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Beginning-of-Year Administration: Reminders & Updates TPRI 2010-2014

Beginning-of-Year Administration: Reminders & Updates

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Beginning-of-Year Administration: Reminders & Updates. TPRI 2010-2014. Contents. Slide 3When to Administer BOY Slides 4 – 6 Kindergarten Slides 7 – 16 Grade 1 Slides 17 – 27 Grade 2 Slides 28 – 38 Grade 3 Slide 39PMER Slide 40PMBR Slide 41Contact Information. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Beginning-of-Year Administration:

Reminders & Updates

TPRI 2010-2014

Page 2: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

2Contents

Slide 3 When to Administer BOY

Slides 4 – 6 Kindergarten

Slides 7 – 16 Grade 1

Slides 17 – 27 Grade 2

Slides 28 – 38 Grade 3

Slide 39 PMER

Slide 40 PMBR

Slide 41 Contact Information

Page 3: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

3When to Administer BOY

•For Kindergarten, TPRI recommends BOY administration begin six weeks after the start of the school year.

•For Grades 1, 2 and 3, TPRI recommends BOY administration begin two weeks after the start of the school year.

•Individual schools and school districts set the specific dates for their TPRI administration window to open and close.

•TPRI recommends an administration window of 2 weeks or less.

Page 4: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Kindergarten

4Kindergarten BOY Reminders

Screening Section

• The purpose of the Screening Section is to predict for teachers which of their students may need additional or intensive reading instruction in order to meet their grade level goals.

• At BOY teachers should complete the Screening Section with all students in the class.

• The Screening Section at BOY includes two tasks: - SCR-1 Letter Sound

- SCR-2 Blending Onset-Rimes and Phonemes

• After the Screening Section, teachers should follow the Branching Rules to determine which tasks on the Inventory Section of the TPRI a student should complete.

Page 5: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Kindergarten

5Kindergarten BOY Reminders

Inventory Section

• The purpose of the Inventory Section is to allow teachers to acquire more data to help match reading instruction with specific student needs. It is not expected that students will be able to complete all of the TPRI tasks successfully at the beginning of the year.

• If students scored Developed (D) on the Screening Section, then skip to the Listening Comprehension portion of the Inventory. Students who scored Still Developing (SD) on the screening should begin with

BPA–1 or PA-1.

• The Book and Print Awareness task (BPA-1) is optional.

• Follow the Branching Rules when a student scores Still Developing (SD) on a task in the PA and GK portions of the inventory.

• All students should complete the Listening Comprehension portion of the inventory.

Page 6: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Kindergarten

6BOY – Kindergarten Listening Comprehension

• The Listening Comprehension task at BOY is COM-BOY.

• This task is administered to all students.• The BOY story is The Day the Prince Lost His

Tooth.• Ask the comprehension questions listed on the

Student Record Sheet.• Score 1 for correct and 0 for incorrect. Do not

give ½ points.• Sample answers are provided, but rely on your

professional judgment in scoring responses as correct or incorrect.

Page 7: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Grade 1

7Grade 1 BOY Reminders

Screening Section

• The purpose of the Screening Section is to predict for teachers which of their students may need additional or intensive reading instruction in order to meet their grade level goals.

• At BOY teachers should complete the Screening Section with all students in the class.

• The Screening Section at BOY includes three tasks: - SCR-1 Letter Sound

- SCR-2 Word Reading- SCR-3 Blending Phonemes

• After the Screening Section, teachers should follow the Branching Rules to determine which tasks on the Inventory Section of the TPRI a student should complete.

Page 8: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Grade 1

8Grade 1 BOY Reminders

Inventory Section

• The purpose of the Inventory Section is to allow teachers to acquire more data to help match reading instruction with specific student needs. It is not expected that students will be able to complete all of the TPRI tasks successfully at the beginning of the year.

• If students scored Developed (D) on the Screening Section then skip to the Word Reading portion of the Inventory. Students who scored Still Developing (SD) on the Screening Section should begin with

PA-1.

• Follow the Branching Rules when a student scores Still Developing (SD) on a task in the PA, GK or Word Reading portions of the inventory.

• All students take the Word Reading and the Reading Accuracy, Fluency and Comprehension portions of the Inventory Section.

Page 9: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Grade 1

9Scoring the Word Reading Task

• Score words as correct (1) or incorrect (0).

• For instructional planning, record incorrect responses as the student reads each word. – Use phonetic spelling that will later allow you to recall

the answer the student provided.

• The Error Analysis Chart helps understand specific word decoding confusion. – Do not complete the Error Analysis Chart while you are

with the student.– Complete the Error Analysis Chart for students to whom

you will provide targeted GK instruction.

Page 10: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Grade 1

10BOY – Grade 1 Reading Accuracy, Fluency & Comprehension

• The Reading Accuracy, Fluency & Comprehension task at BOY is READ-BOY.

• This portion is administered to all students.

• The BOY stories are:– Story 1 – Tut– Story 2 – Baseball Game

• All students attempt to read both stories. If the student reaches the frustrational level on a story, then read the story to the student.

Page 11: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Grade 1

11Correct Story Reading Administration & Scoring

• SAY: I’m going to ask you to read a story.  The title of the story is _____________.  After you read it, I’ll ask you a few questions.  Read the story out loud to me.

• DO:  Place the Story Booklet in front of the student.  Start the stopwatch when the student reads the first word of the story.  As the student reads, mark errors on the Student Record Sheet. 

• Mark any words not read correctly with a slash ( / ) on the Student Record Sheet.

• Story reading errors include:– Mispronunciations – The student pronounces the word incorrectly.  This includes leaving off –s, –ed and

–ing endings. – Substitutions – The student replaces the correct word with a different word. – Omissions – The student skips a word. – Reversals – The student reads adjacent words in the wrong order. – Hesitations – The student pauses for longer than 3 seconds or takes longer than 3 seconds to sound

out a word.  In these cases,  provide the word and count it as an error.  • Items not considered errors:

– Insertions – The student adds a whole word that does not appear in the text. – Self-corrections – The student makes an error, but then corrects the error. – Repetitions – The student reads the same word or phrase multiple times. – Loss of place – The student skips a line or loses their place. Redirect the student to the correct place in

the story and allow the stopwatch to continue to run.

• If the student reads the same word incorrectly multiple times throughout a story, count the word as an error each time it is read incorrectly.  All words, including names, are scored in the same way.

Page 12: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Grade 1

12Determining Fluency Rates Using the Fluency Equating Tables

• TPRI provides tools to help teachers measure and understand fluency scores more effectively. These tools come in the form of Fluency Equating Tables which equate fluency performance on any story with the hardest End-of-Year story (Story 6).

• For more information and to download the Fluency Equating Table for your grade level, go to: http://www.tpri.org/resources/fluency-equating-tables.html

Page 13: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Grade 1

13Determining Average Fluency Rates

• Average fluency rates for the two BOY stories (Story 1 & Story 2) can be used for reporting, grouping students and/or for planning instruction.

• TPRI recommends that average fluency rates be calculated using the equated fluency score for each story the student reads at the instructional or independent level.

• If the student is able to read both stories at the instructional or independent level, then the average fluency rate is determined using this formula:

(Story 1 rate + Story 2 rate) ÷ 2 = Avg. rate

Page 14: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Grade 1

14Determining Average Fluency Rates When Students Reach Frustration

• If a student scores at the frustrational level on a story, do not calculate a fluency rate for that story.

• Students who reach frustration on both Story 1 & 2 will not have an average fluency rate.

• If the student is only able to read one story at instructional or independent level, TPRI recommends that teachers record the equated fluency rate for that one story as the student’s average fluency score.

Page 15: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Grade 1

15BOY – Grade 1 Reading Comprehension

• Ask the comprehension questions listed on the Student Record Sheet.

• Score 1 for correct and 0 for incorrect. Do not give ½ points.

• Sample answers are provided, but rely on your professional judgment in scoring responses as correct or incorrect.

Page 16: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Grade 1

16Scoring Developed (D) for Reading Comprehension

• Students who listen to a story after reaching frustration cannot score D for Reading Comprehension.

• On an individual story, students can score D for Reading Comprehension by answering 5-6 questions correctly, but there is not an overall D criteria for Reading Comprehension.

• To consider students' comprehension scores in relation to each other (when grouping students, for example), there are two common and efficient approaches. – Look at whether students scored D on both stories, 1 story

or 0 stories. – Look at the total number of comprehension questions that

students answered correctly for both stories.

Page 17: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Grade 2

17Grade 2 BOY Reminders

Screening Section

• The purpose of the Screening Section is to predict for teachers which of their students may need additional or intensive reading instruction in order to meet their grade level goals.

• At BOY teachers should complete the Screening Section with all students in the class.

• The Screening Section at BOY includes one task: - SCR-1 Word Reading

• After the Screening Section, the teacher should administer all tasks of the Inventory Section.

Page 18: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Grade 2

18Grade 2 BOY Reminders

Inventory Section

• The purpose of the Inventory Section is to allow teachers to acquire more data to help match reading instruction with specific student needs. It is not expected that students will be able to complete all of the TPRI tasks successfully at the beginning of the year.

• All students take the Spelling, Word Reading and the Reading Accuracy, Fluency and Comprehension portions of the Inventory Section.

Page 19: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Grade 2

19Grade 2 BOY Spelling Task

• The spelling task may be administered to the whole class at once, in small groups or individually.

• Carefully follow the script in the Teacher’s Guide.

• Score words as correct (1) or incorrect (0).

• The Error Analysis Chart helps understand specific spelling confusion and will help to guide instruction.

Page 20: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Grade 2

20Scoring the Word Reading Task

• Score words as correct (1) or incorrect (0).

• Follow the Branching Rules if a student scores 0 on Set 1.

• For instructional planning, record incorrect responses as the student reads each word. – Use phonetic spelling that will allow you to recall the

answer the student provided.

• The Error Analysis Chart helps understand specific word decoding confusion. – Do not complete the Error Analysis Chart while you are

with the student.– Complete the Error Analysis Chart for students to whom

you will provide targeted GK instruction.

Page 21: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Grade 2

21BOY – Grade 2 Reading Accuracy, Fluency & Comprehension

• The Reading Accuracy, Fluency & Comprehension task at BOY is READ-BOY.

• This portion is administered to all students.

• The BOY stories are:– Story 1 – Rosa’s New Friend– Story 2 – Skateboard!

• All students attempt to read both stories. If the student reaches the frustrational level on a story, then read the story to the student.

Page 22: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Grade 2

22Correct Story Reading Administration & Scoring

• SAY: I’m going to ask you to read a story.  The title of the story is _____________.  After you read it, I’ll ask you a few questions.  Read the story out loud to me.

• DO:  Place the Story Booklet in front of the student.  Start the stopwatch when the student reads the first word of the story.  As the student reads, mark errors on the Student Record Sheet. 

• Mark any words not read correctly with a slash ( / ) on the Student Record Sheet.

• Story reading errors include:– Mispronunciations – The student pronounces the word incorrectly.  This includes leaving off –s, –ed

and –ing endings. – Substitutions – The student replaces the correct word with a different word. – Omissions – The student skips a word. – Reversals – The student reads adjacent words in the wrong order. – Hesitations – The student pauses for longer than 3 seconds or takes longer than 3 seconds to sound

out a word.  In these cases,  provide the word and count it as an error.  • Items not considered errors:

– Insertions – The student adds a whole word that does not appear in the text. – Self-corrections – The student makes an error, but then corrects the error. – Repetitions – The student reads the same word or phrase multiple times. – Loss of place – The student skips a line or loses their place. Redirect the student to the correct place

in the story and allow the stopwatch to continue to run.

• If the student reads the same word incorrectly multiple times throughout a story, count the word as an error each time it is read incorrectly.  All words, including names, are scored in the same way.

Page 23: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Grade 2

23Determining Fluency Rates Using the Fluency Equating Tables

• TPRI now provides tools to help teachers measure and understand fluency scores more effectively. These tools come in the form of Fluency Equating Tables which equate fluency performance on any story with the hardest End-of-Year story (Story 6).

• For more information or to download the Fluency Equating Table for your grade level, go to:

http://www.tpri.org/resources/fluency-equating-tables.html

Page 24: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Grade 2

24Determining Average Fluency Rates

• Average fluency rates for the two BOY stories (Story 1 & Story 2) can be used for reporting, grouping students and/or for planning instruction.

• TPRI recommends that average fluency rates be calculated using the equated fluency score for each story the student reads at the instructional or independent level.

• If the student is able to read both stories at the instructional or independent level, then the average fluency rate is determined using this formula:

(Story 1 rate + Story 2 rate) ÷ 2 = Avg. rate

Page 25: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Grade 2

25Determining Average Fluency Rates When Students Reach Frustration

• If a student scores at the frustrational level on a story, do not calculate a fluency rate for that story.

• Students who reach frustration on both Story 1 & 2 will not have an average fluency rate.

• If the student is only able to read one story at instructional or independent level, TPRI recommends that teachers record the equated fluency rate for that one story as the student’s average fluency score.

Page 26: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Grade 2

26BOY – Grade 2 Reading Comprehension

• Ask the comprehension questions listed on the Student Record Sheet.

• Score 1 for correct and 0 for incorrect. Do not give ½ points.

• Sample answers are provided, but rely on your professional judgment in scoring responses as correct or incorrect.

Page 27: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Grade 2

27Scoring Developed (D) for Reading Comprehension

• Students who listen to a story after reaching frustration cannot score D for Reading Comprehension.

• On an individual story, students can score D for Reading Comprehension by answering 5-6 questions correctly, but there is not an overall D criteria for Reading Comprehension.

• To consider students' comprehension scores in relation to each other (when grouping students, for example), there are two common and efficient approaches. – Look at whether students scored D on both stories, 1 story

or 0 stories. – Look at the total number of comprehension questions that

students answered correctly for both stories.

Page 28: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Grade 3

28Grade 3 BOY Reminders

Screening Section

• The purpose of the Screening Section is to predict for teachers which of their students may need additional or intensive reading instruction in order to meet their grade level goals.

• At BOY teachers should complete the Screening Section with all students in the class.

• The Screening Section at BOY includes one task: - SCR-1 Word Reading

• After the Screening Section, the teacher should administer all tasks on the Inventory Section.

Page 29: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Grade 3

29Grade 3 BOY Reminders

Inventory Section

• The purpose of the Inventory Section is to allow teachers to acquire more data to help match reading instruction with specific student needs. It is not expected that students will be able to complete all of the TPRI tasks successfully at the beginning of the year.

• All students take the Spelling, Word Reading and the Reading Accuracy, Fluency and Comprehension portions of the Inventory Section.

Page 30: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Grade 3

30Grade 3 BOY Spelling Task

• The spelling task may be administered to the whole class at once, in small groups or individually.

• Carefully follow the script in the Teacher’s Guide.

• Score words as correct (1) or incorrect (0).

• The Error Analysis Chart helps understand specific spelling confusion and will help to guide instruction.

Page 31: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Grade 3

31Scoring the Word Reading Task

• Score words as correct (1) or incorrect (0).

• Follow the Branching Rules if a student scores 0 on Set 1.

• For instructional planning, record incorrect responses as the student reads each word. – Use phonetic spelling that will allow you to recall the

answer the student provided.

• The Error Analysis Chart helps understand specific word decoding confusion. – Do not complete the Error Analysis Chart while you are

with the student.– Complete the Error Analysis Chart for students to whom

you will provide targeted GK instruction.

Page 32: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Grade 3

32BOY – Grade 3 Reading Accuracy, Fluency & Comprehension

• The Reading Accuracy, Fluency & Comprehension task at BOY is READ-BOY.

• This portion is administered to all students.

• The BOY stories are:– Story 1 – A Bully at School– Story 2 – Getting the Vote

• All students attempt to read both stories. If the student reaches the frustrational level on a story, then read the story to the student.

Page 33: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Grade 3

33Correct Story Reading Administration & Scoring

• SAY: I’m going to ask you to read a story.  The title of the story is _____________.  After you read it, I’ll ask you a few questions.  Read the story out loud to me.

• DO:  Place the Story Booklet in front of the student.  Start the stopwatch when the student reads the first word of the story.  As the student reads, mark errors on the Student Record Sheet. 

• Mark any words not read correctly with a slash ( / ) on the Student Record Sheet.

• Story reading errors include:– Mispronunciations – The student pronounces the word incorrectly.  This includes leaving off –s, –ed

and –ing endings. – Substitutions – The student replaces the correct word with a different word. – Omissions – The student skips a word. – Reversals – The student reads adjacent words in the wrong order. – Hesitations – The student pauses for longer than 3 seconds or takes longer than 3 seconds to sound

out a word.  In these cases,  provide the word and count it as an error.  • Items not considered errors:

– Insertions – The student adds a whole word that does not appear in the text. – Self-corrections – The student makes an error, but then corrects the error. – Repetitions – The student reads the same word or phrase multiple times. – Loss of place – The student skips a line or loses their place. Redirect the student to the correct place

in the story and allow the stopwatch to continue to run.

• If the student reads the same word incorrectly multiple times throughout a story, count the word as an error each time it is read incorrectly.  All words, including names, are scored in the same way.

Page 34: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Grade 3

34Determining Fluency Rates Using the Fluency Equating Tables

• TPRI now provides tools to help teachers measure and understand fluency scores more effectively. These tools come in the form of Fluency Equating Tables which equate fluency performance on any story with the hardest End-of-Year story (Story 6).

• For more information or to download the Fluency Equating Table for your grade level, go to:

http://www.tpri.org/resources/fluency-equating-tables.html

Page 35: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Grade 3

35Determining Average Fluency Rates

• Average fluency rates for the two BOY stories (Story 1 & Story 2) can be used for reporting, grouping students and/or for planning instruction.

• TPRI recommends that average fluency rates be calculated using the equated fluency score for each story the student reads at the instructional or independent level.

• If the student is able to read both stories at the instructional or independent level, then the average fluency rate is determined using this formula:

(Story 1 rate + Story 2 rate) ÷ 2 = Avg. rate

Page 36: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Grade 3

36Determining Average Fluency Rates When Students Reach Frustration

• If a student scores at the frustrational level on a story, do not calculate a fluency rate for that story.

• Students who reach frustration on both Story 1 & 2 will not have an average fluency rate.

• If the student is only able to read one story at instructional or independent level, TPRI recommends that teachers record the equated fluency rate for that one story as the student’s average fluency score.

Page 37: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Grade 3

37BOY – Grade 3 Reading Comprehension

• Ask the comprehension questions listed on the Student Record Sheet.

• Score 1 for correct and 0 for incorrect. Do not give ½ points.

• Sample answers are provided, but rely on your professional judgment in scoring responses as correct or incorrect.

Page 38: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

Grade 3

38Scoring Developed (D) for Reading Comprehension

• Students who listen to a story after reaching frustration cannot score D for Reading Comprehension.

• On an individual story, students can score D for Reading Comprehension by answering 5-6 questions correctly, but there is not an overall D criteria for Reading Comprehension.

• To consider students' comprehension scores in relation to each other (when grouping students, for example), there are two common and efficient approaches. – Look at whether students scored D on both stories, 1 story

or 0 stories. – Look at the total number of comprehension questions that

students answered correctly for both stories.

Page 39: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

PMER

39Using the PMER After BOY

• Kindergarten and Grade 1

– The PMER is typically used with students who are receiving intervention to facilitate more regular checks of their progress.

– Two weeks after the BOY Benchmark Assessment begin with Set 2 and continue every two weeks in sequence.

– At MOY reevaluate student progress and determine whether to continue monitoring progress and/or whether Grade 1 students can begin to be assessed with the PMBR.

Page 40: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

PMBR

40Using the PMBR after BOY

• The PMBR is typically used with students who are receiving intervention to facilitate more regular checks of their progress.

• 2-Week Schedule– Start with Story 1 for the student’s grade level. Move

back to Story 1 for the previous grade if the student is frustrated.

• 6-Week Schedule– Use the timed word list to place the student into a story. – If the student is frustrated, back up to the previous story.– If the student is frustrated on Story 1 for their grade level,

use their word list score to place into a story for the previous grade level.

Page 41: Beginning-of-Year Administration:  Reminders & Updates

41Questions?

If you have any questions, please contact us at:

[email protected]

OR

Check the Frequently Asked Questions section of the website:

http://www.tpri.org/faqs/index.html