Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

September 2007 A Parent’s Guide to the Standard Based Progress Report Christina Fritz Assessment Manager, APS Gina Middleton SBPR Coordinator.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "September 2007 A Parent’s Guide to the Standard Based Progress Report Christina Fritz Assessment Manager, APS Gina Middleton SBPR Coordinator."— Presentation transcript:

1 September 2007 A Parent’s Guide to the Standard Based Progress Report Christina Fritz Assessment Manager, APS fritz_c@aps.edu Gina Middleton SBPR Coordinator RDA Resource Teacher middleton_g@aps.edu

2 September 2007 What are standards? Standards are learning goals that tell us: What students need to know and demonstrate How well they need to know and demonstrate Example: Students must be able to create repeating and growing number patterns by the end of 2 nd grade. (Math: algebra concepts) Standards filter down from the national level and are set for each subject area and grade level (K-12).

3 September 2007 A Useful Definition… Assessment in a standards-based classroom is: The method of “grading” a student Focused on standards learned Different depending on learning needs No surprise to students

4 September 2007 The purpose of the Standards-Based Progress Report (SBPR) is to communicate student progress toward meeting the APS Content and Performance Standards. The New “Report Card”

5 September 2007 Why change? Changing world/21st century learners New demands on society Research on learning and the brain Every student has a right to succeed Assessments need to reflect true understanding Federal mandate to change

6 September 2007 How will teachers know that students are meeting the standards? Standards as assessment outcomes Quality assessments Several chances to learn a concept or skill before being assessed Different assessment types – not always paper/pencil tests

7 September 2007 System of performance levels from 1 to 4 Rubrics tie standards to performance levels when assessing Achievement only (effort, behavior, extra credit, etc. considered separately) Students know and understand learning goals before learning takes place How will teachers know that students are meeting the standards? continued

8 September 2007 Performance Levels are measurements of student achievement 4 – Exceeds Expectations 3- Meets Expectations 2 – Near Expectations 1- Experiencing Difficulty Area of Need

9 September 2007 Level 3- Meets expectations The student meets expectations toward the grade level standards covered in this grading period. The student’s work proves a solid understanding and display of skills included in the APS Content and Performance Standards. The student is achieving at the accepted grade level performance.

10 September 2007 - Reading Process Fluency Comprehension –Reading Analysis –Writing –Research –Speaking, Listening and Viewing LANGUAGE ARTS MATHEMATICS –Number and Operation –Algebra –Geometry –Measurement –Data and Probability –Communication of math strategies Teachers report Performance Levels for:

11 September 2007 SOCIAL STUDIES –Geography –History –Civics –Economics SCIENCE –Physical Science –Life Science –Earth and Space Science Fine Arts Music Physical Education

12 September 2007 Effort marks are separate from performance marks Effort marks measure student engagement in the classroom by: Participation Work completion

13 September 2007 STUDENT RESPONSIBILITIES 11 criteria for the teachers to complete regarding the student’s responsibilities Complete with EFFORT marks Blank Space at the bottom for teacher to use as needed


Download ppt "September 2007 A Parent’s Guide to the Standard Based Progress Report Christina Fritz Assessment Manager, APS Gina Middleton SBPR Coordinator."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google