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Surry County Schools NC K-2 Literacy Assessment

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Surry County Schools NC K-2 Literacy Assessment K-2 English Language Arts Janet Sutphin and Dana Draughn – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Surry County Schools NC K-2 Literacy Assessment


1
Surry County Schools NC K-2 Literacy Assessment
  • K-2 English Language Arts
  • Janet Sutphin and Dana Draughn

2
Housekeeping
  • Restrooms
  • Materials
  • Lunch and Breaks
  • Cell phones
  • Sidebars

3
Introduction and Purpose
  • To understand the components of the 2009 North
    Carolina K-2 Literacy Assessment.
  • Tie to Surry County Schools K-2 Assessment folder

4
NC State Board Policy
  • The State Board of Education requires that
    schools and school districts implement
    assessments in grades K, 1, and 2.
  • The assessments should be documented, ongoing and
    individualized.
  • A summative evaluation should be completed at
    the end of the year.

5
Purposes ofK-2 Assessment
  • The NC K-2 Literacy Assessment is intended to
    assess the reading and writing skills of students
    in kindergarten, first, and second grade.
  • It is intended to be a process for formative,
    interim/benchmark, and summative assessment.

6
SCS Timelines
  • Timelines will serve as a guide for benchmark and
    summative assessments.
  • The dates on the timelines are intended
    completion dates.

7
What do I already know?
  • Book and Print Awareness
  • Letter Knowledge
  • High Frequency Words
  • Writing
  • Reading Miscues
  • Mathematics

8
Book and Print Awareness
  • Assesses the foundational skills that facilitate
    reading and writing at the independent level.
  • Should be assessed during the first 2 years of
    school.
  • Some items may be more appropriate in first grade.

9
Book and Print Awareness
  • The book, No Sandwich is included in the
    assessment.
  • The Administration Guide is directly linked to
    the book.
  • Do not re-assess items that have already been
    successfully assessed!
  • http//www.ncpublicschools.org/curriculum/language
    arts/elementary/k2literacy/

10
Book and Print Awareness
  • Materials
  • A copy of the book, No Sandwich
  • Book and Print Awareness Administration Guide
  • Book and Print Awareness Individual Checklist
    (included in K-2 Folder)
  • Masking cards (index cards)

11
Book and Print Awareness
  • Procedures
  • Sit beside the child.
  • Follow the Book and Print Awareness
    Administration Guide.
  • Record the students responses.
  • Record comments.
  • Tally the number of items correct.
  • Plan for instruction.

12
Letter and Sound Identification
  • This assesses childrens ability to recognize
    letters and the sounds of letters.
  • A student does not need to demonstrate
    understanding of all letters and sounds before
    receiving instruction in reading and learning to
    read.
  • Do not re-assess items that have already been
    successfully assessed!

13
Letter and Sound Identification
  • If a student needs help focusing in just 1 row of
    letters, teachers may use a blank piece of paper
    to cover up the rows below the row beneath.
  • For letters that produce more than 1 sound
    (vowels, g, c), students need to produce only 1
    correct sound to receive credit.

14
Letter and Sound Identification
  • Materials
  • Letter cards (1 uppercase, 1 lowercase)
  • Recording form (included in K-2 folder)
  • Blank sheet of paper (if needed)

15
Letter and Sound Identification
  • Procedures
  • Sit beside the student.
  • Place the letter card in front of the student and
    ask, Do you know what these are?
  • Point to each letter going across the card and
    ask the student, Can you tell me the name of
    this letter and what sound it makes?

16
High Frequency Words
  • Fry Words
  • To build a sight vocabulary
  • The first 300 words make up 65 of written
    materials seen on a daily basis

17
High Frequency Words
  • Use index cards with words printed on them or
    word lists to assess knowledge of words
  • Students should read words with automaticity
  • At the end of the year, highlight words the
    student does not know in the K-2 Assessment Folder

18
Writing ContinuumA Controlled Experience
  • Students produce a writing sample without teacher
    assistance.
  • The sample should be handwritten by the student,
    unless the student has modifications per an IEP.
  • The teacher should follow typical prewriting
    procedures that reflect regular classroom writing
    experiences.

19
Writing ContinuumA Controlled Experience
  • The teacher should not remove resources such as
    word walls, word charts, or dictionaries that are
    used during typical writing experiences.
  • The teacher should maintain a positive writing
    environment.

20
Assessing Writing
  • Read through the students piece of writing.
  • Review the rubric and the criteria of each stage.

21
Assessing Writing
  • Remember
  • A students writing often shows characteristics
    of more than one stage.
  • Depending on the type of writing or the length of
    the piece, it may not display every single
    characteristic of a particular stage, but the
    characteristics that are present will be most
    representative of a particular stage.

22
Assessing Writing
  • Decide which stage the piece best represents
    based on both content and conventions.
  • Once stage has been determined, then use the
    Writing Continuum in the K-2 Assessment to
    determine proficiency level

23
Phonemic Awareness
  • Assesses students ability to manipulate sounds.
  • Helps students develop knowledge of sounds
    through the exposure of oral and written
    language.
  • Make students aware that language is made up of
    individual words, and that words are made of
    syllables and syllables are made up of phonemes.

24
Phonemic Awareness
  • There are 15 different subsets with 6 tasks in
    each.
  • Picture cards can be used for subsets 4 and 11 if
    needed.
  • Do not re-assess items that have already been
    successfully assessed!

25
Phonemic Awareness Subsets 1-4Kindergarten
  • 1. Orally recognizes rhyme.
  • 2. Orally generates rhyme.
  • 3. Orally identifies beginning sounds.
  • 4. Orally identifies words that begin the same.

26
Phonemic Awareness Subsets 5-11First Grade
  • 5. Blends onset and rime.
  • 6. Segments onset and rime.
  • 7. Orally blends phonemes into words.
  • 8. Orally segments words into phonemes.
  • 9. Orally divides words into syllables
  • 10. Orally identifies ending sounds
  • 11. Orally identifies words that end the
    same.

27
Phonemic AwarenessSubsets 12-15Second Grade
  • 12. Orally substitutes one phoneme for another.
  • 13. Phoneme deletion of final sound.
  • 14. Phoneme deletion of initial sound.
  • 15. Phoneme substitution of medial sound.

28
Phonemic Awareness
  • Materials
  • Phonemic Awareness Inventory recording forms
  • Picture cards (if needed)
  • http//www.ncpublicschools.org/curriculum/language
    arts/elementary/k2literacy/

29
Phonemic Awareness
  • Procedures
  • Sit beside the child.
  • Follow the script on the recording forms.
  • Record the students responses.
  • Tally the number of items correct.
  • Plan for instruction.

30
Reading Miscues
  • To assess the childs ability to read continuous
    text (decode print and construct meaning) at
    specific levels of difficulty.
  • To record the childs oral reading for analysis
    of skills/strategies and for documentation of
    growth over time.

31
Reading Miscues
  • Teachers should be doing informal reading
    conferences often during SSR and using this
    information to build flex groups that focus on
    specific skills.

32
Reading Miscues
  • Benchmarks and summative miscue analysis must be
    conducted using secure text.
  • Secured texts are used for assessment only and
    not for reading instruction, general checkout,
    school library or leveled book rooms.

33
Miscue Analysis
  • Materials
  • Leveled book
  • Recording form or Palm
  • Fluency will be assessed with this text beginning
    at level 11-12
  • Retelling form or Palm

34
Miscue Analysis
  • Procedures Before reading
  • Find a quiet place.
  • Sit beside the child.
  • Ask the child to preview the story.

35
Miscue Analysis
  • Procedures During reading
  • Ask the child to read the book orally.
  • Record the oral reading on the Reading Form or
    Palm
  • Refer to Guidelines for administrationpage

36
Miscue Analysis
  • Procedures After reading
  • Compute the Accuracy Rate90
  • Analyze the miscues and self-corrections.
  • M Did the error make sense? (meaning)
  • S Did the error sound like language? (syntax)
  • V Did it look and sound right? (visual)
  • Plan for instruction.

37
Oral Retell
  • Assesses how well a student approaches a text
    that they have read.
  • Assesses a students ability to retell a text in
    their own words and to connect the text with
    other texts or experiences that they have read at
    their instructional level ().

38
Oral Retell
  • Materials
  • Instructional level text
  • Oral Retell Response form or Palm
  • Retelling Prompts
  • Oral Retell Rubric

39
Oral Retell
  • Procedures
  • Ask the student to tell you about the text.
  • Record any information provided by the student in
    the unaided portion of the Oral Retell recording
    form.  
  • Prompt the student regarding any information they
    did not include during the unaided retelling and
    record it in the aided portion of the Oral Retell
    recording form.

40
Oral Retell Unaided vs. Aided
  • A childs retell score is not affected by unaided
    or aided responses.
  • The teacher should consider the amount of aided
    responses when planning for instruction.

41
Oral Retell Unaided
  • Ask the child to retell the story as if they were
    telling it to someone who has never
    seen/heard/read the story before.
  • Any information is recorded in the Unaided
    section of the Oral Retell form.
  • The teacher can ask open-ended questions to
    prompt the child.

42
Oral Retell Aided
  • After the child has been given an opportunity to
    retell the story without direct assistance, the
    teacher will give direct prompts to the child in
    order to complete the retelling.
  • The teacher may use the prompts provided
  • Any information added by the student is recorded
    in the Aided section of the Oral Retell form

43
Oral Retell
  • Calculating the score
  • Score each portion of the retell using the
    rubric.
  • Circle the score in each portion.
  • Add the rubric score from each portion together
    to get a Summative Rubric Score.

44
Fluency
  • Assesses the ability to read a text accurately,
    quickly, and with expression.
  • Assesses students reading a level 11-12 or above
    using both the Qualitative and Quantitative
    Fluency Rubrics.

45
Fluency
  • Materials
  • Qualitative Fluency Rubric
  • Quantitative Fluency Rubric
  • Stopwatch or palm
  • Book used for miscue analysis

46
Quantitative Fluency Rubric
  • Time student using previously read miscue
    analysis book for 1 minute
  • Calculate the words read correctly per
    MinuteWCPM
  • Total words read errors words read correctly
  • Record any notes pertaining to fluency

47
Quantitative Fluency Rubric
  • After calculating the WCPM, refer to the
    Quantitative Fluency Rubric for the percentiles
    for grades 1-3.
  • Students below the 50th percentile may need for
    their teacher to model fluency often!

48
QualitativeFluency Rubric
  • Rubric Score 1
  • All reading is done word by word.
  • Long pauses between words.
  • Little evidence of phrasing.
  • Little awareness of punctuation.
  • There may be 2 word phrases, but word groupings
    are often awkward.

49
QualitativeFluency Rubric
  • Rubric Score 2
  • Most reading is done word by word.
  • Some 2 word phrasing.
  • Expressive interpretation may result in longer
    examples of phrasing.
  • Inconsistent application of punctuation and
    syntax with rereading for problem solving.

50
QualitativeFluency Rubric
  • Rubric Score 3
  • Reading is done as a mixture of word by word
    reading, fluent reading, and phrased reading.
  • Attention to punctuation and syntax with
    rereading for problem solving

51
QualitativeFluency Rubric
  • Rubric Score 4
  • Reading is in large, meaningful phrases.
  • Few slow-downs for problem solving of words or to
    confirm accuracy.
  • Expressive interpretation is evident throughout
    reading.
  • Attention to punctuation and syntax is present.

52
Spelling Inventory
  • Assesses the word knowledge students have to
    bring to the tasks of reading and spelling.

53
Spelling Inventory
  • Materials
  • Sentences for words
  • Individual Score Sheet
  • Class Composite Sheet
  • Blank paper for students

54
Spelling Inventory
  • Procedures
  • Call out the word and use it in a sentence (just
    as you would for any spelling test).
  • Score each students assessment and record
    results on the Individual Score Sheet.
  • Record class results on the Class Composite.

55
Spelling InventoryScoring
  • 1. Check off or highlight the features for each
    word which are spelled according to the
    descriptors at the top.
  • 2. Assign 1 point for each feature (some words
    are scored for some features but not others).

56
Spelling InventoryScoring
  • 3. Add an additional point in the Word Correct
    column for entire words that are spelled
    correctly.
  • 4. Total the number of points across each word
    and under each feature.
  • 5. Review the feature columns in order to
    determine the individual needs of your students.

57
Contact Information
  • Janet Sutphin
  • sutphinj_at_surry.k12.nc.us
  • Dana Draughn
  • draughnda_at_surry.k12.nc.us
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