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SCORING THE ALTERNATE ASSESSMENT

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Math. General & KAMM. April 18. February 18 through April 14. Grade 11. Grades 3-8 & once in H.S. ... The worksheets should be maintained and stored locally ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: SCORING THE ALTERNATE ASSESSMENT


1
SCORING THEALTERNATEASSESSMENT
2
AGENDA
  • Evidence Labels
  • Scorers
  • Rules of Scoring
  • Scorer Recording Worksheet
  • Data Folios Data Collection
  • Post-test

3
  • RELIABLE, ACCURATE, AND QUALITY
  • SCORING
  • WILL DEPEND ON
  • RELIABLE, ACCURATE, AND QUALITY
  • DATA

4
EVIDENCE LABELS
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6
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3
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Snorg nkost sbeling tha ewak and boprog.
Crung swiple spid thew aspmg s woportsb ango meal.
5
EVIDENCE LABELSHandout 1
  • Information provided on the evidence label is the
    reference point for scoring. It should help each
    scorer know the expectations for the individual
    students performance.
  • All acronyms and abbreviations should be written
    out and/or explained.

6
EVIDENCE LABELS
  • Across the sections of the evidence label, it
    might be necessary to highlight what makes each
    piece of data unique.
  • For example, different settings, different
    times/days, different people, different task,
    different format, different materials

7
EVIDENCE LABELS
The Evidence Label provided by CETE has
  • The students name
  • The content area being assessed
  • The students grade level
  • The number of the evidence sample (1, 2, or 3)
  • The extended indicator being measured
  • The data collection setting
  • The assessment task and materials
  • Instructions that were given to the student
  • Accommodations used on the activity, including
    acceptable supports

8
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9
EVIDENCE LABELS
Each evidence label must be completed with the
following information
  • The data collection setting
  • The assessment task and materials
  • Instructions that were given to the student
  • Accommodations used on the activity, including
    acceptable supports
  • The students name
  • The content area being assessed
  • The students grade level
  • The number of the evidence sample (1,
    2, or 3)
  • The extended indicator being measured

10
EVIDENCE LABELS
  • a. Data Collection Setting
  • Settings might be General Education Classroom,
    Resource Room, or in the Community.

11
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12
EVIDENCE LABELS
Each evidence label must Include the following
information
  • The students name
  • The content area being assessed
  • The students grade level
  • The number of the evidence sample (1, 2, or 3)
  • The extended indicator being measured
  • The data collection setting
  • The assessment task and materials
  • Instructions that were given to the student
  • Accommodations used on the activity, including
    acceptable supports

13
EVIDENCE LABELS
  • b. Assessment Task and Materials
  • It is critical to provide sufficient detail,
    such that all steps in the assessment task, as
    well as materials to be used, are clear.
  • Remember! A scorer might not have any other
    knowledge of the student, task,
  • and/or materials!

14
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15
EVIDENCE LABELS
Each evidence label must be completed with the
following information
  • The data collection setting
  • The assessment task and materials
  • Instructions that were given to the student
  • Accommodations used on the activity, including
    acceptable supports
  • The students name
  • The content area being assessed
  • The students grade level
  • The number of the evidence sample (1, 2, or 3)
  • The extended indicator being measured

16
EVIDENCE LABELS
  • c. Instructions Given to the Student
  • Clear specification of the exact directions
    provided for the student is critically important
    here.
  • Details will assist the scorers to understand
  • ? the demands of the task
  • ? how the task is related to the
  • indicator being assessed

17
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18
EVIDENCE LABELS
Each evidence label must be completed with the
following information
  • The data collection setting
  • The assessment task and materials
  • Instructions that were given to the student
  • Accommodations used on the activity, including
    acceptable supports
  • The students name
  • The content area being assessed
  • The students grade level
  • The number of the evidence sample (1,
    2, or 3)
  • The extended indicator being measured

19
EVIDENCE LABELS
  • d. Accommodations, including acceptable supports
    used
  • Relative to the student performing this task, in
  • the setting where assessment is to occur
  • ? Explain any accommodations that are
    typically provided to the student
  • AND
  • ? Provide explicit details re supports which
  • are / are not acceptable for assisting the
    student

20
  • Supports should be written to focus on the
    prompts expected to be provided at the time of
    assessment, not prompts, that might have been
    required in the past.

not
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EVIDENCE LABELS
  • An evidence label may need the connection between
    the task and the indicator explained, especially
    if this relationship would not be readily obvious
    to someone outside the field of SPED.

23
EVIDENCE LABELS
  • Make sure that each piece of evidence is
    correctly labeled, and that each number matches
    the selected indicator.
  • MAKE SURE THERE IS A COMPLETED EVIDENCE LABEL FOR
    EVERY PIECE OF EVIDENCE.

24
SCORERS
25
WHO WILL THE SCORERS BE?
  • Each data folio will be scored independently
    by three different scorers
  • one will be the students special education
    teacher of record
  • the remaining two scorers will be determined
    locally (anyone chosen to score should be
    familiar with the Kansas curriculum standards,
    including the extended standards)

26
POSSIBLE SCORERS
  • School psychologist
  • School social worker
  • Related service provider
  • Another special education teacher
  • Administrator
  • General educator
  • Licensed job coach
  • A paraeducator may
  • be a scorer

not
27
Entering the Scores
  • Each scorer will independently determine their
    scores.
  • Scores will then be sent to a Scorer Recorder to
    enter the scores onto CETE.
  • Scores should be sent to the Scorer Recorder in a
    sealed envelope.
  • (This is important to preserve the independence
  • of the scoresand the technical
  • integrity of the Kansas Alternate
  • Assessment process.)

28
Entering the Scores
  • The Score Recorder
  • Can not have served as a scorer for any alternate
    assessment folio.

29
RULES OF SCORING
30
Entering the Scores
  • If a student is absent you will finish their
    assessment when they return to school.

31
DATA FOLIO ELEMENTS REQUIRED FOR SCORING
  • Table of contents a list of the indicators
    provided to CETE (printable from CETE website)
  • Evidence label for each piece of evidence
    (printable from CETE website)
  • The evidence itself, complete with the date on
    which each piece was collected
  • If any one of these is missing, a scorer must
    attempt to locate it before proceeding with the
    scoring!

32
RULES OF SCORING
  • Each scorer must
  • Complete the scoring independently
  • Refrain from comparing scores, or discussing the
    scoring with anyone else (including other
    scorers)
  • Refrain from asking the students SPED teacher
    for assistance

33
RULES OF SCORING
  • ALL scoring must be based solely on the evidence
    submitted to be included in the students
    alternate assessment data folio.
  • The extended curricular standards for reading,
    mathematics, science, or history-government may
    be used as references during the scoring of the
  • data folio.

34
RULES OF SCORING
  • Scorers need to be objective and impartial
  • The following cannot influence scoring
  • Personal feelings
  • Content presentation - neatness, art work, color,
    etc.
  • Quality of photos or audiotapes
  • Regulate time spent on scoringdont rush, but
    dont spend too much time
  • Maintain the order of the data
    folio

35
RULES OF SCORING
  • ALL data collection and scoring must be completed
    within the assessment window
  • January 2, 2008
  • (See Handout 2 Testing Schedule)

36
Testing Schedule
37
RULES OF SCORING
  • The scorer must score each piece of evidence on
    the
  • Skill Performance Rubric
  • provided by the Kansas State Department of
    Education.

38
RULES OF SCORING
SKILL PERFORMANCE RUBRIC
No half points may be given..
39
  • A scorer must rate what/how the student performs
    on the day of the assessment, and not what is
    his/her typical or best performance.

40
GUIDED PRACTICE
  • Score Handout 4 using the Skill Performance
    Rubric.

41
RULES OF SCORING
  • Only three pieces of evidence are to be scored
    for each selected extended indicator
  • If more than three pieces of evidence are
    included for a single indicator, some will NOT be
    scored
  • First scorer will select three pieces to be
    scored
  • Remaining scorers must score same items
  • Extra pieces of evidence should remain
  • in the students folder

42
RULES OF SCORING
  • What if there are two pieces of evidence, rather
    than three?
  • Make an attempt to locate the missing piece of
    evidence.
  • If you cant locate it, make a note in the data
    folio, then rate the two pieces provided.
  • Score the missing piece as a 0.

43
RULES OF SCORING
  • If no evidence is submitted, or the evidence
    included is not sufficiently complete to score,
    ask the teacher to see if the missing information
    can be located.
  • If additional information does not become
    available, then the scorer is to score a 0 (for
    each piece of missing or unclear data).

44
RULES OF SCORING
  • Each piece of evidence must include a minimum of
    five trials, or five opportunities for the
    student to respond.
  • More than five trials (i.e., data points) MAY be
    included in a single piece of evidence, and WILL
    be considered in scoring.

45
RULES OF SCORING
  • Five trials, or response opportunities, might
    look like
  • five responses marked or -
  • one worksheet of five computation problems
  • one story retelling opportunity, which includes
    five key points
  • videotape, including five questions from
    teacher, which student answers

46
RULES OF SCORING
  • What if more than 5 responses are included in one
    piece of evidence?
  • Score all the recorded responses within each
    piece of evidence as described on the data label.
  • Calculate an average score accordingly.

47
GUIDED PRACTICE 5

48
RULES OF SCORING
  • What if fewer than 5 responses are included in
    one piece of evidence?
  • Make every effort to locate the missing
    information.
  • If no additional information can be found, note
    this in the data folio, then score all the
    evidence that is provided.
  • Use the score from the available evidence as the
    numerator of a fraction and a score of 5 for
    the denominator of the fraction to
    compute the overall score.

49
RULES OF SCORING
  • It is critically important that the evidence
    provided matches the extended indicator selected
    for assessment,
  • AND
  • That each scorer be able to discern this match.

50
RULES OF SCORING
  • What if the evidence provided does not seem to
    match the selected indicator?
  • Ask the students SPED teacher, Is this the
    evidence intended for this indicator?
  • Double check the evidence label to ensure the
    numbers match.
  • Review the Clarifying Examples for the extended
    indicator being assessed.
  • If the scorer continues to believe that there
    is an obvious mismatch between the
    evidence and the selected
    indicator, the evidence will
    be scored a 0.

51
RULES OF SCORING
  • Each piece of evidence must have its own
    corresponding evidence label.
  • Remember!
  • This is the only way for the teacher or data
    collector to communicate with the scorers about
    the uniqueness of each piece of evidence in the
    data folio.

52
RULES OF SCORING
  • What if an evidence label does not accompany each
    piece of evidence?
  • Check with the students SPED teacher to see if a
    label exists.
  • If no label can be located, then the students
    SPED teacher must create an evidence label.
  • DO NOT PROCEED UNTIL AN EVIDENCE LABEL IS
    PROVIDED.

53
SCORER RECORDING WORKSHEET
  • CETE

54
SCORER RECORDING WORKSHEET
  • Download the Scorer Recording Worksheet from the
    CETE website.
  • Make copies for each of the scorers. Circle the
    rater number for each of the scorers.

55
SCORER RECORDING WORKSHEET
56
SCORER RECORDING WORKSHEET
  • Information included on the scorer recording
    worksheet
  • Student name
  • Content area
  • Rater Number or Rater Name
  • Indicators number 1 5
  • Space for recording scores

57
SCORER RECORDING WORKSHEET
  • Record a score for each piece of evidence on this
    worksheet.
  • Send the score sheet to the person who will
    record scores in your district.
  • The worksheets should be maintained and stored
    locally after the assessment is completed.

58
Learner Characteristics Inventory
  • There Will Be
  • No
  • Learner Characteristics
  • Inventory
  • This Year

59
DATA FOLIOS AND DATA COLLECTION
60
A COMPLETE DATA FOLIO SHOULD INCLUDE
  • Three pieces of evidence for each of the five
    selected extended indicators.
  • The data folio for a reading alternate assessment
    will have 15 pieces of evidence (5 indicators X
    3 pieces of evidence per indicator).
  • The data folio for a mathematics alternate
    assessment will have 15 pieces of evidence (5
    indicators X 3 pieces of evidence per indicator).
  • The data folio for a science alternate assessment
    will have 15 pieces of evidence (5 indicators X
    3 pieces of evidence per indicator).
  • The data folio for a history-government alternate
    assessment will have 15 pieces of evidence

    (5 indicators X 3 pieces of evidence
    per indicator).

61
A COMPLETE DATA FOLIO SHOULD INCLUDE
  • The raw data for any graph or other summary
    report.
  • A key or legend for any code used in reporting
    the data.
  • The raw data for any rubric scoring used in the
    data folio.
  • The teacher may not use the KSDE Skill
    Performance Rubric for the collection or
    reporting of the data included in the folio.

62
Handout 6
63
POST TEST
  • Complete the post test on-site today.
  • Score independently do not visit with anyone
    regarding your responses.
  • Use the materials provided to you today as
    necessary.
  • Leave the post-test with your on-site
    facilitator.

64
Questions?
  • If additional questions come up after the
    training, please e-mail
  • Debbie Matthews dmatthews_at_ksde.org
  • 785-296-0916
  • Joan Houghton
  • jhoughton_at_ksde.org
  • 785-296-2515
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