Presented by: Sara Bryant, Measured Progress Michigan Assessment Consortium April 15, 2013

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Measuring Growth Without a Measuring Tape: What Teachers Need to Consider in Thinking About Teacher Effectiveness. Presented by: Sara Bryant, Measured Progress Michigan Assessment Consortium April 15, 2013 1:00—2:30. Acknowledgment. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Measuring Growth Without a Measuring Tape: What Teachers Need to Consider in Thinking About Teacher Effectiveness

Presented by: Sara Bryant, Measured ProgressMichigan Assessment Consortium

April 15, 20131:00—2:30

Acknowledgment

The work described here has been developed for the Literacy Design Collaborative by Measured

Progress and the Stanford Center for Assessment, Learning, and Equity with funding

by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

Overview

• Objectives for today’s session• Teacher Moderated Scoring Systems (TeaMSS)• Literacy Design Collaborative (LCD)• Teacher Effectiveness • “Take 5s”

Session Objectives

• To learn about Measured Progress’ work on TeaMSS

• To learn about a partnership with the LDC• To think about how this project might inform

your own local work on teacher effectiveness models

Take 5s

The Big Question:

As I learn about Measured Progress’ work with LDC and the Gates Foundation, what

connections am I making to my own local work?

Project Components

Measured ProgressScoring Professional Development

Teacher Moderated Scoring Systems (TeaMSS)

• Teachers scoring student tasks

• Common rubrics aligned to Common Core

Standards (CCS)

• Common summative assessments (“tasks”) aligned to

rubrics and CCS

• Other PD tools and resources to help teachers learn

to score and become calibrated with others

PD Components

1. Grade student work with no rubric/guidance2. Learn the intricacies of a common rubric3. Learn how anchor sets are used as a scoring tool4. Practice scoring rubric elements5. Reflect on essential Scoring Principles6. Practice, Practice, Practice7. Score two final papers to look for calibration8. Continue practicing with additional student tasks

Learning ObjectivesBig Ideas

• Adopting a Mind-Set of “Learning to Score”

• Understanding and Using Rubrics

• Understanding and Using Anchor Sets

• Scoring

• Application to Classroom

Grading: reflects the performance of students relative to expectations at a particular point in time.

Scoring: uses fixed standards of quality that do not change over time.

Grading vs. ScoringWhat’s the Difference?

Holistic Scoring: balances characteristics of writing to arrive at a score appropriate to its overall quality.

Analytic Scoring: considers criteria of assessment separately, identifying a single score for each criterion.

Analytic vs. Holistic ScoringWhat’s the Difference?

Take 5

When thinking about your own experiences with organizing and implementing scoring common

student work, what tools and trainings might be helpful to enhance the experiences?

What tools and resources might be helpful to learn more about scoring common student

work?

1. Know the rubric.

2. Trust evidence, not intuition.

3. Match evidence to language inthe rubric.

4. Weigh evidence carefully;base judgments on the

preponderance of evidence.

5. Know your biases;leave them at the door.

6. Focus on what the student does, not on what the student does not do.

7. Isolate your judgment: One bad element does not equal a bad paper.

8. Resist seduction: One good element does not equal a good paper.

9. Recognize direct copy or plagiarism.

10. Stick to the rubric.

Literacy Design Collaborative

Examples on the following slides and more information about LDC can be found at:

www.literacydesigncollaborative.org

What is LDC?

• A framework for building literacy skills and core content knowledge - aligned to Common Core Standards (CCS)

• “Template Tasks” built on text-based essential questions and a genre of writing (e.g. essay)

• Common rubrics for argumentation, informational and narrative writing

Template Task

“LDC ‘template tasks’ provide fill-in-the-blank shells that teachers use to create powerful

assignments. For example, Template Task 2 calls for student analysis that builds an argument.”

- www.literacydesigncollaborative.org/tasks

Template Tasks

“[Insert question] After reading _____ (literature or informational texts), write _________ (essay or substitute) that addresses the question and support your position with evidence from the text(s). L2 Be sure to acknowledge competing

views.”

- www.literacydesigncollaborative.org/tasks

Rubric Scoring Elements

• Focus• Controlling Idea• Reading/Research• Development• Organization• Conventions• Content Understanding

Scoring Element Example

Controlling Idea

Scoring Element 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 3.5 4

Controlling Idea

Attempts to establish a

claim, but lacks a clear purpose.(L2) Makes no

mention of counter claims.

Establishes a claim.

(L2) Makes note of counter

claims.

Establishes a credible claim. (L2) Develops

claim and counter claims fairly.

Establishes and maintains a substantive

and credible claim or proposal.

(L2) Develops claims and counter claims

fairly and thoroughly.

Scoring Element Example

Organization

Scoring Elements 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 3.5 4

Organization

Attempts to organize ideas, but

lacks control of structure.

Uses an appropriate

organizational structure for

development of reasoning and

logic, with minor lapses in structure and/or coherence.

Maintains an appropriate

organizational structure to address

specific requirements of the prompt. Structure

reveals the reasoning and logic

of the argument.

Maintains an organizational structure that

intentionally and effectively enhances the presentation of

information as required by the specific prompt.

Structure enhances development of the

reasoning and logic of the argument.

Scoring Element Example

Reading Research

Scoring Element 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 3.5 4

Reading/ Research

Attempts to reference reading

materials to develop

response, but lacks

connections or relevance to the purpose of the

prompt.

Presents information from reading

materials relevant to the purpose of the prompt with

minor lapses in accuracy or

completeness.

Accurately presents details from reading

materials relevant to the purpose of the

prompt to develop

argument or claim.

Accurately and effectively presents important details

from reading materials to develop argument or claim.

Scoring Element Example

Content Understanding

Scoring Element 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 3.5 4

Content Understanding

Attempts to include

disciplinary content in

argument, but understanding

of content is weak; content is irrelevant,

inappropriate, or inaccurate.

Briefly notes disciplinary

content relevant to the prompt; shows basic or uneven understanding

of content; minor errors in

explanation.

Accurately presents

disciplinary content relevant

to the prompt with sufficient

explanations that demonstrate

understanding.

Integrates relevant and accurate

disciplinary content with thorough

explanations that demonstrate in-

depth understanding.

Take 5

When thinking about your common assessment work in your districts, what LDC processes and

structures might appeal to you and your colleagues?

Putting it All Together

• Local teacher development of modules • Common modules and tasks used across

districts and states• Student work samples and common rubrics

used to develop scoring professional development

• Teachers scoring student tasks across districts and states

Putting it All Together

Professional Dialogue

Calibration

Take 5

How might a common assessment model that includes common local modules, assessment

and teacher scoring be part of a Michigan teacher effectiveness model?

Final Thoughts

• Models such as LDC honors teacher involvement in the process of curriculum, instruction, and assessment.

• Scoring professional development allows teachers to become part of the game.

• Teacher dialogue about student work enhances teacher knowledge.• Teacher effectiveness can be measured

using processes such as these!

For More Information

Sara Bryantbryant.sara@measuredprogress.org

Literacy Design Collaborativewww.literacydesigncollaborative.org

Measured Progresswww.measuredprogress.org