Date: Fri 06-Mar-1998
Date: Fri 06-Mar-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: MICHEL
Quick Words:
schools-report-cards
Full Text:
Student Assessment: Is It Accurate Or Not?
BY MICHELE HOGAN
It's report card time again.
Anxiety provoking or elating, report cards evoke strong reactions in students
and parents alike.
Parents expect to find out just how well their children are doing in school.
But teachers at Sandy Hook School raised concerns that report cards are not
fully and accurately summarizing student achievement.
First grade teachers there have come up with a more detailed performance
assessment to go with the report card, which helps define exactly what the
student knows and what they should be learning.
Some teachers throughout the district are starting to expect students to take
an increasingly active role in self-assessment -- to take charge of their own
learning.
Report cards have barely changed in Newtown in over a decade, although
curriculum has changed significantly.
Some classes that children attend every week are not mentioned in the report
card. Children go to specialists in art, music, physical education and library
on a weekly basis, yet the current report card entirely omits these areas of
study.
In the report card used in the early 1980s, students were graded for
participation and effort in these subjects.
Spelling has also changed. In the 1980s' report card there was one mark for
spelling. In the current report card there are three. One of them is for
"weekly tests." But kids are not given weekly spelling tests in most
classrooms in the district any more.
(Weekly spelling tests were dropped from the curriculum because it turned out
that the words children spelled correctly on the spelling tests would often be
spelled incorrectly in daily usage.)
Dissatisfied
When the Gordon Black Survey was administered in October of 1997, each school
had the option of including its own questions to students, parents and
teachers in their school.
Sandy Hook School asked about the report card.
Although teachers expressed concern about the effectiveness of report cards,
parents and students were reasonably satisfied.
Teachers must collapse a great deal of information on each student to a
pre-printed form, which many Sandy Hook teachers found to be ineffective in
communicating student achievement.
When teachers were asked if "The report card enables me to communicate student
achievement effectively," only seven percent responded with "always."
Forty-four percent said "rarely."
One teacher in ten said that the report card "never" enables them to
communicate student achievement effectively.
Alternate Assessment
Throughout the district, there are teachers who are having students keep
portfolios of their work.
Portfolios provide a more valid assessment of student ability than letter
grades, and they are particularly helpful if a child moves to a new school
district.
Portfolios show examples of the child's work, but by itself, it does not
answer parents' questions about how their child compares to others.
A letter grade gives parents a better idea of how well their child is doing,
but does little to indicate strategies the child should follow to improve.
Reading is such a critical skill that the first grade teachers at Sandy Hook
School decided to add a performance-based assessment to the standard report
card.
This assessment details exactly where children are in their reading
development in 23 categories.
Teachers can then suggest strategies to parents for helping their child take
their next steps.
Jacky McMahon, first grade teacher at Sandy Hook School, provides parents with
a list of questions that would be good to ask a child who is having trouble
reading a word.
Depending on if the child needs help with knowing the sounds the letters make,
or with thinking about what word might make sense in the story, different
questions from the list are recommended.
The performance based assessment may feel natural for teachers, but parents
are given a full page explanation of the "language arts performance-based
assessment grid" just to help them understand it.
It involves parents and captures reading assessment in more detail than the
current report card alone, but parents do have to work at it.
Should the report card be changed to incorporate this amount of detail?
Sandy Hook School parents and students were asked about the report card in
October (which was before the first grade parents had a chance to see the new
performance grid). Most parents and students reported they were already
satisfied with the old report card.
In the Gordon Black Survey, most Sandy Hook students said they "always"
understand how well they are doing in school by their report card, and most
parents thought they always or usually understood.
With the students, 52 percent said "always," 33 percent usually, 13 percent
sometimes, and only just over 1 percent said "rarely" or "never."
When answering "My child's achievement is clearly communicated through the
report card," 36 percent of the parents said "always"; 38 percent said
usually; 19 percent said sometimes, and less than 7 percent said "rarely."
Robert Kuklis, Assistant Superintendent of Schools, said that "what parents
have seen, they understand.
"Is it [the current report card] the best way of capturing student learning?
No. But it is a tool. If you begin to change that, parents will naturally say
`What does that mean?'
"You are not just changing reporting, you are changing culture. You are saying
`this is what learning means in this school, for your child.'
"I want to be sure that we know how to address those questions -- student
achievement and how to communicate it, before we make changes.
It will be a major move when we do it."
Dr Kuklis continued, "We may have more informal discussions to get a dialogue
going [among teachers and parents] but for now, there are greater priorities."
One related priority is a new initiative emphasizing student participation in
assessment.
Self-Directed Learning
In many upper elementary classes and middle school classes, students are
encouraged to take an active role in teacher-parent conferences.
Teachers still prepare the standard report card, but students are expected to
assess their own learning as well.
Dr Kuklis said that with self-directed learning, students are expected to
analyze their own work, recognize their strengths and weaknesses and notice
where improvements are needed.
This can apply to daily classroom work, school projects or additional
communications with parents and teachers at report card time.
Board of Education member Peggy Ulrich-Nims said she regularly encourages
self-direction with the students she teaches.
She said it is motivating, not only for situations where a child needs to
catch up, but also for enrichment.
She said that sometimes a student who has a strong interest in a particular
topic will include plans to continue to study it in more depth in the future.
Dr Kuklis said that he is asking teachers in the district to send him examples
of self-directed learning by the beginning of April.
He wants to initiate a dialogue about self-directed learning within the
schools, and review exemplary examples of the practice.
He said "self-directed learning is not taught in a lesson....The teacher
provides a framework so students can self-assess."
