Title: TEKS-Based Assessment
1TEKS-Based Assessment
2In this next session, we will be talking about
assessing the TEKS, and the types of things you
may do in the classroom to measure how well a
child has learned TEKS content.
3As a group, talk about the different types of
assessments currently used in your classrooms.
After everyone has shared the assessments they
use, summarize the types of assessments used by
the collective group on page 12-94 of your
recording sheet.
4Which assessments were identified by your group ?
5Did your group identify
- Before the lesson (diagnostic) assessment?
- During the lesson (formative) assessment?
- After the lesson (summative) assessment?
6This section of the TEKS training will introduce
how diagnostic, formative, and summative
assessments may be used in your classroom.
7Why should we focus on TEKS-based assessment?
8Within Texas Education Code, the Texas
Legislature has identified a common curriculum
(TEKS) for every student in the state, and a
common assessment (TAKS, TAKS-Alt, or TAKS-I)
beginning at grade three.
9 28.002. REQUIRED CURRICULUM. (a) Each school
district that offers kindergarten through grade
12 shall offer, as a required curriculum (1) a
foundation curriculum that includes (A) English
language arts (B) mathematics (C) science and
(D) social studies, consisting of Texas, United
States, and world history, government, and
geography and
10 TAC 101.3 (a) The goal of the statewide
assessment program is to provide all eligible
Texas students an appropriate statewide
assessment that measures and supports their
achievement of the essential knowledge and skills
of the state-mandated curriculum.
11TEC 39.023. ADOPTION AND ADMINISTRATION OF
INSTRUMENTS. (f) The assessment instruments
shall be designed to include assessment of a
student's problem-solving ability and
complex-thinking skills using a method of
assessing those abilities and skills that is
demonstrated to be highly reliable.
12SECTION I
13Section I Diagnostic Assessment
14The 79th Texas Legislature has appropriated
funding for schools to provide accelerated
reading and math intervention for struggling
students in Grades K-6 during the 2005-2006
school year.
-TEA, 2005
15District-wide mathematics diagnostics, such as
the Texas Math Diagnostic System, should be used
to identify students with mathematics
difficulties.
-TEA, 2005
16So if instruction must meet students needs, how
must we evaluate those needs prior to
instruction?
17Why use diagnostic assessment?
- Required by law, struggling students must be
identified and served prior to failing the grade
five mathematics TAKS - This type of assessment helps us evaluate the
knowledge students have retained from prior
instruction, or learned at home - Diagnostic assessment can help educators tailor
instruction within a unit based on student need
18Diagnostic assessments should be examined by the
teacher to determine which TEKS student
expectation statements should be emphasized
within a unit of study. A formal grade should not
be given.
19Please note
- Diagnostic assessments should be open-ended in
nature and allow for many types of student
responses - Include items that require students to
communicate their thinking - Include items that require students to use
multiple representations - Multiple choice questions should NOT be used in
this type of assessment
20Pretend you are a third grade teacher. What
concepts and skills would you expect your
students to know about 2-D and 3-D geometry prior
to instruction?List these concepts and skills on
your recording sheet, page number 12-94
21Use the TEKS as your Guide
- (2.7) The student uses attributes to identify
two- and three-dimensional geometric figures.
The student compares and contrasts two- and
three-dimensional geometric figures or both. The
student is expected to - (A) describe attributes (the number of vertices,
faces, edges, sides) of two- and
three-dimensional geometric figures such as
circles, polygons, spheres, cones, cylinders,
prisms, and pyramids, etc,
22- (B) use attributes to describe how 2
two-dimensional figures or 2 three-dimensional
geometric figures are alike or different - (C) cut two-dimensional geometric figures apart
and identify the new geometric figures formed
23What content related to 2-D and 3-D geometric
vocabulary are you required to teach in third
grade?
24Use the TEKS as your Guide
- (3.9) The student uses formal geometric
vocabulary. The student is expected to - (A) identify, classify, and describe two- and
three-dimensional geometric figures by their
attributes. The student compares two-dimensional
figures and three-dimensional figures, or both by
their attributes using formal geometry vocabulary.
25The diagnostic assessment used should require
students to access and communicate prior
learning. This will help the teacher identify
patterns in what students (individual and whole
class) know about 2-D and 3-D geometry prior to
instruction.
26Ideally, the diagnostic assessment created would
also help the teacher identify student readiness
to learn about the identification and
classification of geometric figures using formal
geometric vocabulary.
27A third grade teacher developed the diagnostic
assessment included in your packet. With the
help of your group, evaluate the students work
and be ready to answer the following questions.
28Search for Evidence
- Do these students understand how to identify and
classify 2-D and 3-D figures? - Do these students communicate using formal
geometry vocabulary (vertices, polygons, sides,
edges, etc.)?
29After answering these questions, what would you
do instructionally to meet the needs of these
students?
30Debrief Instructional Modifications
31SECTION II
32Section II Assessment During the Lesson
33In the past, teachers have relied heavily on
homework to evaluate student learning. This
section will discuss formative assessment methods
teachers may use during the lesson to evaluate
student thinking in real time.
34Knowledge-including mathematical knowledge- is
now being seen as socially constructed.
-Silver, et. All, 1990
35Students learn mathematics through
communication. Students need opportunities not
just to listen, but to speak mathematics
themselves-to discuss what they have observed,
why procedures appear to work, or why they think
their solution is correct.
-Silver, et. All, 1990
36Students must construct their own mathematical
understanding. Teachers have to pose questions
and provide opportunities for students to apply
and communicate what they are learning.
37Posing questions where the answer becomes the
question opens up the social space in the
classroom. This allows all students the
opportunity to participate, and makes them
accountable for the content they are learning.
38Assessing measurement
39Given the changes in the measurement strand of
the elementary TEKS, teachers will now be
responsible for teaching more content to students
in grades 3-5.
40Area is an important concept that will be
developed throughout grades K-5
41Review the TEKS in second, third, fourth and
fifth grade that develop the concept of area.
42Read the following TEKS knowledge and skill and
student expectation statements.
43(4.11) Measurement. The student
appliesmeasurement concepts. The student
isexpected to estimate and measure tosolve
problems involving length(including perimeter)
and area. Thestudent uses measurement tools
tomeasure capacity/volume andweight/mass.
44- The student is expected to(A) estimate and use
measurement tools to determine length (including
perimeter),area, capacity and weight/mass
usingstandard units SI (metric) and
customary(B) perform simple conversions
betweendifferent units of length, between
differentunits of capacity, and between
differentunits of weight within the
customarymeasurement system
45Find a partner in the room. Discuss how you
would assess student learning on this topic.
46Share assessment ideas that you and your table
partner discussed.
47Assessment opportunities may be open-ended to
capture multiple responses from students. Think
about the assessment ideas you discussed with
your partner for TEKS statement 4.11 A and B.
48In an open-response assessment, a teacher might
ask students to identify three objects in the
room with an area greater than 15 square inches.
49This task would allow students to participate in
the assessment regardless of their cognitive
level.
50- Review the student work found on pages 12-110
12-113 of your packet. What do the students
responses tell you about their understanding of
area?
51Once students have identified different objects
in the room with an area greater than 15, the
teacher may begin a list of objects found by
students. This will allow many different objects
to be shared with the class and help the teacher
identify students that need additional support.
52- Once a list has been generated by the class, the
teacher may ask the class if there are any
objects on the list that they believe have an
area smaller than 15 square inches. Allow the
class an opportunity to validate or delete the
objects on the list.
53Things to keep in mind
- One of the reasons teachers want to use early
comparison activities with area is to help
students distinguish between size (area) shape,
length and other dimensions - Direct comparisons of two areas is nearly
impossible, unless the shapes have a common
dimension or property
54- Develop the idea that area is a measure of
covering a 2-dimensional surface. Formulas do
not need to be developed at this grade level. It
is appropriate for students to use tools such as
inch tiles to cover the area of an object.
Listen as they discuss how to determine the area
when it is impossible to fit the tiles over the
object.
55Make a station at which students create objects
that have an area greater or less than a given
figure. Have students draw new figures and prove
their solutions.
IDEA Irregular Shapes
56With your table group, identify two other area
assessments that you might use with students.
57SECTION III
58This section will focus on summative assessment
of the TEKS
59 Myth
- Students must be given selected response items in
grades 3-5 to prepare them for TAKS assessments
60Reality
- Students must retain the TEKS content they are
learning each year, it is longitudinal content
knowledge that prepares students for TAKS
assessments, not test-taking strategies.
61Types of Summative Assessment (Stiggins, 1997)
- Selected response
- Essay
- Performance assessment
- Personal communication
62This section will highlight three of the
summative assessments mentioned by Stiggins,
selected response, performance assessment and
personal communication.
63Selected Response
- Questions are developed to determine if a student
can reason effectively in order to select the
best or most appropriate answer. - Examples
- Yes/no
- True/false
- Fill in the blank
- Multiple choice
- Matching
- All of the above/None of the above
64Identify a TEKS statement in 4th Grade that may
be assessed using a selected response method.
65Review the selected-response item provided on
page 12-115 of your packet, what is wrong with
the way this item is constructed?
66Performance Assessment
- With performance assessments, we observe students
while they are performing or we examine the
products they create, and judge the level of
proficiency demonstrated on a given task. We
compare student performance to predetermined
measures, usually with the assistance of a
teacher-created rubric.
67Look at the student work found on pages 12-120
through 12-122. Answer the questions found on
page 12-119 of your packet.
68Performance Assessment, Volume
- Review the 5th grade performance assessment
related to volume. - Review the following questions to determine
students procedural and conceptual knowledge and
communication related to the concept of volume.
69Student Work is Judged Based on
- Conceptual Knowledge
- Does the student know the content?
- Procedural Knowledge
- Does the student know the process to solve the
problem? - Communication
- How does the student communicate what they know
about the problem and how do they communicate the
steps used to solve the problem? - (ESC, Region IV)
70Identify a TEKS statement in 4th grade that could
be assessed using a performance assessment.
71Personal Communication
- Teachers are able to gather a lot of information
from students by talking to them. - Teachers may
- Conduct conferences
- Conduct oral exams to assess mastery of content
- Ask students to journal
- Ask students talk or write about content with
peers -
72Identify a TEKS statement in 3rd Grade that may
be assessed using personal communication. With
your group, discuss assessment options.
73Things to remember when designing TEKS-Based
Assessments
- The TEKS should be the focus of the assessment,
keep the assessment on grade level - Search for the appropriate rigor and application
in the assessment items/tasks used with students - Make sure the assessment created aligns with the
processes used in instruction - Never see an assessment as an endpoint, but a
process that will yield information and inform
next steps
74A quality assessment provides a clear, accurate,
and timely picture of what a student has learned,
while at the same time spelling out which
achievement expectations have not yet been met.
-Stiggins Knight, 1997
75The Assessment Principle
- Assessment should become a routine part of the
ongoing classroom activity rather than an
interruption. - NCTMs Principles and Standards for School
Mathematics (2000)