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GED 2014
Changes, Challenges, and ChoicesOctober 14, 2014
Today’s Topics
• Changes– Why change?– What Changed?
• Challenges– New skill requirements– New focus means new teaching focus
• Choices– GED vs. TASC
Changes
• Why Change?– Keep test relevant to changing standards– About every 10 years
• What’s Changed?– Test goals– Format – Content– Test basis
Test Goals
• To provide results leading to the award of a high school equivalency credential
• To provide evidence of readiness to enter workforce training programs or postsecondary education (Honors)
• To provide actionable information about a candidate’s academic strengths and weaknesses
Test Scoring
• Two levels of completion– Passing—High school equivalency– Honors—candidate is prepared for job training or
post-secondary education• Scoring scaled from 100-200– 150-169 is Passing– 170+ is Honors
• Minimum 600 total for entire battery• 680 for full Honors
Why Computer-based Testing?
• Technology is EVERYWHERE!• Today…– Most job postings are exclusively online– Most job applications are completed online– Most job responsibilities have a technology
component built in• In the next decade…– Career opportunities will be created by
technological advances
Format Changes
2002• Booklet and bubble sheet• Five tests• One essay• Results by mail• No performance feedback
2014• Computer based testing• Four tests• Two “extended response”• Results in minutes or day• Extensive performance
feedback
Format Changes
• Computer based testing (CBT) allows new response types– Fill in the Blank–Drag and Drop–Hot Spot– Short Answer– Extended Response–Drop down
Content Changes
2002• Literacy Arts
– Includes essay
• Reading• Mathematics• Social Studies• Science
2014• Reasoning Through
Language Arts– Includes extended response
• Mathematical Reasoning• Social Studies
– Includes extended response
• Science
Test Basis
2002
• Bloom’s Taxonomy– Remembering– Understanding– Applying– Analyzing– Evaluating– Creating
2014
• Webb’s Depth of Knowledge– Level 1—Recall &
reproduction– Level 2— Skills and
concepts– Level 3—Short-term
Strategic thinking– Level 4—Extended
thinking
DOK Basics
• Depth of Knowledge—basis of Common Core Standards• A way to analyze a wide range of educational materials on the
basis of the cognitive demands they require in order for a learner to produce a response to those materials.
• By contrast, 2002 test based on– “knowing/head, feeling/heart, doing/hands”– Application, analysis, synthesis, evaluation
• Emphasis is on the complexity of the cognitive process that activities (applying, analyzing, creating) requires on the part of the learner.
• DOK level 1-3 skills.
Examples of DOK Levels
• DOK 1- Describe three characteristics of metamorphic rocks. (Requires simple recall)
• DOK 2- Describe the difference between metamorphic and igneous rocks. (Requires cognitive processing to determine the differences in the two rock types)
• DOK 3- Describe a model that you might use to represent the relationships that exist within the rock cycle. (Requires deep understanding of rock cycle and a determination of how best to represent it)
The Rock Cycle
• OK, I had to look it up!
Challenges
• New skill requirements– Computer skills • Typing!• Mouse skills
– Pop-up window management– Drag and drop, cut and paste
• Change in focus– More real world, so different topics– Tutors face same problem as teachers dealing with
Common Core Standards
Resource Challenges
• 2002 test served by wealth of published and online material
• 2014 test not yet so well-supported• Best source at this time is the GED Testing
Service sitehttp://gedtestingservice.com
• Beware of other sources, as 2002 material may now be misleading
Choices
• GED Testing Service test available at testing sites throughout California
• California has also approved McGraw-Hill’s Test Assessing Secondary Completion (TASC)
What is TASC?
• McGraw Hill’s Test Assessing Secondary Completion
• An approved GED alternative in California• Designed to assess candidates’ level of
achievement relative to high school seniors
From McGraw-Hill
• Three TASC test forms are available each year in English and Spanish with accommodations including large print, Braille, and audio.
• TASC test addresses the learning standards set forth by the Common Core State Standards and College and Career Readiness Standards, and measures test takers' level of achievement relative to that of graduating high school seniors and, readiness for post-secondary education.
• Supports a complete alignment to Office of Vocational and Adult Education (OVAE) National College and Career Standards for Adult Education.
GED vs. TASC
GED 2014• Common Core Standards
based• Exclusively computer based
testing• Four Tests• Two free retakes• Honors score level• Cost to state=$120• In place in California
TASC• Working toward CCS in first
years• Computer based or paper
based tests• Five tests• Two free retakes• Single score level• Cost to state=$52• Coming to California
From McGraw-Hill
Beginning in 2015, TASC test will offer increased coverage of the College and Career Readiness Standards through a gradual inclusion of additional item types including constructed-response items and technology-enhanced items.
TASC Question Types
• Multiple-choice items in all content areas• One extended writing prompt, like 2002 GED• Gridded response items in mathematics• Stimulus-based science and social studies
multiple-choice item sets.
Resources
• GED Testing Service web sitehttp://gedtestingservice.com
• McGraw-Hill TASC web sitehttp://www.tasctest.com/educators.html
Today’s Topics
• Changes– Why change?– What Changed?
• Challenges– New skill requirements– New focus means new teaching focus
• Choices– GED vs. TASC