slos, assessments and rubrics

Post on 04-Jan-2016

64 Views

Category:

Documents

3 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

DESCRIPTION

SLOs, Assessments and Rubrics. Low Incidence Network Meeting September 23, 2014 Angie Chapple-Wang, SST 3 Meghan Shelby, SST 3 Kalee Miller-Jones, SST 3. Who’s in the room?. Find someone in the room you do not know. Pair up, find out, then share out: Name Position District - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

SLOs, Assessments and Rubrics

Low Incidence Network Meeting

September 23, 2014

Angie Chapple-Wang, SST 3

Meghan Shelby, SST 3

Kalee Miller-Jones, SST 3

Who’s in the room?

• Find someone in the room you do not know. Pair up, find out, then share out:NamePositionDistrictGrade level/subjectWhat do you like to do when you are

not teaching?What do you hope to learn?What do you plan to contribute?

Updates• AASCD—Science and Social Studies NEW

SS grades 4 and 6 Science grades 5 and 8 Administration Training and Updates

• Revised documents http://oh.portal.airast.org/oh_alt/resources

• Revised participation flow chart http://oh.portal.airast.org/oh_alt/wp-content/uploa

ds/2014/09/AASCDParticipationCriteriaFlowChartFinal082514.pdf

Updates

• PARCC Accessibility Manual http://www.parcconline.org/parcc-accessibility-fe

atures-and-accommodations-manual

• Graduation Options http://education.ohio.gov/Topics/Special-Educati

on/Ohio-Core-and-Students-with-Disabilities Handouts

Updates

• OLAC Diverse Learners Module http://www.ohioleadership.org/

• Lesson and Unit Planning http://literacy.nationaldb.org/

• ODE Diverse Learners page http://education.ohio.gov/Topics/Special-Educati

on/Diverse-Learners

So why are we talking about SLOs??

So why are we talking about SLOs??

What is a Student Learning Objective? 

A Student Learning Objective (SLO) is a measurable, long-term academic growth target that a teacher sets at the beginning of the year for all students or for subgroups of students. SLOs demonstrate a teacher’s impact on student learning within a given interval of instruction based upon baseline data gathered at the beginning of the course. Each SLO includes:

• The baseline and trend data;

• The student population or sample included in the objective;

• The period of time covered by the SLO;

• The standards the SLO will align with;

• The assessments that will be used to measure student progress; The SLO should include assessments both to track

student progress and make midcourse corrections (formative), and to indicate if the objective was met (summative).

• The expected student growth; and

• The rationale for the expected student growth.

Criteria for Selecting Assessments

1. Is the assessment aligned to both my students’ learning objective and to the appropriate grade- or content-specific standards?

2. Does the assessment allow high- and low-achieving students to adequately demonstrate their knowledge? In other words, does the assessment have enough stretch?

3. Is the assessment valid and reliable?

Course-Level or Targeted SLO

• The student population or sample included in the objectiveSLOs can apply to all students

(course-level SLOs) or subgroups of students (targeted SLOs)

Students covered under a teacher’s SLO(s) must be proportional and representative of the teacher’s schedule

Standards

• The standards the SLO will align withThis can be the OACS-E if the students’

course of study aligns with them but should also reference the aligned grade level standard statement in a learning progression

Formative assessment

• The SLO should include assessments both to track student progress and make midcourse corrections (formative), and to indicate if the objective was met (summative).• For example, the types of assessments that

are used in the TBT 5 step process or ANY teacher team/data team analysis process

• Examples of TBT protocols that include OACS-E

Formative Assessment

Formative Assessment

Formative Assessment

Formative Assessment

SLO Assessment

Learning Progressions • Read the article:

Learning Progressions: Connecting Ongoing Learning to Assessment

While you read, mark your article

! Important

+ Agree

X Disagree

Talk at your table about things you found in common or different

Learning progressions help teachers determine a path for how student learning might

move toward increased understanding over time with

focused instruction.

• Standards = end point

• Learning Progressions = map/path

Learning progressions are different from standards and curriculum because they… • are developed (and refined) using available

research;

• are organized around the big ideas of each content domain and have clear binding threads that articulate development of essential/core concepts and processes;

• articulate movement toward increased understanding (deeper or broader or generalizable transfer); and

• go hand-in-hand with well-designed and well-aligned assessments.

Developing and applying a central theory about the nature of learning and knowing for students with significant disabilities should probably not begin with their disabilities, but with what we know about learning, regardless of disability

Hess, 2012

• Evaluate the various grade band SLOs, assessments and TBT protocols and formative assessments Use the Student Learning Objective (SLO)

Template Checklist Use Checklist for Selecting Appropriate

Assessments

TBT protocol• Learning targets are identified• Assessment that matches learning targets• Strengths and weaknesses are identified• Shared expectations match the strengths and

weaknesses• Implementation matches the expectations

Now you try…..

• Begin to create SLOs and connected assessments using the OACS-E

• Work in teams

• We will provide feedback and support

top related