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GED 2002

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Presentation by Claire Ludovico at Tucson AALL Conference based on PowerPoint ... What's happening with the new GED? Percent who passed: Overall on GED 2002: 64 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: GED 2002


1
GED 2002
  • What do we know so far?
  • Presentation by Claire Ludovico at Tucson AALL
    Conference based on PowerPoint presentation at
    COABE by Marie Hassett and information supplied
    by Joan Auchter

2
Whats happening with the new GED?
3
Percent who passed
  • Overall on GED 2002 64
  • Overall on 1988 version of GED 69

4
Passing Percentages
5
Passing Percentages by Age
6
Average Scores
7
Average Score Disparities
158
176
160
158
171
8
Re-TestPassing Percentages
9
Average Scores
10
Non-Passers v. Retesters
62
71
53
48
54
Dark blue numbers show percent passing on Retest.
11
Passers, Non-Passers Retesters
62
71
53
48
54
Dark blue numbers show percent passing on Retest.
12
Who Passes the GED?
  • 18-24 year olds (53)
  • Primary Language English (97)
  • Eleven or more years of school (43)
  • Out of school 2 or fewer years (47)

13
Who Takes the GED?
  • 20-39 year olds (53)
  • Ten or fewer years of school (63)
  • Primary Language?
  • Years out of school?

14
Why do they take the GED?
  • Personal Satisfaction
  • Better Job
  • Further Education

15
Top 5 reasons for leaving school given by those
with 8th grade education or less
  • Did not like school
  • Needed money to help at home
  • Bored
  • Poor teaching
  • Teachers did not help enough

16
Top 5 reasons for leaving school given by those
with 9th grade education or more
  • Poor teaching
  • Did not like school
  • Needed money to help at home
  • Teachers did not help enough
  • Parents did not support my education

17
Top reasons for leaving school given by those
who passed the test
  • Absent too many times
  • Bored
  • Got a job

18
Top reasons for leaving school given by those
who did not pass the test
  • Didnt get it
  • Didnt understand math
  • Teacher didnt help

19
What do Passers Non-Passers Have in Common?
  • Low Writing Scores (467/296)
  • Low Math Scores (485/327)

20
Language Arts, Writing
21
Essay Scores
71
57
20
13
3
3
3
8
8
7
1
1
5
22
Mathematics
23
Percent Correct Math
24
Social Studies
25
Science
26
Language Arts, Reading
27
Average Scoresof passers, non-passers, and
retesters
28
Why do Writing Math scores improve on retest,
while Content Area scores do not?
29
Reading Comprehension
  • On the basis of the information in the poem, what
    will the speaker do next? The speaker will
  • set up camp for the night to protect himself and
    his horse
  • try to buy the land from the owner
  • continue traveling so he can meet his obligations
  • stay where he is and watch the snow in the woods
  • turn around and go back where he came from

30
Components of Reading
Vocabulary
Prior Knowledge
Meaning Skills (Comprehension)
Print Skills
Reading Rate
Decoding Skills
31
Why Reading Matters
  • dntf th wrds n ths lst dffdl,
    Wshngtn, cmptr, qut, rd.
  • Lrnng s th ndspnsbl nvstmnt rqurd
    fr sccss n th nfrmtn g w r
    ntrng.

32
Strategies to Improve Learner Performance
33
  • Daily exposure to a variety of texts.
  • Vocabulary instruction that includes a variety of
    complementary methods designed to explore the
    relationships among words and the relationships
    among word structure, origin, and meaning.
  • Comprehension strategies that include prediction
    of outcomes, summarizing, clarification,
    questioning and visualization.
  • Frequent writing to enable deeper understanding
    of what is said.

34
Problems with social studies, science, and
reading
  • SOCIAL STUDIES reading a passage and
    understanding the gist of it, then applying that
    concept to a different situation
  • SCIENCE understanding basic science concepts
    (especially in physics) and applying those to
    concrete situations
  • READING questions that require the integration
    of new information about the piece or about the
    author with the passage on the test

35
Some suggestions for social studies, science, and
reading
  • Try scaffolding have students determine
  • Literal understanding of passage (restate ideas,
    check focus statement title of passage)
  • Interpretive understandingwhat else does student
    know about this writer or this piece who, where,
    when, attitude?
  • Applied understanding how do these fit with
    answers to question?
  • Try some simple science experiments or discuss
    science principles in terms of everyday
    activities.

36
How about the math test?
  • Biggest problem is application can they choose
    the correct procedure to answer question?
  • Real world problems are often missed

37
Suggestions for improving math
  • Discuss how to solve problems
  • Discuss relevant words in the problem
  • Use realia to create real world problems

38
Suggestions for improved scores on writing skills
multiple choice
  • Practice construction shift questions have
    student read stem and each choice of ending
    together
  • Students need to be given authority to remove
    non-relevant sentences from text try taking
    realia and polluting it.
  • Have students check each statement against focus
    statement (title of passage) for relevancy

39
Any thoughts?
  • Thanks for coming!
  • Special thanks to Brite Lee
  • and Marie Hassett, Ph.D.
  • Steck-Vaughn Publishers
  • And to Joan Auchter, GEDTS
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