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Biology End-of-Course Exam: 2014 Strategies for Describing Unintended Consequences.

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Presentation on theme: "Biology End-of-Course Exam: 2014 Strategies for Describing Unintended Consequences."— Presentation transcript:

1 Biology End-of-Course Exam: 2014 Strategies for Describing Unintended Consequences

2 Background Information o Students in the classes of 2013 and 2014 are not required to pass a state science exam for the purposes of graduation. o Beginning with the class of 2015, students are required to pass the biology EOC. The biology EOC was first available to those students in the spring of 2012.

3 Types of Questions on the EOC

4 Short Answer Item Types o New Procedures o Field Study o Conclusions o Unintended Consequences o Criteria & Constraints o Test Solution o Research & Explore o Redesign

5 Word Wall 1) Unintended 2) Consequence 3) Effect 4) Insecticide 5) Ecosystem

6

7 Prompt

8 Item AttributesScore Point Effect on a part of the forest ecosystem (#1) 1 Change in another part of the forest ecosystem (#1) Effect on a part of the forest ecosystem (#2) 1 Change in another part of the forest ecosystem (#2) Total (value attributes & score points) 2/2 Attributes Score Points 22 11 00 Unintended Consequence Attributes Unintended Consequence Attributes

9 Attributes o Effect on a part of the forest ecosystem o Did you describe two unintended effects (#1 and #2)? o Common reasons this point is missed: o Writing only a single unintended effect or none at all

10 Attributes o Changes in another part of the forest ecosystem o Did you describe how the unintended effect causes a change (+/-) in another part of the ecosystem? o Common reasons this point is missed: o Many students (80.2%) often do not attempt to describe how the unintended consequences could affect a “specified” part of the given system (e.g. ecosystem). o Some only described a vague effect.

11 Rubric

12 Grading Student Answers: 2 point response

13 Grading Student Answers: 1 point response

14 Grading Student Answers: 0 point response

15 Takeaways 1) Describe both a plausible unintended consequence and how it might affect another area of the system (e.g. ecosystem). 2) Pair this “cause and effect” pair very clearly. For example, number each as (#1 of 2) and (#2 of 2). 3) Be sure to count four individual responses (2 x 2).

16 How would you score this response?

17

18 Sources 1) Science Assessment Updates for 2014: Biology End-of-Course (EOC) Exam o http://www.k12.wa.us/science/pubdocs/BiologyEOCUpdate2014.pdf (Downloaded 3/6/16) http://www.k12.wa.us/science/pubdocs/BiologyEOCUpdate2014.pdf 2) Lessons Learned from Scoring Student Work 2014 o http://www.k12.wa.us/science/pubdocs/2014LessonsLearned.pdf (Downloaded 3/6/16) http://www.k12.wa.us/science/pubdocs/2014LessonsLearned.pdf

19 Correspondence 0 Mitchell.Smith@kent.k12.wa.us Mitchell.Smith@kent.k12.wa.us 0 Kentridge High School 0 Kent School District #415 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 United States License.Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 United States License


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