2015 RESULTS: SMARTER BALANCED ASSESSMENT CONSORTIUM (SBAC) SFUSD Board Presentation September 29, 2015
Presentation Outline Context of SBAC Participation on SBAC Districtwide SBAC Results SBAC Student Report (Parent Resources) School Action
Context of SBAC
Smarter Balanced Assessments
Smarter Balanced Assessment Facts The technology-based Smarter Balanced Assessments in Mathematics and English Language Arts measure progress toward the more rigorous California Common Core Standards. The Common Core State Standards in English Language Arts and Mathematics define what a student needs to know and be able to do to be college and career ready for the 21 st century. Shifts in Education: Shifts in curriculum standards and instruction inform assessment and accountability shifts. We see these tests as one of many ways to gauge our progress. This is a baseline year and this year’s results cannot be compared to previous years’ results. However, SBAC is a vertically-aligned assessment that allows measuring growth from one grade level to the next. These tests include a wider variety of questions, requiring students to explain how they solve problems, think critically, reason with evidence, and write analytically.
Smarter Balanced Assessments (SBA) – What’s Different About Them? Source: LAUSD. Smarter Balanced Assessments (SBA) – What’s Different About Them?
Smarter Balanced Assessments (SBA) – What’s Different About Them?
Source: LAUSD. Smarter Balanced Assessments (SBA) – What’s Different About Them? Smarter Balanced Assessments (SBA) – What’s Different About Them?
Participation on SBAC
*NOTE: These figures do not include these scores that are being contested with the test publisher. The following schools have more than 25 students that are currently being contested: Presidio, Washington, Lawton, Glen Park, Lafayette, Longfellow, Rosa Parks, Starr King, Roosevelt, Everett **NOTE: 77 parents requested exemptions from SBAC Testing Source: CDE website and SFUSD SBAC Content AreasState Target Percent of Enrolled Students Tested Percent and number of Students Tested, but not reported* English Language Arts95%93% (25,237 students) 2.5% (673 students) Mathematics95%95.8% (26,102 students) 0.6% (164 students)
Special Education and English Learner Testing Preparation Collaborated with Special Education Services and Multilingual Pathways Department Presented to the SFUSD Community Trained Staff District-wide Provided Site-level support Use of Universal Tools, Designated Supports and Accommodations Students with IEPs (approximately 3,500 students participated) Text-to-Speech (>500 students) Color Contrast (>250 students) Masking (>250 students) English Learner Students (approximately 8,000 students participated) Math Translated Glossary - multiple languages (>2,000 students) Math Translated Test Directions – multiple languages (>1,000 students) Math Stacked Translations – Spanish Only (>500 students)
Districtwide SBAC Results
Districtwide SBAC Results (ELA)
Districtwide SBAC Results (Math)
Districtwide SBAC Results (ELA, by Grade Level) 48%50%56%49%50%49%65% 38%41%44%41%38%41% SFUSD Met or Exceeded % National Field Test Estimate %
Districtwide SBAC Results (Math, by Grade Level) 55%48%47%44%49%47%50% 39%37%33% 32%33% SFUSD Met or Exceeded % National Field Test Estimate %
Met or Exceeded Standards English-Language ArtsMathematics All Students5248 Gender Females5849 Males47 Ethnicity American Indian or Alaska Native4933 Asian6669 Black or African American1811 Ethnicity -- Two or More Races6154 Filipino5642 Hispanic or Latino2719 Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander2317 White7768 Economic Status Economically Disadvantaged4239 Not Economically Disadvantaged7669 Special Education Status Students with Disability1514 Students with No Reported Disability5753 Language Fluency English Learner2128 English Only5850 Initially-Fluent English Proficient (I-FEP)7871 Reclassified-Fluent English Proficient (R-FEP)6760 Districtwide SBAC Results (by Subgroups)
Districtwide SBAC Results (ELA, by SES & Ethnicity) Not Economically Disadvantaged Economically Disadvantaged Difference
Districtwide SBAC Results (Math, by SES & Ethnicity) Not Economically Disadvantaged Economically Disadvantaged Difference
Districtwide SBAC Results (ELA, Comparison to State and Other Districts)
Districtwide SBAC Results (Math, Comparison to State and Other Districts)
Districtwide SBAC Results (ELA & Math, Comparison to State and Other Districts by Targeted Subgroups) Overall and Targeted Subgroups SFUSDSTATELos AngelesFresnoSacramentoLong BeachOaklandSanta AnaSan Diego Overall African American na33 Latino English Learners Low SES SpEd ELA Standard Met or Exceeded (%) Math Standard Met or Exceeded (%) Overall and Targeted Subgroups SFUSDStateLos AngelesFresnoSacramentoLong BeachOaklandSanta AnaSan Diego Overall African American na21 Latino English Learners Low SES SpEd
SBAC, Correlation to Other Indicators *% Targeted Students include: African-American, Latino, and Samoan Students IndicatorsSBAC – ELA SBAC – Math % Targeted Students* Chronic Absenteeism Scholastic Reading Inventory (SRI).83 Common Learning Assessments (CLA), Part A – ELA.66 Common Learning Assessments (CLA), Part A – Math.56
Highlights of SBAC Results AspectHighlight Participation> 25,000 in grades 3 – 8 and 11 Overall ResultsHalfway to the goal: 52% Met or Exceeded Standards in ELA, 48% Met or Exceeded Standards in Math Comparisons… …grade level results (% proficient) are higher than predicted, STATE, and other peer districts …program level results (English Learners, Special Education, and SED students) excelled relative to peer districts …African American and Latino students are lower relative to most peer districts Subgroup Results Highest in ELA/Math: Initially-Fluent English Proficient students Lowest in ELA: Special Education students Lowest in Math: African American students Correlations High positive correlations: District Progress Measures in ELA and Math High negative correlations: Chronic Absenteeism & Concentration of Ethnically Targeted Subgroups (AA, L, Samoan)
SBAC Student Report (Parent Resources) NOTE: As a parent, you should receive your student score report within the next two weeks. If not, please contact us at
Student Score Report
Student Score Report (page 1)
Student Score Report (page 2)
Student Score Reports Scores should NOT BE COMPARED to results from the Standardized Testing and Reporting (STAR) program because they are based on different academic standards These results are ONLY ONE OF MANY MEASURES of academic performance: classroom tests, assignments, report cards, teacher conferences, grades, projects These scores are a starting point -- a BASELINE for the progress we expect students to make over time
SBAC Parent Resources
Resource List for Parents California Assessment of Student Performance and Progress (CAASPP)
School Action with Results
Progress Measures Leading to SBAC Week 1 Aug 17 Week 19 Jan 4 Week 38 May 26 SBAC Testing 3/10-5/26 (Tentative) SBAC 3/10-5/26 Spring Interim District Assessments ELA: 1/4 - 2/12 Math: 1/25 – 2/29 Math SBAC Interim Assessment Block (IAB) Math Milestone Task (grades K-Alg 2 ELA SBAC Interim Assessment Block (IAB) ELA Writing Task (grades 3-10) Fall Interim District Assessments Tasks: 10/15 – 11/13 IABs: TBD IWA 2/9 – 2/19 Integrated Writing Assessment (Grd 3, 6, and 9) 2/9 – 2/19 SRI + F&P, Spring SRI + F&P, Fall Spiral 1 (ends mid Oct) Spiral 2 (end winter break) Spiral 3 (end mid-March) Spiral 4 (EOY) Unit 1 Unit 2 Unit 3Unit 4Unit 5 Unit 6 Unit 7 Unit 8Unit 9Unit 10 ELA Math INSTRUCTION Academic Domain RPA, J.Reyes CELDT Window ends 10/30 CELDT Window ends 10/30
Context of SBAC: School Quality Improvement Index