Session Presented for UWO Seeds of Inclusion Conference by Dr. Michael P. Ford March 7, 2015

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What Teachers Need to Know about the

Constructed Response Questions on the

WFORT

Session Presented for UWO Seeds of Inclusion Conference

by

Dr. Michael P. FordMarch 7, 2015

Presented byMichael P. Ford

Waukesha County Reading CouncilFebruary 28, 2015

Based on the book from ASCD

 "Engaging Minds in the Classrooms: The Surprising Power of Joy"

 "Engaging Minds in Classrooms:The Surprising Power of Joy"

This summer I presented at…

So here live from his recent performance on the Las Vegas Strip is

“The Tests Will Go On”

The Tests Will Go On 

(Sung to the tune of MY HEART WILL GO ON with hopes that a Titanic-like iceberg will sink our current voyage on this ship)

Everyday in my school

We test kids to see

What it is they’ve learned to do

Ain’t much time

for reading or writing

cause testing is the only thing we now do

 

And we’re the best

We’re better than all the rest

At the taking of standardized tests.

Can’t think very well

but we can bubble like hell

And I guess that is how you will know

that we’re all doing swell

 

Each day

I sit at my desk and pray

That these tests may slowly fade away

My greatest fear is

the kids will all disappear

and these tests will keep growing

and going on and on

 

Why do we keep drowning in all these tests?

Ker-ching...Ker-ching...Gulb-Gulb

"Just because you do not take an interest in politics

doesn't mean politics won't take an interest in

you.”

Pericles"The Olympian"

430 B.C.

When will undergraduate students have to pass the

FORT?

You will need to demonstrate a passing score when you apply for student teaching.

When will graduate students have to pass

FORT?

You will need to demonstrate a passing score when you apply for 316 and/or 17 licensure.

So how have all students been doing since the pass rate

went up to 240?

First time pass rate = 74%Second time pass rate =

43%

So how have graduate students in the reading program been doing?

First time pass rate = 96%Average score = 271

http://www.wi.nesinc.com/

Pearson has established a Wisconsin website, which will

include test registration and score reporting services, and

preparation information.

One Hundred Multiple Choice

Questions Two constructed response

questions.

WFRT = MTEL Format

1. Understand phonological and phonemic awareness.2. Understand concepts of print and the alphabetic principle.3. Understand the role of phonics in promoting reading

development.4. Understand word analysis skills and strategies.5. Understand vocabulary development.6. Understand how to apply reading comprehension skills and

strategies to imaginative/literary texts.7. Understand how to apply reading comprehension skills and

strategies to informational/expository texts.8. Understand formal and informal methods for assessing

reading development.9. Understand multiple approaches to reading instruction.

WFRT Objectives

10. Prepare an organized, developed

analysis on a topic related to one or more of the following: foundations of reading development; development of reading comprehension; reading assessment & instruction.

WFRT Objectives

Range ofObjectives

ApproximateTestWeighting

I. Foundations of Reading Development

01–04 35%

II. Development of Reading Comprehension

05–07 27%

III. Reading Assessment and Instruction

08–09 18%

IV. Integration of Knowledge and Understanding

10 20%

Perfect score on constructed response score = 60

Multiple Choice Needed = 81%

Bomb the constructed response score = 24

Multiple Choice Needed = 91%

UW Oshkosh

State

Area I Foundations of Reading

2.9B/2.8 F 2.9B/2.9 F 

Area II Reading Comprehension

3.1B/3.0F 3.2B/3.1F

Area III Assessment and Instruction

3.1B/3.0F 3.2B/3.1F

Area IV Integration

2.6B/2.6F 2.5B/2.5F

How is it scored?

Holistic scoring Overall effectiveness of the response Quality over quantity

http://www.uwosh.edu/coehs/aggregator/WFORT

http://www.uwosh.edu/library/emc

jenniferyaeger.weebly.com

http://jenniferyaeger.weebly.com/

Connecticut Teach for America

Site

http://tfactreading.weebly.com/

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dt-scpgz8Z0&feature=youtu.be

Open Ended Strategy Answer the question in the first paragraph

Second should be the strength

Third should be the weakness

Fourth how and what you would teach

In the two supporting paragraphs define key

terms and use at least 2-3 details from the text

The test privileges…

Using phonics/visual as the first strategy. Using meaning/semantics and structure/syntax as

back up systems. Systematic, explicit instruction is preferable. When it comes to phonics, it’s back to basics.

Practice Questions

AssessmentConstructed response

Using your knowledge of word identification strategies (e.g., use of phonics, analysis of word structure, use of context clues, identification of sight words), write a response in which you:

• identify one of Daniel's strengths in using word identification strategies; and

• identify one of Daniel's weaknesses in using word identification strategies.

Be sure to cite specific evidence from the information shown above to support your response.

Constructed Response Practice Tips

1. Do a basic analysis of the miscues. Use a

t-chart to record the information; word in the text vs word the student said

(note if self corrected)

Text Student

backpack baka (corrected)

Sunshine sush, sushin (corrected)

goldfish golish (corrected)

bubbling Bub, bubble

fishbowl fib (corrected)

container counter (corrected)

sprinkled spilled

forever fever (corrected)

difficult different

remembered remmer (corrected)

company copy (corrected)

homework hommer (corrected)

daydreamed (omitted)

Constructed Response Practice Tips

2. Examine the miscues of the student for a pattern. Analyze it in the four areas: phonics

analysis, structural analysis, context clues and sight vocabulary.

Also look at the words the student was able to say correctly. These will reflect what a child did

not have difficulty with.

Miscue Reflects weakness in…Think about ability to use sound, sight, structure or context

Reflects strength in… Think about ability to use sound, sight, structure or context

Bub, bubble for bubbling Spilled for sprinkled Different for difficult Omitted daydreamed

Did the errors make sense? (context) Did the errors sound right syntactically?

(context, structure) Were the errors visually similar? (phonics,

sight)

Words Missed

Baka/backpackSushin/sush/sunshineGolish/goldfishCounter/containerFever/foreverRemmer/rememberedcompanyHommer/Homework

How does Daniel usually strategically approach unknown words?

How does he strategically figure out the unknown words?

What could strengthen his word strategies?

What is similar about all these words?

Words Corrected

Sight ? Sound (phonics)? Structure?Context?

Prompt Language

Definition (AKA)

Subcategories

What would you see is strength

What would you see if weakness

Using phonics

Prompt Language

Definition (AKA)

Subcategories

What would you see is strength

What would you see if weakness

Using phonics

Sound analysis,decoding

Prompt Language

Definition (AKA)

Subcategories

What would you see is strength

What would you see if weakness

Using phonics

Sound analysis,decoding

Beginnings, middles, ends

Prompt Language

Definition (AKA)

Subcategories

What would you see is strength

What would you see if weakness

Using phonics

Sound analysis,decoding

Beginnings, middles, ends

Vowels (long, short, digraphs, diphthongs, schwa, r-controlled, etc.)

Prompt Language

Definition (AKA)

Subcategories

What would you see is strength

What would you see if weakness

Using phonics

Sound analysis,decoding

Beginnings, middles, ends

Vowels (long, short, digraphs, diphthongs, schwa, r-controlled, etc.)

Consonants (single consistent, variable, digraphs, blends, etc.)

Prompt Language

Definition (AKA)

Subcategories

What would you see is strength

What would you see if weakness

Using phonics

Sound analysis,decoding

Beginnings, middles, ends

Vowels (long, short, digraphs, diphthongs, schwa, r-controlled, etc.)

Consonants (single consistent, variable, digraphs, blends, etc.)

Most easily decodable words correct

Many visually similar miscues

Prompt Language

Definition (AKA)

Subcategories

What would you see is strength

What would you see if weakness

Using phonics

Sound analysis,decoding

Beginnings, middles, ends

Vowels (long, short, digraphs, diphthongs, schwa, r-controlled, etc.)

Consonants (single consistent, variable, digraphs, blends, etc.)

Most easily decodable words correct

Many visually similar miscues

Many missed easily decodable words

Many semantic and structural miscues

Prompt Language

Definition (AKA)

Subcategories

What would you see is strength

What would you see if weakness

Analysis of word structure

Prompt Language

Definition (AKA)

Subcategories

What would you see is strength

What would you see if weakness

Analysis of word structure

Morphemic analysis, structural analysis

Prompt Language

Definition (AKA)

Subcategories

What would you see is strength

What would you see if weakness

Analysis of word structure

Morphemic analysis, structural analysis

roots, prefixes, suffixes, inflected endingscompounds,contractions

Prompt Language

Definition (AKA)

Subcategories

What would you see is strength

What would you see if weakness

Analysis of word structure

Morphemic analysis, structural analysis

roots, prefixes, suffixes, inflected endingscompounds,contractions

Most multi-syllabic words correct

Marking that reflects chunking

Prompt Language

Definition (AKA)

Subcategories

What would you see is strength

What would you see if weakness

Analysis of word structure

Morphemic analysis, structural analysis

roots, prefixes, suffixes, inflected endingscompounds,contractions

Most multi-syllabic words correct

Marking that reflects chunking

Many missed multi-syllabic words

Many structural (syntactical, grammatical) miscues

Prompt Language

Definition (AKA)

Subcategories

What would you see is strength

What would you see if weakness

Use of context clues

Prompt Language

Definition (AKA)

Subcategories

What would you see is strength

What would you see if weakness

Use of context clues

Using the meaning of surrounding words to identify an unknown word

Prompt Language

Definition (AKA)

Subcategories

What would you see is strength

What would you see if weakness

Use of context clues

Using the meaning of surrounding words to identify an unknown word

• typographical• structural• direct

definitions• synonyms

and antonyms

• metaphors and similes

• mood and tone

• inferences• background

knowledge• Graphic

Prompt Language

Definition (AKA)

Subcategories

What would you see is strength

What would you see if weakness

Use of context clues

Using the meaning of surrounding words to identify an unknown word

• typographical• structural• direct

definitions• synonyms

and antonyms

• metaphors and similes

• mood and tone

• inferences• background

knowledge• Graphic

Many semantic miscues

Self-corrections

Prompt Language

Definition (AKA)

Subcategories

What would you see is strength

What would you see if weakness

Use of context clues

Using the meaning of surrounding words to identify an unknown word

• typographical• structural• direct

definitions• synonyms

and antonyms

• metaphors and similes

• mood and tone

• inferences• background

knowledge• Graphic

Many semantic miscues

Self-corrections

Many visual miscues

Minimal self-corrections

Prompt Language

Definition (AKA)

Subcategories

What would you see is strength

What would you see if weakness

Identification of sight words

Prompt Language

Definition (AKA)

Subcategories

What would you see is strength

What would you see if weakness

Identification of sight words

High frequency words

Words known automatically

Prompt Language

Definition (AKA)

Subcategories

What would you see is strength

What would you see if weakness

Identification of sight words

High frequency words

Words known automatically

Pronouns

Linking verbs

Conjunctions

Determiners

Hard to decode common words

Prompt Language

Definition (AKA)

Subcategories

What would you see is strength

What would you see if weakness

Identification of sight words

High frequency words

Words known automatically

Pronouns

Linking verbs

Conjunctions

Determiners

Hard to decode common words

Most high frequency words correct

Most words known automatically (limited pausing and repetition)

Consider grade level

Prompt Language

Definition (AKA)

Subcategories

What would you see is strength

What would you see if weakness

Identification of sight words

High frequency words

Words known automatically

Pronouns

Linking verbs

Conjunctions

Determiners

Hard to decode common words

Most high frequency words correct

Most words known automatically (limited pausing and repetition)

Consider grade level

Many high frequency words missed

Lots of pausing and repetition

Many errors with hard to decode common words

Visual miscues

Constructed Response Practice Tips

3. Identify one area of strength and one area of weakness in the word analysis based on the miscues and/or accurate words. Probe what evidence supports the response. State the

response in a frame as attached.

Paragraph One: Answer right away. The student has a strength in ______ and the students has a weakness in ______ .

Paragraph Two: Identify strength, define dimension, and cite at least 2-3 specific examples.

The student’s strength is _ (general area) _________ which is_ (definition)_______. In particular, the student can _____ (specific skill) _____________ as seen in these two or three specific examples __ (evidence from passage)____.

Paragraph Three: Identify weakness, define dimension, cite at least 2-3 specific examples.

The student’s weakness is _ (general area) _________ which is_ (definition) _______. In particular, the student had difficulty with _____(specific skill)_____________ as seen in these two or three specific examples __(evidence from passage)____.

Paragraph Four: Identify what and how you would teach based on this information. So I would support the student to improve on __ (area) _______ by doing __

(instructional strategies) ____________.

Purpose

This response addresses the assignment fully by focusing on specific and important word identificationstrategies Daniel used to read this passage aloud. The candidate thoroughly explains how a particular strength and a particular weakness in word identification are revealed and why they are important

Analysis

Subject Matter Knowledge

The candidate uses specific knowledge of word identification strategies, appropriate to teaching third grade reading, to determine the meaning behind Daniel's efforts to identify words. Aspects of Daniel's word identification are correctly identified and defined, such as the use of context clues ("relies on the meaning of the words around it"), and analysis of word structure (compound words). Several specific examples are provided (e.g., golish for goldfish as a word in context; homework as a compound word), and each one is relevant to the discussion of Daniel's word identification strategies. The candidate even takes the time to offer a plausible explanation for why Daniel did not change one word (spilled) that he guessed incorrectly from context clues.

Analysis

Support

The candidate provides substantial and accurate support for the particular word identification skills discussed, citing specific instances of the use of context clues by pointing to Daniel's self-corrections of counter, golish, and fib (container, goldfish, and fishbowl). The candidate further supports Daniel's difficulty with compound words by correctly citing sunshine, forever, and homework, among others. These examples are critical evidence of Daniel's word identification strategies.

Analysis

Rationale

The strength of the rationale is in the candidate's analysis of Daniel's use of context clues from two different perspectives: as a weakness, Daniel "doesn't seem to have another way," and as a strength, Daniel “ is taking in the meaning of the sentence" through the context. The candidate demonstrates how breaking down compound words into smaller words would give Daniel an additional word identification strategy. Each part ofthe discussion demonstrates the candidate's reasoning about Daniel's word identification skill. 

Analysis

Constructed Response Practice Tips

1. Read the literary passage. Read like a reader vs a test taker. Remember to

take the time to thoughtfully and carefully read the literary passage.

Note: This is one reason why you should do the constructed response questions

first.

Constructed Response Practice Tips

2. Do a basic literary analysis of the passage. Check understanding of key literal and inferential interpretations.

You can use a t-chart to record the information.

Literal Details Inferential Interpretation

s   

Constructed Response Practice Tips

3. Examine the retelling of the student. Analyze it in the four areas: literal comprehension, inferential comprehension, engagement of schema and self-

monitoring. Use a grid to keep track of the retelling sentence by sentence. Use a + if the retelling

shows evidence the reader can or - if the retelling shows evidence the reader was confused.

Student’s statement

Literal Inferential Engagement of Schema

Self-monitoring

Facts and details

Inferences, big ideas, implied thoughts

Connectionsto self, texts and world

Meta-cognitive language, strategic talk

“Right There” “Between the lines”

“Author and you”

“Thinking about thinking”

1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

7.

Constructed Response Practice Tips

4. Identify one area of strength and one area of weakness in the reader’s

comprehension based on the retelling. Probe what evidence supports the response. State the response in a

frame as attached..

Paragraph One: Answer right away. The student has a strength in ______ and the students has a weakness in ______ .

Paragraph Two: Identify strength, define dimension, and cite at least 2-3 specific examples.

The student’s strength is _ (general area) _________ which is_ (definition)_______. In particular, the student can _____ (specific skill) _____________ as seen in these two or three specific examples __ (evidence from passage)____.

Paragraph Three: Identify weakness, define dimension, cite at least 2-3 specific examples.

The student’s weakness is _ (general area) _________ which is_ (definition) _______. In particular, the student had difficulty with _____(specific skill)_____________ as seen in these two or three specific examples __(evidence from passage)____.

Paragraph Four: Identify what and how you would teach based on this information. So I would support the student to improve on __ (area) _______ by doing __

(instructional strategies) ____________.

Purpose

The candidate fully responds to the charge of the prompt by pointing to significant reading comprehension skills. A strength, literal comprehension, and a weakness, inferential comprehension, are identified and supported thoroughly with evidence from the prompt.

Analysis

Subject Matter Knowledge

The first paragraph immediately demonstrates the candidate's knowledge about reading comprehension skills. The comments are appropriate to a third grader who is unable to read at a deeper level of comprehension. The candidate picks up on Tyler's missing the significance of the conversation, that Emma is relating it from her seven-year-old perspective.

Analysis

Support

Support is ample throughout the response. The candidate provides pertinent evidence from the prompt, in his own words and by quoting it directly. The explanations supply the context that is needed to understand how the reading attribute and the examples are related.

Analysis

Rationale

The response is ably reasoned and clearly focused on reading comprehension. The choice of strength/weakness to discuss, the explanations given, and the examples provided all show a comprehensiveunderstanding of reading comprehension.

Analysis

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