Title: Progress Monitoring
1Progress Monitoring
- Presented by the Office of Psychological
Services - Bartow County School SystemMarch 14, 2008
2What is Progress Monitoring?
- Progress monitoring is a scientifically-based
practice of continuous monitoring that teachers
use to evaluate the effectiveness of instruction.
-
- The major purposes of progress monitoring are
to - Describe the childs rate of response to
instruction and - Build more effective instruction.
(Fuchs and Fuchs)
3Differences Between Traditional Assessments and
Progress Monitoring
- Traditional assessments
- Lengthy tests
- Not administered on a regular basis
- Teachers do not receive immediate feedback
- Student scores are based on national scores and
averages - Not sensitive to short term gains in basic skills
(Wright).
Hosp and Donaldson, 2004
4Curriculum Based Measurement (CBM)
- Curriculum-Based Measurement (CBM) is one type
of Progress Monitoring - CBM provides an easy and quick method for
gathering student progress. - Teachers can analyze student scores and adjust
student goals and instructional programs. - Student data can be compared to teachers
classroom or school district data..
(Fuchs and Fuchs)
5Progress Monitoring
- Teachers identify goals for what their students
will learn over time - Students are given probes at regular intervals
(weekly, every two weeks, monthly, etc.) - Measure their students progress toward these
goals by comparing expected (benchmarks) and
actual rates of learning - Adjust instruction as needed
(Fuchs and Fuchs)
6Benefits of Progress Monitoring
- accelerated learning because students are
receiving more appropriate instruction - more informed instructional decisions
- documentation of student progress for
accountability purposes - more efficient communication with families and
other professionals about students progress - higher expectations for students by teachers and
- fewer Special Education referrals.
- Overall, the use of progress monitoring results
in more efficient and appropriately targeted
instructional techniques and goals, which
together, move all students to faster attainment
of important state standards of achievement.
"Common Questions for Progress Monitoring."
Student Progress Monitoring.
7Origins of Progress Monitoring
8Why Progress Monitoring?
- Research shows
- CBM produces accurate, meaningful information
about students academic levels and their rates
of improvement. - CBM is sensitive to student improvement.
- CBM corresponds well with high-stakes tests.
- When teachers use CBM to inform their
instructional decisions, students achieve better.
(Fuchs and Fuchs)
9Why Progress Monitoring?
- A significant body of research conducted over
the past 30 years has shown this method to be - a reliable and valid predictor of subsequent
performance on a variety of outcome measures, and
thus useful for a wide range of instructional
decisions (Deno, 2003 Fuchs, Deno, Mirkin,
1984 Good Jefferson, 1998).
(Safer, Nancy, and Steve Fleischman, 2005)
10Key Terminology
- Baselines
- Benchmarks
- Probes
- Data Points
- Fidelity
- Trend Lines
11What is a Baseline?
- Baseline DataInitial information taken on a
skill or behavior - It serves as a reference point for all future
data collected on a student
12What is a Benchmark?
- Benchmarks
- Expected rates of learning
- Often, measured three times a year (e.g., Fall,
Winter, Spring)
13Why Benchmark?
- The rationale for conducting benchmarking three
times a year with ALL students, even those
students who have met or exceeded the benchmark,
is that there is no guarantee students will
continue to learn the skills being taught. - Benchmarking ALL students three times a year
provides educators with an efficient and accurate
indicator of current skill performance. It also
allows educators to monitor which students are on
track for making AYP without having to wait until
the end of the year testing.
Frequently Asked Questions About Curriculum
Based Measurement in Reading." Student Progress
Monitoring.
14What is a Probe?
- A probe is a quick sampling of a basic skill such
as, reading fluency or math calculation. - Depending on the skill being measured, probes can
be administered one-on-one or in a group setting. - Provides data to help judge the effectiveness of
interventions/curriculum
15Finding Probes for Progress Monitoring
- Probe items can be randomly selected from the
entire year's curriculum, or - Some research groups offer free probes. There are
probes to measure progress in pre-reading,
reading, math, spelling, and writing, or - You can use commercially available probes such
as, AIMSweb or DIBELS
(Implementing CBM in the Classroom"
http//www.ncld.org/content/view/315/456053)
16Oldest Known Reading Fluency Probe
17The importance of data points
- Data Points
- The more the merrier, but
- Balance IDEAL with FEASIBLE
18The importance of data points
19(No Transcript)
20Exercise / Diet
Exercise / Diet Take 2
21Fidelity
- Fidelity of Implementation is the delivery of
instruction in the way in which it was designed
to be delivered. - Schools should set up systems to insure that
interventions are being implemented with fidelity.
(Gresham, MacMillan, Beebe-Frankenberger,
Bocian, 2000)
22Trend Lines
- Trend lines indicate the rate of improvement
- Provide insight into future performance (i.e.,
Will they meet their goal?)
23Trend Line Calculation
24Trend Line Calculation -- Tukey Method
- Step 1 Divide the data points into three equal
sections by drawing two vertical lines. (If the
points divide unevenly, group them
approximately). - Step 2 In the first and third sections, find the
median data-point and median instructional week.
Locate the place on the graph where the two
values intersect and mark with an X. - Step 3 Draw a line through the two Xs,
extending to the margins of the graph. This
represents the trend-line or line of improvement.Â
(Fuchs and Fuchs)
25Trend Line Calculation
(Fuchs and Fuchs)
26- If the trend line is steeper than the goal line,
we may need to raise our goal. - If the trend line is moving away from the goal
line or running parallel, we may need to modify
instruction in some way or increase the
intensity, frequency, etc.
Trend Line
Goal line
Goal line
Trend Line
27(No Transcript)
28What About Behavior?
29Behavior Observations
30ChartDog
http//www.interventioncentral.org/tools.php
31The Behavior Reporter
http//www.interventioncentral.org/tools.php
32Functional Behavior Assessment (FBA)
- FBA is a systematic process of describing problem
behavior and identifying the environmental
factors and surrounding events associated with
problem behavior. - This information is used to develop an effective
plan for reducing the frequency or severity of
problem behavior, and to identify and teach more
appropriate replacement behavior. - Observation is conducted to determine the
antecedents and consequences of the identified
problem behavior. The demands of the
environment(s) in which the behavior occurs may
be setting events and/or predictors of the
behavior.
33Information Rich, Knowledge Poor
- The most important part of progress monitoring is
not just collecting datait is using that data to
make sound instructional decisions.
34 35Web Resources
- Student Progress Monitoring
- http//www.studentprogress.org/
- The Center's mission is to provide technical
assistance to states and districts and
disseminate information about progress monitoring
practices proven to work in different academic
content areas (Gr. K-5). - Responsiveness to Intervention (RTI) How to Do
It - http//www.nrcld.org/rti_manual/
- Responsiveness to Intervention (RTI) How to Do
It (RTI Manual) is offered as a tool for
implementing RTI. The RTI Manual can help you
understand, design, and evaluate the RTI features
that you will implement. This RTI Manual is based
on current research regarding the features of
RTI. - Research Institute on Progress Monitoring
- http//www.progressmonitoring.net/
- The Office of Special Education Programs (OSEP)
has funded the Research Institute on Progress
Monitoring to develop a system of progress
monitoring to evaluate effects of individualized
instruction on access to and progress within the
general education curriculum.
36Web Resources
- Progress Monitoring and Reporting Network
- http//www.fcrr.org/pmrn/
- The Florida Center for Reading Research was
established by Governor Jeb Bush in January,
2002. It is jointly administered at Florida State
University by the Learning Systems Institute and
the College of Arts and Sciences. - Intervention Central
- http//www.interventioncentral.org
- Intervention Central offers free tools and
resources to help school staff and parents to
promote positive classroom behaviors and foster
effective learning for all children and youth.
The site was created by Jim Wright, a school
psychologist and school administrator from
Central New York. - AIMSweb Progress Monitoring and Response to
Intervention System - http//www.aimsweb.com
- AIMSweb is a scientifically based, formative
assessment system that 'informs' the teaching and
learning process by providing continuous student
performance data and reporting improvement to
parents, teachers, and administrators to enable
evidence-based evaluation and data-driven
instruction.
37References
- "Common Questions for Progress Monitoring."
Student Progress Monitoring. National Center on
Student Progress Monitoring. 5 Mar. 2008
lthttp//www.studentprogress.org/progresmon.asp2gt.
- Frequently Asked Questions About Curriculum
Based Measurement in Reading." Student Progress
Monitoring. National Center on Student Progress
Monitoring. 6 Mar. 2008 lthttp//www.studentprogres
s.org/faq.aspgt. - Fuchs, Lynn S., and Douglas Fuchs. "2005 Summer
Institute on Student Progress Monitoring."
Student Progress Monitoring. National Center on
Student Progress Monitoring. 18 Sept. 2007
http//www.studentprogress.org/summer_institute/in
st2005.aspUsingCurriculumBasedMeasurementforProgr
essMonitoringinMathematics - "Functional Behavioral Assessment." Utah's
Behavior Initiatives Home Page. Utah State Office
of Education. 10 Mar. 2008 lthttp//www.updc.org/ub
i/index.htmlgt. - Gresham, F.M., MacMillan, D.L.,
Beebe-Frankenberger, M.E., Bocian, K.M. (2000).
Treatment integrity in learning disabilities
intervention research Do we really know how
treatments are implemented? Learning Disabilities
Research Practice, 15(4), 198-205. - Hosp, Michelle, and Whitney Donaldson. What
Progress Monitoring Can Do for YOU. 15th Annual
CASE Conference, Nov. 2004, Council of
Administrators of Special Education. 5 Mar. 2008
http//www.studentprogress.org/library/Presentatio
ns/WhatProgressMonitoring.ppt - Johnson, E., Mellard, D.F., Fuchs, D.,
McKnight, M.A. (2006). Responsiveness to
intervention (RTI) How to do it. Lawrence, KS
National Research Center on Learning
Disabilities. - Safer, Nancy, and Steve Fleischman. "Research
Matters / How Student Progress Monitoring
Improves Instruction." Educational Leadership 62
(2005) 81-83. 18 Sept. 2007 http//www.ascd.org/a
uthors/ed_lead/el200502_safer.html - "Implementing CBM in the Classroom." National
Center for Learning Disabilities. 2007. 19 Sept.
2007 http//www.ncld.org/content/view/315/456053 - "Progress Monitoring." National Research Center
on Learning Disabilities. 2 Aug. 2007. U.S.
Department of Education, Office of Special
Education Programs. 24 Sept. 2007
http//www.nrcld.org/. - Wright, Jim. Curriculum-Based Measurement a
Manual for Teachers. 6 Mar. 2008
http//www.jimwrightonline.com/pdfdocs/cbaManual.p
df - Wright, Jim. ChartDog 2.0 10 Mar. 2008
http//www.interventioncentral.org/tools.php