ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT1 Overview: Learning Progressions What is a Learning Progression.

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ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT1 Overview: Learning Progressions What is a Learning Progression ? Why is a Learning Progression important?

ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT2 What is a Learning Progression? A set of en route building blocks Subskills and bodies of enabling knowledge Which students need to master to achieve a more distant curricular aim

ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT4 Let’s take a moment to think simply of learning progressions in terms of a basketball game. There are many parts to the game starting with dribbling the ball,

ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT3 Passing the ball

ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT5 Shooting the ball and playing the game,

ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT6 And any good player needs to follow the game plan put together by the coach as well as…

ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT7 Be able to make the strategic adjustments created within the game.

ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT8 In the end, the coach, players, school and community have the societal expectation of a winning game. The same ideas work for understanding learning progressions.

ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT9 Conceptual View of Learning Progressions

ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT10 Novice At the lower end of the progression are “novice” performers (at any grade level), who may (or may not) demonstrate the necessary prerequisite skills or understanding that is needed to be successful (e.g., essential skills/concepts that can be built upon over time).

ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT11 Expert At the other end of the continuum are “expert” performers. Learning progressions descriptors help to “unpack” how learning might unfold for most students over time, moving from novice to expert performance

ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT12 Learning Progressions Construct Similarities Let’s look a little deeper into Learning Progressions. According to Michael T. Battista, there are common characteristics of the LEARNING PROGRESSIONS construct. Within the research literature, descriptions of the LEARNING PROGRESSIONS construct possess both differences and similarities. Let’s take a moment to first look at similarities:

ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT13 Research Based LEARNING PROGRESSIONS "are based on research syntheses and conceptual analyses” (Smith et al., 2006, p. 1); "Learning progressions should make systematic use of current research on children’s learning " (NRC, 2007, p. 219).

ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT14 Anchored LEARNING PROGRESSIONS "are anchored on one end by what is known about the concepts and reasoning of students. … At the other end, learning progressions are anchored by societal expectations. … [LEARNING PROGRESSIONS also] propose the intermediate understandings between these anchor points that contribute to building a more mature understanding" (NRC, 2007, p. 220).

ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT8 Organized LEARNING PROGRESSIONS focus on core ideas, conceptual knowledge, and connected procedural knowledge, not just skills. LEARNING PROGRESSIONS organize "conceptual knowledge around core ideas" (NRC, 2007, p. 220). LEARNING PROGRESSIONS "Suggest how well- grounded conceptual understanding can develop" (NRC, 2007, p. 219).

ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT16 Multiple Sequences LEARNING PROGRESSIONS "recognize that all students will follow not one general sequence, but multiple (often interacting) sequences" (NRC, 2007, p. 220).

ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT17 Differences Differences: There are several differences in how the learning progressions construct is used in the literature.

ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT18 Time Spans LEARNING PROGRESSIONS differ in the time spans they describe. Some progressions describe the development of students' thinking over a span of years; others describe the progression of thinking through a particular topic or instructional unit.

ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT19 Grain Size LEARNING PROGRESSIONS differ in the grain size of their descriptions. Some are appropriate for describing minute-to-minute changes in students' development of thought, while others better describe more global progressions through school curricula.

ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT20 Different Audiences LEARNING PROGRESSIONS differ in the audience for which they are written. Some LEARNING PROGRESSIONS are written for researchers, some for standards writers, some for assessment developers (formative and summative), and some for teachers.

ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT21 Differ in how they describe student learning. Focus on numerically "measuring" student progress While others focus on describing the nature or categories of students' cognitive structures and reasoning Learning Progressions

ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT22 Overview

ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT23 The most important rule regarding this conceptual view is that long-term memory is not about a collection of skills and knowledge, but connections among skills and knowledge built upon over time.

ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT24 What a Learning Progression is Not It is not unerringly accurate. It is not necessarily suitable for all students. It is not the one and only way for students to master the targeted curriculum. It is not necessarily better just because it is complex.

ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT25 Why Learning Progressions are Important By identifying the component knowledge and skills that constitute a curricular outcome, teachers can have a better idea of what to teach and test and when to teach and test it. Learning Progressions can help teachers design instructionally sensitive tests that more specifically identify points of student misunderstanding and guide the teacher in designing effective re-teaching lessons.

ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT26 Rubric/Scoring Guides Teachers can design learning progressions for scoring guides or rubrics. For example, a scoring guide or rubric for an open-ended question might be organized in a sequence to represent to goal.

ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT27 A Scoring Progression Rubric 0 No response. 1 Student does respond but response is off- topic or inaccurate and incomplete. 2 Response is accurate but incomplete. 3 Response is both accurate and complete.

ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT28 Constructing a Learning Progression: “Thoughtful, well-intentioned educators can undertake task analyses for an identical curricular outcome, yet end up with strikingly different learning progressions. Happily, almost any carefully conceived learning progression is more likely to benefit students than teachers' off-the-cuff decision making.” »--W. James Popham, Ph.D. Key Point #1

ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT29 Constructing a Learning Progression: Learning Progressions should contain only those subskills and bodies of enabling knowledge that represent the most significant building blocks of the targeted outcome to be mastered. Key Point #2

ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT30 Constructing a Learning Progression: “Isolating and sequencing the building blocks underlying students' attainment of a challenging curricular aim requires rigorous cerebral effort.” »-- W. James Popham, Ph.D. Key Point #3

ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT31 Simplicity vs. Complexity Finally, a learning progression is not necessarily better just because it is complex. As a matter of fact, if the learning progression is too complex it is not likely to be used at all. And that defeats the purpose for it.

ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT32 Summary A learning progression represents the best thinking of a teacher or teachers about the component knowledge content and skill development needed for the student to master a particular curricular outcome or aim. It helps the teacher see the order in which the component parts should be taught. It is a useful tool to know when to test and how to construct test items that are instructionally sensitive.

ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT Kansas State Department of Education ASSESSMENT LITERACY PROJECT33 For More Information Learning Progression Activities Glossary and Resources