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Published byMarlene Baldwin Modified over 9 years ago
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THINK / PUZZLE / EXPLORE Think about what you may have read as part of the pre-reading activity for this workshop as well as what you already know about the SBAC Assessment. Take a few post-it notes and generate responses to the prompts below. Place them accordingly on the large chart. 1. What do you already think/know about the SBAC assessment that do you want to discuss with your colleagues? 2. What questions/puzzles do you have about how the implementation of this assessment or how it will impact teaching/learning in your classroom? 3. How would you like to further explore the questions/puzzles we have around the SBAC assessment or performance tasks? 1
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Common Core State Standards (CCSS) & the Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium (SBAC) Today is a continuation of the ongoing work the district has been conducting to prepare teachers and students for the instructional shifts required to prepare our students for new CCSS and SBAC expectations. At this point, we have engaged in the follow experiences: – April 30, 2012: Overview of CCSS/SBAC in your schools (kick-off) – November 6, 2012 (grade K/3) OR January 9/30, 2013 (grades 1/2 and 4/5): CCSS and Information Research Literacy Today, we will continue to connect these threads by exploring how Information Research Literacy is a critical CCSS instructional shift and how these skills are integrated within SBAC's Research/Inquiry Performance Tasks. 2
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4/10/13 Participant Outcomes Teachers will: explore Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium (SBAC) test items. deconstruct a grade 11 SBAC Performance Task to identify required on-line reading/note-taking skills and instructional learning blocks. analyze a grade-level SBAC-like Performance task (adapted from TCRWP). Teachers will draw conclusions about media and literacy instructional learning blocks required to support learning outcomes. 3
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Performance Tasks for English Language Arts Adopted by Greenwich Public Schools January/April 2013 4
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General Guidelines for Developing Performance Tasks Integrate knowledge and skills Measure understanding, research skills, analysis, and the ability to provide relevant evidence Require student to plan, write, revise, and edit Reflect a real-world task Demonstrate knowledge and skills Allow for multiple points of view Feasible for classroom environment 5
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“Students can demonstrate progress toward college and career readiness in English Language arts and literacy.” “Students can demonstrate college and career readiness in English language arts and literacy.” “Students can read closely and analytically to comprehend a range of increasingly complex literary and informational texts.” “Students can produce effective and well-grounded writing for a range of purposes and audiences.” “Students can employ effective speaking and listening skills for a range of purposes and audiences.” “Students can engage in research and inquiry to investigate topics, and to analyze, integrate, and present information.” Overall Claim for Grades 3-8 Overall Claim for Grade 11 Claim #1 - Reading Claim #2 - Writing Claim #3 - Speaking and Listening Claim #4 - Research/Inquiry Claims for ELA - The Performance Tasks Measures a Combination of Claims 6
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General Specifications for Performance Tasks Allowable teacher and peer interactions and group work Organization of complex task directions Vocabulary Simulated Internet access Rubrics 7
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Design of Performance Tasks Components of a Performance Task Stimulus Readings Video clips Audio clips Graphs, charts, other visuals Research topic/issue/ problem etc. Information Processing Research questions Comprehension questions Simulated Internet search etc. Product/Performance Essay, report, story, script Speech with/without graphics, other media Responses to embedded constructed response questions. etc. Use 1-2 Stimuli for Grade 3. Use up to 5 stimuli for high school. Emphasis on stimuli related to science, history, and social studies. 8
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Parts of Performance Task Part 1: Student reads research sources and responds to prompts (Claim 1 or 4) Part 2: Student plans, writes, and revises his or her full essay (Claim 2) or plans and delivers a speech (Claim 3) Test Administration & Time Requirements Grade 3–8: 105 minutes total Part 1: 35 min. Part 2: 70 min. High School: 120 minutes total Part 1: 35-45 min. Part 2: 75-85 min. 9
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Sample SBAC Performance Task: Nuclear Power- Friend or Foe Designed for Grade 11 (handout pgs. 1-15) Claims 1, 2, 3 and 4 General Overview of Task Part 1 (45 minutes) presents students with the sources/stimulus (URL links to articles, images & video clip) and asks students to answer 3 constructed responses (rubrics and sample responses p. 12-16) Part 2 (70 minutes) students access/synthesize stimuli/sources, their notes and answers to constructed responses to write an explanatory article. 10
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Scoring Information How your essay will be scored: The people scoring your essay will be assigning scores for (see p. 12-15): – Statement of purpose/Focus & Organization— – Evidence/Elaboration— – Conventions— 11
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Guidelines for Writing Performance Tasks Align parts of the task Parts build to “full write” or speech Develop rubric for each assessment target Develop exemplars for each rubric Allow multiple approaches 12
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