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Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s.

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Presentation on theme: "Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s."— Presentation transcript:

1 Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org 1 Melissa Fincher, Ph.D. Deputy Superintendent, Assessment & Accountability mfincher@doe.k12.ga.us mfincher@doe.k12.ga.us

2 Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Georgia Milestones Grades 3 – 8 End of Grade (EOG) in language arts, mathematics, science, social studies High School End of Course (EOC) in 9 th Grade Literature & Composition, American Literature & Composition, Coordinate Algebra, Analytic Geometry, Physical Science, Biology, U.S. History, and Economics

3 Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Georgia Milestones Comprehensive single program – an assessment system – not series of tests (e.g., CRCT; EOCT; Writing Assessment) Coherent consistent expectations and challenge to position Georgia students to compete with peers nationally and internationally consistent signal about student preparedness for the next level, be it the next grade, course, or college/career consistent signal about student achievement both within system (across grades and courses) and with external measures (NAEP; PSAT; SAT; ACT) Consolidate combine reading, language arts, and writing into a single measure to align to the standards The Department is working with the University and Technical College Systems, as well as business and industry representatives to define college and career readiness.

4 Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Georgia Milestones Features include: inclusion of constructed-response items in ELA and mathematics, in addition to selected-response items inclusion of a writing component (in response to text) at every grade level and course within the ELA assessment; inclusion of norm-referenced items in every grade and content area to complement the criterion-referenced information and to provide a national comparison; and transition to online administration over time, with online administration considered the primary mode of administration and paper-pencil back-up until transition is completed. Addition of technology-enhanced items beginning in 2016-2017.

5 Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Georgia Milestones Blended: Criterion-Referenced and Norm-Referenced Georgia Milestones will provide: criterion-referenced performance information in the form of four performance levels, depicting students’ mastery of state standards norm-referenced performance information in the form of national percentiles, depicting how students’ achievement compares to peers nationally Note: To provide norm-referenced information, some norm-referenced items may not align to Georgia’s content standards. Only aligned NRT items will contribute to proficiency designations.

6 Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Georgia Milestones It is important to remember that Georgia Milestones is primarily a criterion-referenced test, reflecting the content standards for each grade and course teachers should teach the Georgia state-adopted content standards and not the NRT standards Remember: All important uses of the test results – for both students and educators – will be based on the criterion-referenced scores and proficiency determinations.

7 Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Georgia Milestones Transition to Online Year 1: minimum of 30% online Year 3: minimum of 80% online Year 5: minimum of 100% online Paper/pencil versions will be available for the small number of students who cannot interact with computer due to their disability. Braille forms will be available. A demo of CTB’s online platform can be accessed at this link – http://learnoas.ctb.com/GA/ Click on any one of the demonstration tests Click on “Login”, no credentials are required Click on “Start the test” Note – the demonstration tests contain generic items from multiple grade levels and are not designed to be reflective of Georgia Milestones content.

8 Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Online Testing Clarifications Georgia Milestones will not measure student keyboarding skill. English Language Arts Communication skills (language usage/conventions) are only assessed via writing items (ELA). There is a difference between a typo and a lack of understanding of language conventions. Student responses from both modes – online and paper/pencil – will be used to train raters. Scoring of open-ended items is approached from the point of view of awarding points, not subtracting. 8

9 Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Online Testing Clarifications Georgia Milestones will not measure student keyboarding skill. ELA Continued….. Given the time allowance, it is understood that the full writing process will not occur Expectations for student writing will be developmentally appropriate Mathematics Open-ended items will ask students to provide an answer and explain, not show their work (similar to the George and Anna pizza question) 9 Students should be given the opportunity to practice responding online in a variety of platforms, including the GOFAR or OAS. It is not necessary that they practice solely in the Georgia Milestones platform. Such practice does not need to be regimented and should serve a purpose other than ‘test-prep’. Student should be given the opportunity to write and explain often.

10 Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Grade 3 Student Response: ELA Score: 2 Part A Beauty was important because the woman thought she didn't have enough beauty and bear liked the beauty of his tail. Part B Te woman was happy and bear was sad. Part C In woman in the sky teached a lesson that no one is beatiful than you in the inside and in how bear lost his tail teached a lesson that bragging isn't beauty. In Part A, the student basically explains why beauty is important in both stories. In Part B, the student basically explains how the main characters react when her/his beauty is lost. In Part C, the student basically explains how both stories teach the lesson that beauty is found on the inside. The response needs to include more details in all parts to achieve a higher score. The response demonstrates an inconsistent command of the conventions of standard English. There are a few patterns of errors in grammar and usage that occasionally impede understanding.

11 Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Grade 3 Student Response: ELA Score: 1 part a. because they both think they are beautiful. part b. they are sad because they loved there beauty. part c. it teaches you dont think you are better than others. In Part A, the student minimally explains why beauty is important in one story. Although there is no evidence that the bear-woman thinks she is beautiful, the student attempts to explain why the idea of beauty is important. In Part B, the student minimally explains how Bear reacts when he loses his beauty, but the response does not apply to the bear-woman. In Part C, the response includes a lesson, but does not explain how the story teaches the lesson that beauty is found on the inside. All parts of the response are incomplete. The response demonstrates an inconsistent command of the conventions of standard English. The directions for the item instructed students to write in complete sentences and to use correct punctuation and grammar.

12 Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Grade 5 Student Response: ELA The student writes a basic explanation of why the author used the title as well as a basic explanation of why the peacock mantis shrimp does not fit the definition. Some details from the passage are provided for support. Insufficient textual support prevents this response from receiving a higher score. The lack of spacing between sentences does not detract from understanding. The student pulls text directly from the passage. Score: 2 The author used the word shrimp to describe the size of the peacock mantis.The title tells the audience besides the size, the peacock mantis can deliver quite a punch to a predator or their prey.The peacock mantis does not fit the definition for shrimp because this creature could change the safety supplies such as football gear to make it even more safe.I think that peacock mantis is not unimportant.

13 Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Sample Student Response: Social Studies Prompt: Explain how the early European settlers in New England depended upon Native Americans for survival. Student Response: All of them where having trouble surving and they needed the Natives help to live. Watch that students do not simply restate the question. Disclaimer: This item is provided as an example. Open- ended items will not be on the Social Studies tests this year.

14 Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Georgia Milestones Debrief Statewide Readiness Test Lessons learned from January 13 event Second readiness test scheduled for February 12 Winter EOC Administration Lessons learned from the inaugural administration

15 Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Georgia Milestones Writing at Every Grade – All students will encounter an extended constructed-response item allowing for narrative prose, in response to text, within first or second section of the test (contributes to the writing score). – Within section three, students will read a pair of passages and complete a series of items prior to writing their essay: o 3 selected-response items asking about the salient features of each passage and comparing/contrasting between the two passages (contributes to reading score) o 1 constructed-response item requiring linking the two passages (contributes to the reading score) o 1 writing prompt (allowing for an extended writing response) in which students must cite evidence to support their conclusions, claims, etc. (contributes to the writing score) Genres Writing prompts will be informative/explanatory or opinion/argumentative depending on the grade level. Students could encounter either genre. Warning: Students who simply rewrite excerpts from the passage(s) to illustrate their point(s) will not receive favorable scores.

16 Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Georgia Milestones: Resources Available NOW Content standards – frameworks, formative lessons, PARCC evidence statements Sample items – formative items/benchmarks via Georgia OAS→GOFAR; – released items via PARCC, SBAC, other states (KY, NY), NAEP – parent’s guide to Georgia’s new assessment developed by the National PTA [ http://www.pta.org/advocacy/content.cfm?ItemNumber=3816 ] Georgia Milestones Test Blueprints/Content Weights Georgia Milestones EOG & EOC Assessment Guides Experience Online Testing Georgia website Georgia Milestones Technology Specifications Georgia Milestones Calculator Policy Allowable Accommodations Eliciting Evidence of Student Learning Modules NOTE: The content weights communicate the REPORTING CATEGORIES and the number of associated points. These are not instructional documents and should not be used to inform instructional time. To do so could place students at a significant disadvantage as the knowledge and skills are not discrete and not bounded by a single domain.

17 Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Georgia Milestones Guiding principles stipulate that Georgia Milestones: be sufficiently challenging to ensure Georgia students are well positioned to compete with other students across the United States and internationally; be intentionally designed across grade levels to send a clear signal of student progress/growth and preparedness for the next level, be it the next grade level, course, or college or career; be accessible to all students, including those with disabilities or limited English proficiency, at all achievement levels; support and inform educator effectiveness initiatives, ensuring items and forms are appropriately sensitive to quality instructional practices; and accelerate the transition to online administration, allowing – over time – for the inclusion of innovative technology-enhanced items.

18 Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Richard Woods, Georgia’s School Superintendent “Educating Georgia’s Future” gadoe.org Georgia Milestones Georgia Milestones represents a significant change and importantly – an opportunity – for our state. This opportunity allows us to recalibrate, as a state, and refocus on teaching and learning as a primary emphasis with assessment and accountability serving a supporting role.


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