Title: Alphabet Soup
 1"Alphabet Soup"
Making Sense of the PSSA's and 'No Child Left 
Behind'
PDE
AYP
NCLB
ESEA
PSSA
IEP
2005-2006 
 2No Child Left Behind
 What exactly is the NCLB law? The federal 
Elementary and Secondary Education Act is 
periodically reauthorized. In January 2002 a 
reauthorization of ESEA was signed by President 
Bush. He called the revised law "No Child Left 
Behind." The next scheduled reauthorization of 
ESEA is in 2008. Specifically NCLB provides a 
framework within which each state must (1) 
establish rigorous academic standards, (2) 
establish an assessment system that annually 
measures student progress in meeting those 
standards, and (3) impose consequences on school 
districts whose assessment results fail to meet 
the states standard proficiency goals for two or 
more consecutive years. 
 3Important Terminology
Making Sense of It All...
What are some terms related to the NCLB law? AYP 
 Adequate Yearly Progress  the progress 
required of each school district/school/subgroup 
to move to 100 proficiency in 2013/2014 ELL  
English Language Learners  students whose native 
language is not English ESEA  Elementary and 
Secondary Education Act  first passed in 1965 
this is the federal law that governs all policies 
and programs in public schools it is 
reauthorized periodically, most recently in 2002. 
The current version is entitled No Child Left 
Behind. Highly Qualified Teachers  term in 
federal law that says all teachers (in schools 
with federal funding) teaching in core academic 
subjects in public schools must have proper 
certification. This means (1) all elementary 
teachers must have a bachelors degree AND pass 
rigorous state tests in reading, writing, math, 
and other basic elementary curricular areas, and 
(2) all middle and secondary school teachers must 
have a bachelors degree AND either pass a core 
content test or have an academic major, graduate 
degree or coursework equivalent in the subject 
area to be taught. Pennsylvania law says that all 
public school teachers must be "highly qualified" 
by 2005/06, even in schools that do not receive 
federal funding. 
 4IEP  students who qualify for special education 
services are educated according to an 
Individualized Education Program. The IEP team, 
chaired by a representative of the district, 
includes at a minimum, a special education 
teacher, a regular education teacher and the 
parent. The team meets annually to review the 
students progress and revise the learning 
goals. Indicators  the items used to measure 
AYP the federal law requires state test results 
to account for at least 60 of the determination 
of Adequate Yearly Progress other measures can 
include attendance rates, graduation rates, SAT 
scores, dropout rates, Advanced Placement 
participation, and so on. Pennsylvania has 
elected to use only the PSSA tests, participation 
rates on those tests, attendance rates, and 
graduation rates as indicators. NCLB  No Child 
Left Behind  the title given to the 
reauthorization of the ESEA in 2002. 
 5PASA  Pennsylvania Alternative System of 
Assessment  official name of the Pennsylvania 
state test given to students with severe 
disabilities PPI  Pennsylvania Performance 
Index  a growth index that measures progress all 
along the achievement scale, not just from basic 
to proficient PPI will be used in conjunction 
with the "safe harbor" provision to determine AYP 
as well as to determine district rewards. This 
formula requires constant growth from year to 
year, even if the actual percentage of students 
meeting proficiency, participating in the 
examinations, attending school or graduating is 
far above the required AYP target for that 
year. Proficiency  "Satisfactory academic 
performance indicating a solid understanding and 
adequate display of the skills included in 
Pennsylvanias academic standards." (PENNSYLVANIA 
law) This performance is reflected in an 
"advanced" or "proficient" score on the state 
assessment. 
 6PSSA  Pennsylvania System of School Assessment  
official name of the Pennsylvania state 
tests Safe harbor  a provision that exists 
under the ESEA that can be used in determining 
whether a school can be said to have met its AYP 
target even if the scores, participation rates or 
attendance/graduation rates did not meet the 
required number. Under Safe Harbor, if a school 
or subgroup does NOT meet the proficiency 
criteria, but DOES reduce the number of 
below-proficient students by 10 or more, it will 
be considered to have met AYP. Subgroup  
federal law requires disaggregation of scores for 
certain groups of students, including 
economically disadvantaged students, major racial 
and ethnic groups, students with disabilities, 
and English Language Learners. The law refers to 
these groups as "subgroups." 
 7Understanding It All... 
 8In order to make AYP  what are the percentages 
of students that must be measured as 
proficient? Schools must increase the percentage 
of students deemed proficient on state tests in 
ever-increasing increments. The benchmarks for 
the state of Pennsylvania are
NOTE These are the percentages of students who 
must score at the proficient (or higher) level on 
the state tests. These are NOT the scores on the 
tests. 
 9The challenge 100 proficiency in reading and 
math by 2014 
 10How are participation rates measured? 95 of 
each grade level that is required to take each 
test, AND 95 of each priority group that is 
required to take each test must actually take the 
test. If less than 95 of any of these groups 
does not take the test, then the school does not 
meet the AYP goals and sanctions will occur. 
 11Is a school judged proficient based on just the 
test scores from the entire population of 
students who took the test? The "whole school" 
score is just one measure of proficiency. Equal 
expectations of proficiency are held for all 
priority groups. If just one priority group does 
not meet AYP targets in a given year, sanctions 
will affect the entire school. What are the 
various priority groups that have their scores 
included in AYP calculations? Required priority 
groups include English Language Learners, 
socio-economically disadvantaged students (as 
defined by students qualifying for free/reduced 
lunches), students of certain ethnic groups 
(American Indian, Asian, Black and Latino), and 
special education students (those with IEPs). It 
is possible for some students to be in as many as 
four of these priority groups at the same 
time. How many students must there be to have a 
priority groups score included in the AYP 
calculation? There must be a minimum of 40 
students in a priority group. These 40 students 
can come from any grade level within the school, 
as long as they meet the criteria of that 
priority group definition. If a school is too 
small to have 40 students for any one priority 
group, then the state will combine data for 2 or 
3 years. 
 12How are attendance and graduation rates 
measured? A school must meet the goal of 95 
attendance (or be making progress towards that 
goal) in order to meet AYP. The required 
graduation rate is 80. 
 13What happens to a school if the school itself or 
any of its priority groups fails to make 
AYP? According to the PDE website, if schools 
fail to improve after 1 year - warning after 
2 years  School Improvement I (must pay to 
transfer students to different schools school 
assistance team school improvement plan) after 
3 years  School Improvement II (same as above, 
plus supplemental services like must pay for 
private tutors for students who are not 
proficient) after 4 years - Corrective Action 
I (same as above plus major changes in 
leadership, curriculum, and so on) after 5 
years - Corrective Action II (same as above plus 
privatization, and so on) after 6 years  
Governance Changes must shut down district A 
building or district leaves this list ONLY when 
it meets AYP targets for TWO consecutive years 
 14What if a district DOES meet AYP 
targets? Schools will receive monetary rewards 
and recognition if they meet or exceed their 
annual AYP targets or their PPI targets for two 
consecutive years. Schools will receive freedom 
from some reporting requirements and mandates 
after 4 years of meeting targets. It is important 
to note that each year the benchmarks for making 
Adequate Yearly Progress will be raised. 
Therefore AYP becomes increasingly difficult to 
achieve. 
 15Many schools are meeting AYP, but we have a long 
way to go 
 162004-05 AYP results for Pennsylvania school 
districts 
 17(No Transcript) 
 18(No Transcript) 
 19Heat dramatically lowers scores on physical and 
mental tests. Reading comprehension declines at 
temperatures above 74 degrees F and math skills 
decline above 77 degrees F. Classrooms kept 
between 68 and 72 degrees F are the most 
comfortable for students. It is easier to adjust 
and adapt to a cooler classroom than one that is 
too hot. 
 20Subject Area Prompt or Question Additional 
Information 
Subject Area Prompt or Question Additional 
Information
PSSA Style Response Form
PSSA Style Response Form 
 21Multiple Choice (Selected Response) Multiple-choic
e items (selected response) measure how well 
students recall or infer content and how well 
they choose the preferred answer among four 
responses offered to a question. At times, 
multiple choice items provide the best way to 
determine whether students gleaned certain 
information important from a story, such as the 
setting, its central ideas or its main events and 
their chronology. (Performance Level Handbook, 
p.223) Common Characteristics (from released 
PSSA tests) All multiple choice items are written 
to the PA Academic Standards 1.2, 1.2, 1.3, 1.7, 
1.8 and specifically to bulleted descriptors All 
items must be passage dependent. Items are 
written in the active voice and most often 
present tense. Negatives are not used. The 
number of words for the selected responses should 
be the same Common Stems (mostly narrative) PA 
Academic Standard 1. Select John's 
occupation. 1.15 D 2. The word, ____, as used in 
the story, means 1.15 F 3. Select the words which 
best fit the meaning of the statement  1.1.5 G  
1 4. The First Date is an example of (a 
biographical text, an informational text, 
narrative,) 1.1.5 H  4 5. The phrase that best 
describes the main character, ________________ 1.3
.5 B 6. The story implies (suggests) that the 
main character.  1. 3.5 B 7. The sentence that 
best describes the author's message (point of 
view) 1. 3.5 B 8. The metaphor, , means 1.3.5 C  
2 9. Describing _______ as ________makes use of 
the literary device... 1.3 C  2 Common Stems 
(mostly informational) PA Academic 
Standard 10. According to the article, 1.2.5 A  
3 11. The article is organized.... 1.2.5 A  
4 12. A major theme (or idea) of the 
article.... 1.2.5 A  4 13. The following 
statement is an essential fact in understanding 
the article 1.2.5 A  1 14. The author's opinion 
about _______ is  1.2.5 A  1 15. The author 
probably means _________ 1.2.5 A  4 16. The 
author's purpose in writing this article 1.2 .5 
A  4 17. The word _____from the Latin 
word,_____, meaning _____, in this story 
means 1.7.5 A 18. The word "upscale" is an 
example of 1.7.5 B 19. The word "mouse" has 
changed to mean 1.7.5 C 20. The best source to 
find .. 1.8.5 B  2 21. In the card 
catalog,.... 1.8.5 B  4 22. Select the words 
that should be included in notes about ______ 
 22Value of Non-fiction Writing
Dr. Douglas Reeves, chairman of the Center for 
Performance Assessment, summarizes years of 
research, "If you do one thing different in your 
district to improve children's performance, teach 
more non-fiction writing. While most schools 
overload on fiction writing, the skills needed to 
craft a coherent non-fiction essay help sharpen 
students' minds as well as boosting their writing 
and reading ability. 
 23The emotional states of anticipation, confusion, 
and curiosity require so many attentional 
resources that they cannot last long-30 to 90 
seconds. If resolution does not occur, then the 
individual moves on to another emotional state. 
 24Using Assessment for Data Driven Decision Making
- Assessment drives instruction. (Assessment 
information helps the teacher map next steps for 
varied learners and the class as a whole.)  - Assessment occurs consistently as the unit 
begins, throughout the unit and as the unit ends. 
 (Preassessment, formative and summative 
assessment are regular parts of the 
teaching/learning cycle.)  - Teachers assess student readiness, interest and 
learning profile.  - Assessments are part of teaching for success. 
 - Assessment information helps students chart and 
contribute to their own growth.  - Assessment MAY be differentiated. 
 - Assessment information is more useful to the 
teacher than grades.  - Assessment is more focused on personal growth 
than on peer competition. 
  25- 99 of all learning occurs at the non-conscious 
level. Only 38 of the spoken message is 
transmitted by words. The conscious mind can 
only process one sense at a time. The 
unconscious mind picks up many messages per 
second.  - Change voice pace, volume, tone, and use gestures 
 -  Call on students with an outstretched hand with 
the palm facing up  -  Smile
 
  26- We tend to remember 
 - 10 from reading 
 -  20 hearing words 
 -  30 looking at pictures 
 -  50 watching a movie, looking at an exhibit, 
watching a demonstration, seeing it actually done  -  70 participating in a discussion, giving a talk 
 -  90 doing a dramatic presentation, simulation, 
doing the real thing 
  27University of California Brain Research showed 
that music can charge and energize the brain. 
The brain gains more energies from certain 
frequencies when it harmonizes with body rhythms 
(around 8000 Hz). By listening to Mozart 
selections for just 10 minutes, testers 
demonstrated elevated intelligence scores on 
spatial-temporal reasoning problems. Play 
positive, energizing music before the start of 
class Play triumphal music to supplement moments 
of emotional highs Allow musical creativity for 
assessment projects.
Music
Music 
 28- What Are the Trends in Schools With Greatest 
Gains in Standardized Test Scores, Graduation 
Rates, and High Achievement?  - Consistent in-school writing assessment in every 
subject  -  Frequent common assessments  short, immediate 
feedback, collaboratively scored  -   Intervention  immediate and decisive 
 -  Constructive use of data  students, classes, 
schools  -   
 -  
 
  29Report Filter --gt Filter criteria Subject 
MathGrade Eleventh GradeFilter All Students 
Report Filter --gt Filter criteria Subject 
MathGrade Eleventh GradeFilter All Students 
Subject MathGrade Eleventh GradeFilter All 
Students  
 30Subject MathGrade Eleventh GradeFilter 
Include IEP-Autism, IEP-Deaf-blindness, 
IEP-Deafness, IEP-Emotional Disturbance, 
IEP-Hearing Impairment, IEP-Mental Retardation, 
IEP-Multiple Disabilities, IEP-Other Health 
Impairment, IEP-Specific Learning Disability, 
IEP-Speech or Language Impairment  
 31The Actual Legislation http//www.ed.gov/about/of
fices/list/oese/legislation.html 
 32(No Transcript)