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Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007
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Page 1: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions &

Recommendations

Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan

Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash.

IRA, Toronto, May, 2007

Page 2: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

Why should we be cautious when using test scores to guide

instruction?

Page 3: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

Problems with Test Scores

• Teaching the test

• The issue of standards--alignment?

• Ceilings and floors

• Masking individual differences

Page 4: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

40

45

50

55

60

65

70

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14

Year

Percentile Rank

MathReading

Page 5: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

0102030405060708090

CT SC TN TX NY IL

State

NAEP Scores vs State Scores

NY Times 11/05

Page 6: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

Ceilings and Floors

Page 7: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

Johnny can’t read because Johnny needs phonics

By Harold Hochstatter

Chairman of Senate Education Committee

Seattle Times

Op Ed, Feb. 25, 1998

Page 8: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

% Wd Id

Mng Flu

Auto Wd Callers 18 + + -- -- + + Strug Wd Callers 15 -- -- ++ Wd Stumblers 17 -- + -- Slow Comprehend 24 + + + -- Slow Wd Callers 17 + -- -- Disabled Rders 9 -- -- -- -- -- --

Page 9: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

Word Id Comp. Vocab Fluency

Sandy Tomas Trang Sandy

Trang Trang Joey Martin

Jesse Andrew Andrew Jesse Jesse

Page 10: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

H & T%ile

CWPM

Acc(%)

Rate(wpm)

Exp.(1-4)

ITBS(NCE)

Dibels

>75 151140

8999

169142

34

7048

No riskNo risk

50-74 118128

9493

126137

23

4264

No riskNo risk

25-49 9097

9396

9799

23

4536

Some riskSome risk

0-24 8845

9496

9447

21

6631

At riskAt risk

Grade 4 Student Profiles

Page 11: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

What does all this mean?

• We can’t trust any single piece of information to screen perfectly or guide instructional decisions

• Need an inquiry approach to using assessment information

Page 12: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

What is an Inquiry Approach?

• All assessment info is viewed as a “springboard” to understanding student learning--not as static “facts”

• We need to use easily accessible information and questions to help figure out where to go with instruction

Page 13: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

Easily Available Information

• State/district test results

• WCPM

• Running Records

• Writing samples

• Spelling tests/samples

Page 14: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

How do we use this information?

• Look at available evidence together

• Check to see if information is consistent– With itself– With classroom evidence– With teacher judgment

Page 15: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

Asking Questions

• If ALL evidence points to student doing well, ask what, if any, confirming information is needed to plan instruction

• If ALL evidence points to problems, ask what additional information is needed to plan instruction

• If evidence is inconsistent, ask what might be going on and what information is needed to clarify before planning instruction

Page 16: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

Ongoing Questioning

• With each additional piece of information ask: Does this fit with what we already know about the student?– If yes, do we have all the information we

need to plan instruction – If not, generate and test hypotheses about

what’s going on

Page 17: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

How do we get more information easily?

• High utility assessments– IRI or IRI-like procedures– Running Records

• Work samples/observations– Writing– Spelling– Oral language

Page 18: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

The Many Uses of IRI-like Procedures

• Much more than a set of scores• Qualitative Analyses

– Comprehension• Oral reading, silent reading, listening • Literal and inferential comprehension questions• Retellings

– Word recognition• Comparison of word rec in and out of context• Word rec strategies

– Vocabulary– Fluency

Page 19: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

Probing Retelling/Comp Performance

• Write/tell about the story you just read in your own words.

• The following sentences tell you something about the story you just read. Read (listen to) them and write/tell some more about the story.

• Place a check next to each idea that you think was in the story you just read.

Page 20: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

Probing Strategy Usagewith Think Aloud

S: (reads title) Space Ship EarthT: What were you thinking when you read the

title?S: A space trip to earth. (Reads text haltingly).

Boy! I had a lot of trouble with that.T: What makes you think you had trouble?S: I kept messing up.T: What do you mean by messing up?

Page 21: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

Think Aloud (cont’d)

S: I kept reading sentences over.

T: What do you think caused you to read over like that?

S: Not understanding it.

T: OK, did any of the words give you trouble?

S: No

Page 22: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

Pursuing Leads

S: Harry lik..liked to walk to the store. He like to hop on the ker, cr, crub, crub, kir, crib, crib.. (22 sec on word)

S: “Mom is teaching me the sound of the letters but there’s all kinds of sounds for the u”

T: I can hear that you are trying some outS: (Spontaneously goes on trying to sound out

word), cube, kirb, crub, cr.. T: The word is curbS: Well, I would expect a er there because we

have a chart in class that has the er sound…

Page 23: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

Probing Word Recognition

Reader Text AnalysisCould/cloud clouds SC; uses mng/syn

Then/tundra/ tundraherds

Thunder-heads

multisyllabic;uses grapho-phonic

motorless motionless Multi; suffix

Torn/tornado tornado SC; using mng.

Unc/oncing oncoming Multi; prefix

Page 24: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

Probing Vocabulary

• Observe performance on voc questions; add/ask new voc questions

• Observe oral reading errors for evidence of words not in speaking voc

• Probe understanding of words that are questionable--ask for synonyms, use in sentence, etc.

Page 25: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

Example Student #1

• Grade 4– WCPM 140– ITBS 48NCE

• Inconsistent information leads us to ask: Why might a student who is so fast (fluent) have such low comprehension?

Page 26: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

Student 1 Follow-up

• Informal Reading Inventory– Accuracy--99%– Expression--4 (very fluent)– Passage comp--below grade level

• What next?– Listening comprehension – Vocabulary questions

Page 27: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

Student #1--Results and What to try?

• Listening comp and voc OK (classic word caller)

• SLOW DOWN

• If that doesn’t work try comp and/or monitoring strategies

Page 28: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

Example Student #2

• Grade 4 ESL student– WCPM, 117 (low risk)– Comp/state test, <second grade– Writing sample--below proficient

• Inconsistent info leads us to ask: Why might a student who is low risk on wcpm perform poorly on comprehension and writing?

Page 29: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

Student #2 Follow-up

• Informal Reading Inventory– Word rec in context, second grade– Expression, 2.5 (borderline disfluent)

• No evidence of monitoring for meaning

• What next?– Vocabulary– Oral language

Page 30: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

Student #2--Results and What to try?

• Low voc and oral English

• Try:– Second grade materials that are

interesting/familiar– Exposure to grade level content to build

background– Instruction in decoding, vocab, and

monitoring for meaning

Page 31: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

Example Student #3

• Grade 2 student– WCPM, 73 (some risk)– ITBS, 80NCE

• Inconsistent information leads us to ask: Why might a student who is struggling with oral reading fluency do so well in comprehension?

Page 32: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

Student #3 Follow-up

• Informal Reading Inventory– Acc, 97%– Expression, 3 (fluent)

• What next? Why?– Isolated word rec– Rate with repeated readings

Page 33: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

Student #3--Results and What to try?

• Isolated word rec low--classic slow kid

• Decoding in context is much better than decoding out of context

• Reading is very slow

• Hyp--needs word rec work and practice, practice, practice

Page 34: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

Student #4

• Grade 2– WCPM, 90 (low risk)– ITBS, 39NCE– Spelling--still emergent

• Questions: Why might someone with this rate not do better in comp? What does poor spelling say about word rec?

Page 35: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

Student #4 Follow-up

• Informal Reading Inventory– Accuracy, 87%, grade level passages– Rate, 102– Expression, 1 (non-fluent)

• What next?– Listening comp– Voc– Sight vocab/decoding

Page 36: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

Student #4--Results and What to try?

• Listening comp and voc high

• Sight words/decoding low

• Over-relying on context so try– Word rec instruction (both sight words and

decoding strategies)– Use first grade materials that are less

familiar

Page 37: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

In Closing

We often spend more time giving and scoring tests and less time thinking about the information we have

Instead, we need to spend more time thinking about the information we have and the additional information we need

Page 38: Using Assessment to Inform Instruction: Cautions & Recommendations Karen Wixson, Univ. of Michigan Sheila Valencia. Univ. of Wash. IRA, Toronto, May, 2007.

Oral Reading Think Aloud

S: (reads title) Space Ship EarthT: What were you thinking when you read

the title?S: A space trip to earth. (reads haltingly)

Boy! I had a lot of trouble with this.T: What makes you think you had

trouble?S: I kept messing up.


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