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1 COMMON CORE STATE STANDARDS Assessments based on the Common Core State Standards Vince Dean, Ph.D. Office of Educational Assessment & Accountability.

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Presentation on theme: "1 COMMON CORE STATE STANDARDS Assessments based on the Common Core State Standards Vince Dean, Ph.D. Office of Educational Assessment & Accountability."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 COMMON CORE STATE STANDARDS Assessments based on the Common Core State Standards Vince Dean, Ph.D. Office of Educational Assessment & Accountability

2 Race to the Top Assessment Competition Assessments based on the Common Core State Standards  RTTT Assessment Competition 350 million total 320 million for at least 3-8 and one H.S. grade 30 million for H.S. solution, likely end-of-course  Alternate Assessments based on Alternate Achievement Standards Grant Competition  English Language Proficiency Grant Competition (next federal fiscal year)

3 Race to the Top Assessment Competition Assessment Consortia  Development of an infrastructure and content for a common assessment in measuring CCSS in English Language Arts and Mathematics Two consortia  SMARTER/Balanced Assessment Consortium (SBAC)  Partnership for the Assessment of Readiness for College and Career (PARCC)

4 Race to the Top Assessment Competition U.S. Education Department Requirements  Measure the full breadth of the Common Core State Standards  Extend the range of high quality measurement in both directions  Assessments operational by 2014-15  Consortia must offer an online version  Must take advantage of technology for reporting speed and be instructionally relevant

5 Race to the Top Assessment Competition The consortia:  SMARTER/Balanced 31 states 17 governing states CAT beginning in 2014-2015  PARCC 26 states 11 governing states CBT beginning in 2014-15

6 Introduction to the SMARTER Balanced Assessment Consortium (SBAC)

7 History Smarter Computer Adaptive Mosaic Formative Capacity Balanced Integrated System

8 Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium Governing StatesAdvisory States CT, HI, ID, KS, ME, MI, MO, MT, NC, NM, NV, OR, UT, VT, WA, WI, WV 17 AL, CO, DE,GA, IA, KY, NH, NJ, ND, OH,OK, PA SC, SD 14

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10 Theory of Action Goal To ensure that all students leave high school prepared for postsecondary success in college or a career through increased student learning and improved teaching

11 Theory of Action SMARTER Balanced Assessment Consortium shaped by the following principles: 1. Integrated system 2. Evidence of student performance 3. Teachers integrally involved 4. State-led, transparent and inclusive governance structure

12 Theory of Action SMARTER Balanced Assessment Consortium shaped by the following principles: 5. Continuously improve teaching and learning 6. Useful information on multiple measures 7. Design and implementation adhere to established professional standards

13 Theory of Action Creating a policy environment that supports: a. innovation systems, b. high expectations and c. increased opportunities for students Aligned to the Common Core Standards: a. clearly defined college and career expectations, b. learning progressions c. content/curricular frameworks, d. test maps, and e. instructional processes

14 Theory of Action SBAC policies and standards are effectively communicated to districts and schools: a. Multi-media communications plan b. Score reports

15 SBAC Specific Priorities Ensure all students have access to the technology needed to participate in each component (summative, interim/benchmark, formative) Support research on how to use technology to increase access for all students, in particular those needing accommodations

16 SBAC Specific Priorities Use technology to efficiently deliver training, resources, reports and data; social networks for teachers to develop and disseminate effective CCSS curriculum and instructional tools Create innovative item types that utilize technology and represent real- world contexts

17 SBAC Specific Priorities Use Computer Adaptive Testing engine to maximize accuracy for individual students across the CCSS Standardized accommodations policy and administration practices across states to ensure comparability

18 SBAC Assessment Design Proposal

19 Summative Assessment  Measure full range of CCSS  Computer Adaptive Testing for precision  Timely results  Engage Institutions of Higher Education to ensure achievement standards reflect college and career readiness  Scale scores help inform growth model

20 SBAC Assessment Design Proposal Interim Benchmark Assessment  Allow for finer grain of measurement (e.g., end of unit)  Inform teachers if students on track to be proficient on summative assessments  Multiple opportunities for students to participate  Scale scores help inform growth model

21 SBAC Assessment Design Proposal Formative Assessment  Repository of tools available to teachers to support quick adjustment and differentiated instruction  Help define student performance along the CCSS learning progressions  Concrete strategies for immediate feedback loops

22 SBAC Assessment Design Proposal Teacher Engagement  Integral role in developing test maps for each grade and content area  Item writing, specifications, reviewing, and range-finding for all test types  Teacher-moderated scoring of performance events to inform professional development

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24 Technology Enhanced Item Prototype items courtesy of the Minnesota and Utah Departments of Education

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27 Technology Enhanced Item Minnesota Science Item

28 SBAC Assessment Design Proposal Assessment window vs. single day administration Multiple opportunities to assess Quick results available to support instruction Emphasis on problem-solving and critical thinking

29 Dynamic Learning Maps Alternate Assessment Consortium Alternate Assessments Based on the Common Core State Standards

30 State Participants Iowa Kansas Michigan Mississippi Missouri New Jersey North Carolina Oklahoma Utah West Virginia Wisconsin

31 Other Participants University of Kansas  Center for Educational Testing and Evaluation  Center for Research Methods and Data Analysis  Center for Research on Learning  Special Education Department AbleLink Technologies The ARC The Center for Literacy and Disability Studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Edvantia

32 Feature Overview Learning maps Dynamic assessment Inclusion of instructionally relevant tasks Instructionally embedded and stand-alone versions Advanced feedback and reporting systems (including growth modeling) Technology platform Universal design Evidence centered design including cognitive labs Scaffolding Development of over 14,000 tasks/items Professional development

33 Major Changes Include  Moving Online  Scoring  Reporting

34 Moving to Online Assessment Survey of state testing directors (+D.C.)  41 responses  5 of 41 states have no CBT initiatives  36 of 41 states have current CBT initiatives, including: Operational online assessment Pilot online assessment Plans for moving online

35 Moving to Online Assessment Survey of state testing directors (+D.C.)  Of 36 states with some initiative 21 states currently administer large-scale general populations assessments online 9 states have plans to begin (or expand) online administration of large-scale general populations assessments 8 states currently administer special populations assessments online 2 states have plans to begin (or expand) online administration of special populations assessments

36 Moving to Online Assessment Survey of state testing directors (+D.C.)  Of 36 states with some initiative 5 states currently use Artificial Intelligence (AI) scoring of constructed response items 4 states currently use Computer Adaptive Testing (CAT) technology for general populations assessment 0 states currently use CAT technology for special populations assessment 7 states offer online interim/benchmark assessments 7 states offer online item banks accessible to teachers for creating “formative”/interim/benchmark assessments tailored to unique curricular units

37 Online Assessment -The Michigan Stage Michigan’s online initiatives  Pilot in 2006  Pilot in 2011 (English Language Proficiency)  Pilot in 2012 (Alternate Assessments)  Pilots leading up to operational adoption of SMARTER/Balanced Assessment Consortium products in 2014/15  Constitutional amendment barring unfunded mandates

38 Scoring Maximize objective scoring by  Automated scoring of objective items  AI scoring of extended written response items, technology enhanced items, and performance tasks wherever possible  Distributed hand-scoring of tasks not scorable using AI

39 Scoring as Professional Development Human scorers taken from ranks of teachers  Online training on hand-scoring  Online certification as a hand-scorer  Online monitoring of rater performance  Validation hand-scoring of samples of AI-scored tasks Our experience with teacher-led scoring and rangefinding indicates that it is some of the best professional development that we provide to educators

40 Reporting Current reports can be difficult to read and poorly used Need online reporting of all scores for all stakeholders, including:  Policymakers (aggregate)  Administrators (aggregate and individual)  Teachers (aggregate and individual)  Parents (aggregate and individual)  Students (individual)

41 Reporting Portal Reporting portal needs to be able to integrate reports from classroom metrics all the way to large-scale secure assessment metrics

42 Challenges LEA capacity for online assessment Bandwidth issues, especially in rural areas  Minnesota challenge  Utah example  USED working with FCC on National Broadband Initiative

43 Challenges Item development for computer- adaptive testing Field-testing  Item types  Demographic coverage AI Scoring validation

44 Challenges Psychometrics  Comparability across years and student populations  Equating from year to year Accommodated versions for SWD and ELL  Contrast, read aloud, enlarged print  Braille All challenges will be resolved by 2014-15

45 Timeline for Transition 2010-2011  Getting to know the CCSS/Alignment work  2010 MEAP/2011MME remain the same  State focus will be on technical assistance 2011-2012  Implementation of CCSS in classrooms  2011 MEAP/2012 MME remain the same  State focus will be on instruction/professional development

46 Timeline for Transition 2012-2013  2012 MEAP minimally modified as necessary to reflect the CCSS  2013 MME remains the same  State focus will be on student learning 2013-2014  2013 MEAP based on 2012 model  2014 MME remains the same  State focus will be on preparing for new assessments from SMARTER Consortium 2014-2015  Full implementation - Instruction and assessment based on CCSS

47 DRAFT 471 Contact Information Office of Educational Assessment & Accountability  www.michigan.gov/oeaa www.michigan.gov/oeaa SMARTER Balanced Assessment Consortium  http://smarter.k12partners.org/ http://smarter.k12partners.org/


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