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Integrated Document Analysis Workshop Peter Worth, Assessment Standards & Development Services, WestEd, CA John L. Smithson, Director, Measures of the.

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Presentation on theme: "Integrated Document Analysis Workshop Peter Worth, Assessment Standards & Development Services, WestEd, CA John L. Smithson, Director, Measures of the."— Presentation transcript:

1 Integrated Document Analysis Workshop Peter Worth, Assessment Standards & Development Services, WestEd, CA John L. Smithson, Director, Measures of the Enacted Curriculum Wisconsin Center for Education Research, University of Wisconsin-Madison Washington, DC May 5-7, 2008 Describing the Content & Language Demands of Standards, Assessments & Student Work

2 The intended curriculum: State content standards— What students should learn The enacted curriculum: What teachers teach The learned curriculum: Student outcomes based on school learning The assessed curriculum: State (and other) assessments— tested learning Analyzing Alignment Linquistic Complexity by Language Demands A neutral linguistic taxonomyA neutral content language Topics by Cognitive Demand

3 Content and Language Coding Form Focus: (A = Academic/S = Social) Language Demand: (A-P, Z) Density: (L = Low/H= High) Mode: Rec. = Receptive (LI=Listening; RD= Reading) Construction: (S=Simple/C=Complex) Pro. = Productive (SP=Speaking, WR=Writing) Overall Complexity: (1= lowest, 4=highest; X= Complexity cannot be determined) Content Codes Language Codes Strand ID TPC1TPC1 CGD1CGD1 Focus (A/S) ModeLanguage Demand (A-P, Z) Density (L/H) Construction (S/C) Overall Complexity (1-4, X) Comments Rec.Pro. 1 2 3 4 5 6

4 Content and Language Coding Grade 8 mathematics item

5 Content and Language Coding Form Focus: (A = Academic/S = Social) Language Demand: (A-P, Z) Density: (L = Low/H= High) Mode: Rec. = Receptive (LI=Listening; RD= Reading) Construction: (S=Simple/C=Complex) Pro. = Productive (SP=Speaking, WR=Writing) Overall Complexity: (1= lowest, 4=highest; X= Complexity cannot be determined) Content Codes Language Codes Strand ID TPC 1 CGD 1 Focus (A/S) ModeLanguage Demand (A-P, Z) Density (L/H) Construction (S/C) Overall Complexity (1-4, X) Comments Rec.Pro. 1 16506EARDDLC2 2 204CE 3 K 4 5 6

6 K-12 Mathematics Content

7 Basic Algebra

8 The Goal To render quantitative descriptions of instruction, standards, and assessments using a common language in order to facilitate comparisons and analyses of the three domains of a standards-based approach to education reform and their relationship to one another.

9 To Facilitate Comparisons Academic Content ELL Lang. Acquisition Academic Content ELL Lang. Acquisition Academic Content ELL Lang. Acquisition

10 The Two Dimensions Of Content What students should know [Topics] And… Be Able to Do [Expectations for student performance]

11 Describing Instructional Content SEC utilizes a two-dimensional taxonomy based on: Topic by Cognitive Demand 1 2 3 4 5 BCDEF

12 The Content Matrix

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14 … adding levels of relative emphasis yields a 3-D construct

15 Describing the Cognitive Domain 3 4 5 6 How Many Categories? Bloom’s SEC DOK (Webb) SCASS Science

16 Dimensions of Knowing & Inquiry AcquireUseExtend (From: Dimensions of Knowing and Inquiring about Science, State Collaborative on Assessments & Student Standards Science Project, Council of Chief State School Officers, 1997)

17 Depth of Knowledge * Webb, N. 1999. Alignment of Science and Mathematics Standards in Four State. NISE Research Monograph #18. Madison:Wisconsin Center for Education Research. Skill/Concept Recall Strategic Thinking Extended Thinking Level 12341234

18 Skill/ConceptRecall Strategic Thinking Extended Thinking AcquireUseExtend Exploring Cognitive Demand

19 Cognitive Demand (or Expectations for Student Performance) Skill/ConceptRecall Strategic Thinking Extended Thinking AcquireUseExtend Memorize Perform Procedures Demonstrate Understanding Conjecture, Generalize Prove Solve non- routine/ make connections Memorize Conduct Investigations Communicate Understanding Analyze Information Apply concepts /make connections Recall Perform Procedures Analyze/ Investigate Evaluate Generate /Demonstrate

20 Cognitive Demand (or Expectations for Student Performance) Skill/ConceptRecall Strategic Thinking Extended Thinking AcquireUseExtend Memorize Perform Procedures Demonstrate Understanding Analyze Information Evaluate/Apply RecallUnderstandingApplicationAnalyzeEvaluateCreate

21 Practice Session #1 Exploring Cognitive Demand But first…. Let’s take a 10 minute break!

22 Exploring Cognitive Demand CgD Immersion Activity Organize into Groups/Tables Each Table w/ CgD Pie Each Person w/ Cgd Descriptors Step 1: Place CgD cards on Pie Slices face-down Step 2: Turn cards over: ID agreements e.g. 2 cards w/ same descriptor in same slice if Group Agrees... discuss key words if not … Discuss … operational definition to distinguish Step 3: Discuss disagreements if consensus reached put in envelope / if not, set aside

23 Content Analysis Materials Cognitive Demand List Topics Lists Comments & Suggestions Worksheet Coding Forms Documents to be analyzed

24 Cognitive Demand Lists Five categories of cognitive demand Slightly different for each subject Each category is defined by a list of descriptors The list of descriptors are not exhaustive Each category stands on its own Each category has an associated letter (B-F)

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28 Dimension A: Content Topics Topics List (In your packet of material) Organized at two levels: Content Areas (16 for Mathematics) (27 for Science) (14 for ELAR) Topics (identified by number) (182 Mathematics Topics) (211 Science Topics) (114 ELAR Topics) Plus: non-specific & other

29 Topics Lists Mathematics Science English Language Arts & Reading Cover grades K-12 Organized into Content Areas Topics & Content Areas have an associated #

30 Comments & Suggestion Worksheet One for each reviewer - more available Use to: Record coding conventions/decision rules Suggest/identify additional topics not listed Suggest/identify additional CGD descriptors Provide other comments & suggestions Be sure to turn in at end of workshop (and with mail-in materials, as necessary).

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36 The Content Analysis Process ‘Coding’ Teams of 4-5 Content Experts Independent Coding by each Analyst w/ Group Discussion Goal for Process: Generalizability not Inter-rater Reliability Should not be necessary to discuss every item – select by team Pick-up and return documents / coding sheets to Alissa Sign & return to Alissa non-disclosure forms

37 Practice Exercise #1 (Math)

38 Practice Exercise #2 (ELAR)

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40 A neutral content language Topics by Cognitive Demand The intended curriculum: State content standards— What students should learn The enacted curriculum: What teachers teach The learned curriculum: Student outcomes based on school learning The assessed curriculum: State (and other) assessments— tested learning Content Analysis Workshop

41 Coding Forms Assessment Coding Forms Standards/Benchmark Coding Forms Each is used to record content descriptions Each content description consists of A topic number A cognitive demand category letter The Integrated Analysis Coding Form Combines Content & Linguistic Information in a single data collection form

42 Assessment Coding Forms

43 Standards Coding Forms

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45 Gr. 5-8 National Science Standards

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