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Tips to Scoring the ELA Smarter Balanced Interim Assessments

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Presentation on theme: "Tips to Scoring the ELA Smarter Balanced Interim Assessments"— Presentation transcript:

1 Tips to Scoring the ELA Smarter Balanced Interim Assessments
This training is intended for educators setting up access to and using the English Language Arts Smarter Balanced Interim Assessments through the WCAP portal. Comprehensive and Block Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction

2 Navigating Interim Support – WCAP Portal
The Washington Comprehensive Assessment Program (WCAP) portal houses the: Interim assessments Teacher Hand Scoring System (THSS) Training Materials for hand scoring (TIDE) Online Reporting System (ORS) Administration Manual Online - Interim The WCAP portal is your access point for the Washington assessment system tools and resources. This is where the Smarter Balanced Interim and hand scoring resources are housed along with sign-in access for the Summative assessments. Other resources and tools on the portal include access to the digital library and administrative and teaching supports for schools and classrooms.

3 Start Here http://wa.portal.airast.org/
The first page of the portal displays recent announcements and display tabs to access all support materials. There are four access points: Students and Families, Test Administrators (TA), Test Coordinators, and Technology Coordinators. Some materials are available in multiple locations, but classroom educators will find what they need under the Test Administrators tab.

4 Manuals Interim Tests Reports
ELA hand scoring training documents are also located here. Hand Scoring Interim Tests Classroom Activities for Interim Once you’ve entered the Test Administrators (TA) interface, more options appear. The Test Administration Resources icon houses all manuals and non-secure resources. The TIDE icon, depending on your role, includes: managing user accounts, managing student information, assessment eligibilities and test settings, managing orders for testing materials, managing rosters of students, and managing appeals. Notice the lock in the bottom right corner indicating access is secure and will need a secure login to access. Secure material related to the assessments are also located here, including the summative Performance Task Classroom Activities and ELA Interim Scoring Training materials. The Test Administration icon is where educators assign, approve, and activate assessments their students are taking, both interim and summative. The Interim Assessment Classroom Activities icon houses the Classroom Activity that needs to preface the Interim Performance Tasks. Once students have completed the interim, educators access the Interim Teacher Hand Scoring System (THSS) icon to score student constructed responses and essays. Once all scores have been submitted, educators access the Online Reporting System icon to view scores for their assigned students. Reports

5 Administrator Roles within WCAP Portal Depending on your district size and configuration, these roles may be somewhat varied. District Coordinator Classroom Teacher Confirm that student information has been rolled over into TIDE Assign educator roles Decide which interim assessment to use Via the Test Administration Tab, select the test and activate the session Approve students so they may begin Once all students are finished, stop session District Coordinators confirm that all student information rolls over into TIDE and assigns educator roles. Classroom Teaches will assign the specific assessment, activate the session ones students are logged in and will stop the session when all students are finished.

6 Interim Assessments Now that the location of materials, access to tests, and user roles have been discussed, let’s take a look at the actual interim assessments.

7 Interim Assessment ICA and IAB Options
There are two Interim Assessment Options available in the Test Administration icon.

8 Overview of Interim Process
Decide which assessment your students should take Interim Comprehensive Assessment (ICA) Interim Assessment Block (IAB) Check to be sure student rosters are loaded in TIDE Set up the test using the Test Administration tab Train for scoring using the Training Guide and Exemplar materials Administer the test with students Score student answers in THSS For a successful interim administration, follow these four steps. Administering the interim is the classroom teacher’s opportunity to interact with students and the testing interface as they take the assessment.

9 Administration Characteristics
ICAs and IABs can be administered multiple times during the year Tests draw from the same interim pool. Students may encounter some of the same items on the ICA as they will on the IAB. Decisions about test choice and frequency of use are determined by district or school plans. Currently both are fixed-form, online tests. Both will become adaptive over time as item bank allows. All Smarter Balanced assessment items come from the same pool. Because of the newness of the assessment, there are a limited number of test questions available. Students may encounter the same item in an ICA as they will in an IAB. Performance tasks in both interim pools (the ICAs and the IABs) are the same within a grade level. Due to the newness of the item bank, all students currently accessing a specific grade level interim will see the same assessment. This is called a fixed-form. As the item bank grows, these test will become adaptive.

10 Interim Assessment Similarities
August 7, 2014 Interim Assessment Similarities Both ICA and IAB options are: Available at grades 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and high school Administered at teacher’s discretion, including using off grade-level Teacher Scored Constructed Response Majority of items are automatically scored Short-Text, brief writes, and full writes are hand-scored by teachers; requires scoring training using a rubric through provided materials Administering or offering two different types of assessments provide flexibility. This slide highlights the characteristics that are the same for both types of interim assessments.

11 Interim Comprehensive Assessment (ICA)
Same design as summative assessment Assess the same claims and standards Reports give the overall scale score, performance level designation, and claim score information Timing of administration to mirror summative Approximately 4 hours + 30 minute classroom activity Is arranged in two sections Computer Adaptive Test (CAT) Performance Task (PT) Teachers will need to hand-score short-text items, brief writes and a full write Once teachers submit the hand scores, reports are available Reports provides teachers with information on a student’s General areas of strength or need Readiness for the end-of-year summative assessment Because the ICA mirrors the summative test, it is divided into two sections, the Computer Adaptive Test (CAT) [Currently this portion of the assessment is non-adaptive, but it is equivalent to the CAT blueprint of the summative assessment] and Performance Task (PT). These can be given in one day, or students can log-in over multiple days to complete to complete the entire assessment.

12 A Closer Look at the ICA Reading Brief Writes Listening Research
Computer Adaptive Test (CAT)* Performance Task (PT) Reading Brief Writes Listening Research Classroom Activity Located in Portal Administered prior to students accessing the PT Part 1: Access Sources and answer Research questions Part 2: Full Write The ICAs have both the CAT portion and a Performance Task. CAT (sections 1 & 2) Reading, stand-alone Research, stand-alone Writing, and Brief Writes (section 1) Listening (section 2) Performance Task (section 3) A Classroom Activity is administered prior to students taking the PT section of the test. The PT is broken into two sections: Part 1: Read 2-5 sources and answer 2-3 Research questions related to the sources. Part 2: Students will be prompted to write a full essay (i.e. full write) using sources in Part 1 as evidence in their writing. The PT articles (or sources) are available during both parts of the PT. Students can take Global Notes during Part 1 and access and use their Global Notes in Part 2. *Currently this portion of the assessment is non-adaptive, but it is equivalent to the CAT portion on the summative assessment

13 ELA Comprehensive Interim - Estimated Time
Content Response Type Estimated Time* **Computer Adaptive Test (CAT) Reading Lit Mostly machine scored, a few hand scored 2 hours Reading Info Brief Write All hand scored Edit/Revise All machine scored Listening Research Performance Task (PT) ***Classroom Activity 30 min Part 1: Research Part 2: Full Write Hand scored 1 1/2 –2 hours *Estimated time is based on 1–2 minutes to answer a MC question and up to 5 minutes to answer a constructed response. Plus time to read stimulus/sources. **Currently this portion of the assessment is non-adaptive, but it is equivalent to the CAT portion on the summative assessment ***Located in TIDE- Administered prior to students taking the PT Please note, these are estimated times.

14 Interim Assessment Blocks (IAB)
Short, focused sets or “blocks” of items that measure similar content 6-8 blocks per grade level, including ELA Performance Task blocks Offers a smaller set of targets and more flexibility for administration Reports state “Below Standard, “At/Near Standard,” and “Above Standard” Provides teacher with Information about a student’s strengths or needs More detailed content information for instructional purposes Teacher hand scoring, dependent on the block See next slide Blocks are shorter, more focused assessments. Educators can access a particular topic based on the block focus. Teachers can administer more than one in a day, or access them individually over a period of time. Reports are not as specific as the comprehensive since they are broken down into distinct blocks and no longer cover a range of ELA items.

15 ELA Blocks- Estimated time
Number of Items Response Type Estimated Time* Reading Lit 13–15 Mostly machine scored, a few hand scored 45 min–1 hour Reading Info 14–16 Brief Write 6 brief writing tasks All hand scored 1 hour Edit/Revise 13–16 All machine scored 30 min Listening Research 17–18 All Performance Tasks 2–3 research items and 1 full write Mostly hand-scored 1–2 hours, including 30 minutes for the classroom activity. *Estimated time is based on 1–2 minutes to answer a MC question and up to 5 to answer a constructed response. Plus time to read stimulus/sources. Note: Some blocks require hand scoring while others will be scored completely by machine. While the summative items are professionally scored, interim hand scoring is done by local educators.

16 Interim Block Assessments
Grade 3 PT = Opinion Grade 4 & 5 PT = Narrative Grade 6-8 and high school PT = Argumentative Currently, only 1 Performance Task is available per grade level.

17 Scoring the Assessments
Once students have completed the comprehensive and/or block assessments, educators will have an active role in scoring students’ reading, writing, and research constructed responses plus the full write.

18 Accessing hand-scoring training materials.
The training materials are in two locations. Educators may access the hand scoring training materials prior to students testing by locating them in TIDE under the THSS Materials tab. This location allows educators to access the Exemplars and Training Guides prior to scoring and therefore allows more time to become familiar with the scoring process and criteria. The same hand scoring training materials are located in the Teacher Hand Scoring System (THSS) and can be accessed as each item is scored, but is not available until students have completed testing. Remember, the ICA requires hand scoring. Not all IABs require hand-scoring (see slide 15). Prior to testing, log in to TIDE and select the THSS Materials tab which houses PDFs of each scoring set for every hand-scored item. These same scoring sets are also located in the THSS but cannot be accessed there until students are done testing and teachers actively start scoring.

19 Within TIDE, the ELA scoring materials are located in the THSS Materials tab.

20 Teacher Hand Scoring System (THSS)
Read and score student responses Access, download/print the Training Guide and Exemplar Sets to train on scoring as you are scoring* Access scores in the ORS ELA IABs for Edit/Revise, Listening and Research do not require hand scoring. Once inside the THSS portal, educators will be able to select, read, and score students’ constructed responses. * To access materials prior to testing, log in to TIDE and select the THSS Materials tab. These are the same scoring materials located in the THSS but can be accessed in TIDE prior to students testing.

21 Where are the constructed response items?
ICA or IAB Number of Hand Scored Items Response Type Estimated Teacher Training Time* Reading Lit 1–2 Short-text 45 min–1 hour Reading Info Brief Write 6 Brief write tasks All Performance Tasks 2–4 research items and 1 full write 2-3 short-text and 1 full-write essay 1–2 hours *Estimated time is based on teachers reading through the materials, practicing scoring the Prep set, and scoring the Check set on their own. This can be done in a PLC or individually. ICA This slide identifies where and about how many hand-scored items are located in both the ICA and the IABs and shows estimates of how long it may take to train on an item for the first time.

22 Scoring Overview: Things to Consider
August 7, 2014 Scoring Overview: Things to Consider Interim assessments have the same item types as the summative assessment Most items are machine scored Short-text, Brief Writes, and Full Write are hand scored locally for interims Educators use the Teacher Hand Scoring System (THSS) to score student responses The THSS cannot be accessed until testing is complete ELA Rubrics and training materials are provided within TIDE and THSS After hand-scoring is complete, student scores will be available in the Online Reporting System (ORS) An overview of the scoring process

23 After students have completed the assigned test, you are ready to begin scoring.
Each constructed response item has its own set of scoring materials. Reminder: materials can be found in TIDE prior to testing, or in the Exemplar and Training Guide tabs in the Teacher Hand Scoring System as tests are being scored. When you log in to the THSS, you will be taken to the Student Response List page (see next slide) Locate the student and the item you want to score. Click the Score tab Training to score is something educators are encouraged to do prior to scoring actual student responses. To access materials prior to scoring students’ responses, locate the materials in TIDE. The same materials are available in the THSS and can be reviewed and used during scoring.

24 This is the first page of the THSS
This is the first page of the THSS. Use the drop down menu to select the test and or session. You may also sort by student name, item number, session, or status. Once you are ready, click on the “Score” tab.

25 Student Response Page Each student’s response is on its own page (see next slide). Information on the page includes A rubric A Training Guide tab An Exemplar Set tab A place to enter the score The question or task The student’s response

26 Exemplar and Training Guide Tabs
Student Response Page Rubric Once you click on “Score”, you will be directed to the individual student response page. This is where you can access the Exemplar and Training Guides (the same ones you will find in TIDE), a rubric, a drop down to enter the score, a condition code (information about the condition code can be found in the Training Guide), the item stem, and the student’s response. This particular screenshot does not show the item stem or the student response, however the response will be where this screenshot is cut-off. Student’s Response

27 What will I find in the ELA Training and Exemplar Tabs?
Training Guide Exemplars Instructions Stimulus Item stem Rubric Condition Codes Claim and Target Sheet Prep Set Sample student responses with scores Scoring comments Train using the rubric Check Set Sample student responses without scores Scores and comments located on a key Practice scoring using the rubric Reminder: these are the same materials also located in TIDE.

28 Reporting Results

29 Online Reporting System
To view student scores, back on the portal page, access the Online Reporting System.

30 Online Reporting System - ORS
ICA One overall ELA score Claim information also reported Both CAT and PT portions must be completed by student and all hand-scoring completed by teacher/proctor IAB Scores generated per block If the block includes constructed response items, hand-scoring must be completed to generate a score Reminder – machine scoring happens immediately. Hand-scoring connected to either the ICA or IAB must be completed to generate the student’s score.

31 ICA Score Report Home Example State Bay View School District Bay View Central High Grade 11 For the ICA, each student’s score will be displayed with an overall number, and as a point on a scale of 1-4. Level 1- Below Basic (red) Level 2- Basic (yellow) Level 3- Proficient (green) Level 4- Advanced (blue) Within the Smarter Balanced Digital Library- there are score report modules available that explain how to read score reports based on the user: parents, teachers and administrators.

32 IAB Score Report For the IAB, students will be given one of three descriptions since the blocks do not cover a range of ELA standards: Below Standard At or Near Standard (falls within 1 standard error of the Level 2-to-3 cut score for that block) Above Standard *This screenshot shows what scores will look like for Washington state. Individual teachers will see this by student depending on which blocks have been completed.

33 Final Thoughts The interim assessments are a valuable tool to:
Prepare teachers and students for successful testing. Guide instruction aligned to standards based on student needs.


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