-based assessment strategies.
  • Areas of greatest need for development are
    scoring procedures and how data will be reported.

12
Content Addressed by Alternate Assessments
Change Over Time
Year Fnctl skill, No link St stnd Fnctl skill Link St stnd St stnd Plus Fnctl skills Exp/ext St stnd Grade level stnd IEP team deter cntnt Other Revising
1999 16 --- 1 19 --- --- 24 ---
2000 9 3 7 28 --- --- 3 ---
2001 4 15 9 19 --- --- 3 ---
2003 2 --- 4 36 --- 3 3 2
2005 --- --- 1 21 10 1 7 10
Category possibly included grade level standards
prior to 2005 Category introduced in 2005
13
Pioneer Massachusetts
  • Wiener, D. (2005). One state's story Access and
    alignment to the GRADE-LEVEL content for students
    with significant cognitive disabilities
    (Synthesis Report 57).

14
Changing Curricular Context for Students with
Significant Cognitive Disabilities
  • 1990s
  • Also social inclusion focus
  • Also self determination focus
  • Assistive technology
  • 2000
  • General curriculum access (academic content)
  • Plus earlier priorities (functional, social, self
    determination)
  • Digitally accessible materials
  • Early 1970s
  • Adapting infant/early childhood curriculum for
    students with the most significant disabilities
    of all ages
  • 1980s
  • Rejected developmental model
  • Functional, life skills curriculum emerged

15
Alternate Assessment Approaches 2000-2005 (from
2005 Survey)
Year Portfolio or Body of Evidence Rating Scale or Checklist IEP Analysis Other In Develop- ment/ Revision
Regular States Regular States Regular States Regular States Regular States Regular States
1999 28 (56) 4 (8) 5 (10) 6 (12) 7 (14)
2001 24 (48) 9 (18) 3 (6) 12 (24) 2 (4)
2003 23 (46) 15 (30) 4 (8) 5 (10) 3 (6)
2005 25 (50) 7(14) 2 (4) 7 (14) 8 (16)
Unique States Unique States Unique States Unique States Unique States Unique States
2003 4 (44) 0 (0) 1 (11) 1 (11) 3 (33)
2005 1 (11) 1(11) 1 (11) 0 (0) 1 (11)
Of these 25 states, 13 use a standardized set
of performance/events/tasks/skills. Of these 7
states, three require the submission of student
work.
16
Where did we start? Part 2
  • Scoring criteria and procedures - 2001 and on
  • Performance/achievement descriptors and
    achievement standard setting 2001 and on
  • Reporting and Accountability 2001 and on
  • (In addition to confusion about terms, there is
    some evidence in survey responses/verification of
    a tendency to give the right answer)

17
2001 - Student Performance Measures
18
2001 - System Performance Measures
Variety of settings
Staff support
Appropriateness
General education participation
Parent Satisfaction
No system measures
19
2005 - Outcomes Measured by Rubrics on Alternate
Assessments
(Numbers in parentheses from 2001)
20
2001, 2003 - Alternate Assessment Scorers
Students teacher/ IEP member (44)
Teachers in other districts (26)
Test contractor (24)
State education agency (NA)
Teachers within district (12)
Developing/ revising (6)
Other (20)
Numbers in parentheses from 2001 Numbers on
chart in black from 2003
21
2003 - Alternate Assessment Achievement Level
Descriptors
Year Same as general assessment Different from general Assessment Currently developing/ revising
Regular States Regular States Regular States Regular States
2001 18 (36) 19 (38) 13 (26)
2003 31 (62) 16 (32) 3 (27)
Unique States Unique States Unique States Unique States
2003 3 (27) 2 (18) 3 (27)
22
2003 - States with standard setting process
Regular States
23
PIONEERS Arkansas, Washington, Massachusetts
  • Early standard-setting approaches
  • Commitment to real assessment methodology
  • Tell me - how will we set standards on this
    test? Arkansas Assessment Director
  • What the h does proficiency mean for these
    kids? Washington Chief State School Officer

24
Devil in the Details
  • Quenemoen, R. F., Lehr, C. A., Thurlow, M. L.,
    Massanari, C. B.  (2001). Students with
    disabilities in standards-based assessment and
    accountability systems Emerging issues,
    strategies, and recommendations (Synthesis Report
    37). CCSSO alternate assessment presession report
  • Bechard, S. (2001). Models for reporting the
    results of alternate assessments within state
    accountability systems (Synthesis Report 39).
  • Roeber, E. (2002). Setting standards on alternate
    assessments (Synthesis Report 42).
  • Quenemoen, R., Thurlow, M., (2002). Including
    alternate assessment results in accountability
    decisions (Policy Directions No. 13).

25
Devil in the Details, continued
  • Quenemoen, R., Rigney, S., Thurlow, M. (2002).
    Use of alternate assessment results in reporting
    and accountability systems Conditions for use
    based on research and practice (Synthesis Report
    43).
  • Quenemoen, R., Thompson, S. Thurlow, M. (2003).
    Measuring academic achievement of students with
    significant cognitive disabilities Building
    understanding of alternate assessment scoring
    criteria (Synthesis Report 50).
  • Gong, B., Marion, S. (2006). Dealing with
    flexibility in assessments for students with
    significant cognitive disabilities (Synthesis
    Report 60).

26
Flexibility and Standardization
  • Nominal categories are NOT often useful for
    characterizing the technical aspects of the
    assessment (see Gong Marion, 2006).
  • The evaluation of technical adequacy interacts
    with the types of alternate assessments (i.e.,
    choices/ degree of flexibility-standardization)
    being employed.
  • This does NOT mean that standardization is good
    and flexibility is badit all depends on purposes!

27
Alternate Assessment Approaches 2000-2005 (from
2005 Survey)
Year Portfolio or Body of Evidence Rating Scale or Checklist IEP Analysis Other In Develop- ment/ Revision
Regular States Regular States Regular States Regular States Regular States Regular States
1999 28 (56) 4 (8) 5 (10) 6 (12) 7 (14)
2001 24 (48) 9 (18) 3 (6) 12 (24) 2 (4)
2003 23 (46) 15 (30) 4 (8) 5 (10) 3 (6)
2005 25 (50) 7(14) 2 (4) 7 (14) 8 (16)
Unique States Unique States Unique States Unique States Unique States Unique States
2003 4 (44) 0 (0) 1 (11) 1 (11) 3 (33)
2005 1 (11) 1(11) 1 (11) 0 (0) 1 (11)
Of these 25 states, 13 use a standardized set
of performance/events/ tasks/ skills. Of these
7 states, three require the submission of student
work.
28
2005 - Development or revision
Area Number of Regular States
Approach 8
Content 10
Standard-setting 13
Scoring Criteria 17
29
Survey topics Where are we now?
  • Stakeholder expectations
  • Content coverage (linkage to content standards)
  • Approaches (test format)
  • Scoring criteria and procedures
  • Performance/achievement descriptors and
    achievement standard setting
  • Reporting and accountability

30
Where are we now? Part 1
  • Stakeholder expectations stakeholder estimates
    of less than 1 to more than 4 of all students
    in 1999 (see slide 8).
  • In 2007, with 2 regulation, we have seen data
    from under 1 to as high as 9 of all students in
    alternates.
  • Content coverage National Alternate Assessment
    Center work University of Kentucky Is it
    reading? Is it math? Is it science? University
    of North Carolina Links for Academic Learning
    other methodologies for alignment.
  • Peer Review suggests great variability, near and
    far linkages, but a steady trend is toward
    academic content.
  • Approach Degree and logic of flexibility and
    standardization choices Nominal categories are
    not particularly useful descriptors.
    Unfortunately, the naked eye is drawn to test
    format not educational soundness (Baker, 2007)

31
Where are we now? Part 2
  • Scoring criteria and procedures What does
    student performance look like? Student vs.
    system? How do we measure independence? Who
    scores? Who checks? Trust but verify? Flexibility
    vs. standardization issue.
  • Peer Review suggests great variability on this.
  • Performance/achievement descriptors and standard
    setting Achievement on the content? Is the
    content clearly referenced? How good is good
    enough?
  • What should these students know and be able to
    do? How well? Needs careful monitoring over time,
    consequential validity studies.
  • Reporting and accountability NCLB and IDEA
    define that for now stay tuned.
  • Reporting remains a challenge in some states.

32
More or less than meets the eye?
  • BECAUSE of the number of uncertainties still in
    play, we need
  • Transparency
  • Integrity
  • Consequential validity studies
  • Planned improvement over time

33
What is the road ahead?
  • Knowing What Students Know The science and
    design of educational assessment (NRC, 2001),
    synthesized a tremendous body of learning and
    measurement research and set an ambitious
    direction for the development of more valid
    assessments.
  • New Hampshire Enhanced Assessment Initiative
    (NHEAI) and National Alternate Assessment Center
    (NAAC) research/partner states validity framework
    to apply to alternate assessment

34
Pioneers Connecticut and Georgia
  • Connecticut Technical Manual
  • http//www.education.umn.edu/NCEO/TopicAreas/State
    Forum/CMTCAPTTechnicalManual2.pdf
  • Georgia Technical Manual
  • Through NHEAI/NAAC Expert Panel review New
    Hampshire, Massachusetts, Colorado, Connecticut
    Georgia, Iowa, Kentucky, Maryland, Rhode Island,
    South Carolina

35
NCEO Resources
Visit www.nceo.info quene003_at_umn.edu
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