assessment grounding

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HSD2 Assessment Question Creation • The Objective: Participants will be able to construct reliable and valid test items. • The Task: Create question items for CBM 2 o Items include Multiple Choice, Constructed Response, ECR and SCR prompts. o Write multiple items for each framework or evidence outcome to be assessed (giving priority to RED and BLUE frameworks or evidence outcomes).

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Page 1: Assessment grounding

HSD2 Assessment Question Creation

• The Objective: Participants will be able to construct reliable and valid test items.

• The Task: Create question items for CBM 2o Items include Multiple Choice, Constructed

Response, ECR and SCR prompts.o Write multiple items for each framework or

evidence outcome to be assessed (giving priority to RED and BLUE frameworks or evidence outcomes).

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What to Assess?

• All content that is identified in the assessment column available for CBM 2.

• 1/3 of questions from Jan. 4 – Feb. 4, 2/3 of questions from Feb. 7 – May 13

• Give priority to RED and BLUE frameworks and/or evidence outcomes.

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Assessment Question TypeGrade Level/Content

Assessment Question Type Assessment

K-12 Specials & Electives (Visual Arts, Performing Arts, PE)

Multiple Choice CBM 2

K-12 English/Language Arts (Reading)

Multiple Choice – frameworks that are not passage specific

CBM 2

K-12 English/Language Arts (Writing)

Multiple Choice &SCR (K-3)/ECR (4-12) Prompt

CBM 2

K-12 Math Multiple Choice & CR CBM 2

K-5 Science Multiple Choice CBM 26-12 Science Multiple Choice & CR CBM 2

6-12 Social Studies Multiple Choice & SCR End of Course Exam

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How to Prepare BetterMultiple-Choice Test Items:

Guidelines for Teachers

Developed fromBrigham Young University Testing Services

andThe Department of Instructional Science

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Anatomy of a Multiple-Choice Item

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Reliability

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Difficulty of Construction

• Good multiple-choice test items are generally more difficult and time-consuming to write than other types of test items. Coming up with plausible distractors requires a certain amount of skill. This skill, however, may be increased through study, practice, and experience.

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Guidelines for Constructing Multiple-Choice Items

1. Construct each item to assess a single written lesson objective. • Items that are not written with a specific objective

in mind often end up measuring lower-level objectives exclusively, or covering trivial material that is of little educational worth.

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2. Base each item on a specific problem stated clearly in the stem using proper grammar, punctuation, and spelling.

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As illustrated in the following examples, the stem may consist of either a direct question or an incomplete sentence, whichever presents the problem more clearly and concisely.

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3. Include as much of the item as possible in the stem, but do not include irrelevant material.

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Excess material in the stem that is not essential to answering the problem increases the reading burden and adds to student confusion over what he or she is being asked to do.

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4. State the stem in positive form (in general).

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5. Word the alternatives clearly and concisely.Clear wording reduces student confusion, and concise wording reduces the reading burden placed on the student.

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6. Keep the alternatives mutually exclusive.

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7. Keep the alternatives homogeneous in content

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8.1 Keep the grammar of each alternative consistent with the stem. Students often assume that inconsistent grammar is the sign of a distractor, and they are generally right.

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8.2 Keep the alternatives parallel in form. If the answer is worded in a certain way and the distractors are worded differently, the student may take notice and respond accordingly.

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8.3 Keep the alternatives similar in length. An alternative noticeably longer or shorter than the other is frequently assumed to be the answer, and not without good reason.

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8.4 Avoid textbook, verbatim phrasing. If the answer has been lifted word-for-word from the pages of the textbook, the students may recognize the phrasing and choose correctly out of familiarity rather than achievement.

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8.5 Avoid the use of specific determiners. When words such as never, always, and only are included in distractors in order to make them false, they serve as flags to the alert student.

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8.6 Avoid including keywords in the alternatives. When a word or phrase in the stem is also found in one of the alternatives, it tips the student off that the alternative is probably the answer.

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8.7 Use plausible distractors. For the student who does not possess the ability being measured by the item, the distractors should look as plausible as the answer. Unrealistic or humorous distractors are nonfunctional and increase the student’s chance of guessing the correct answer.

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9. Avoid the alternatives “all of the above” and “none of the above” (in general).

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10. Include one and only one correct or clearly best answer in each item. When more than one of the alternatives can be successfully defended as being the answer, responding to an item becomes a frustrating game of determining what the teacher had in mind when he or she wrote the item.

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11. Present the answer in each of the alternative positions approximately an equal number of times, in a random order.

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12. Avoid using unnecessarily difficult vocabulary.

• If the vocabulary is somewhat difficult, the item will likely measure reading ability in addition to the achievement of the objective for which the item was written. As a result, poor readers who have achieved the objective may receive scores indicating that they have not.

• Use difficult and technical vocabulary only when essential for measuring the objective.

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13. Avoid Question Bias – Be aware of questions that can:

a) be construed as offensive to particular groups of individuals,b) portray groups of individuals unfavorably, or in a stereotypical fashion,c) be advantageous to one group, and/or disadvantageous to another, ord) be unfamiliar to certain groups of individuals.

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Guidelines For Writing Content SCRs

• Write questions/prompts that can be answered in one paragraph.

• Target Content, Details, and Vocabulary sections of the scoring rubric need to be explicit. (see example on the next slide)

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Example of Content Scoring Rubric

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Constructed Response Questions

• Each question needs to be aligned to a framework or evidence outcome from the district curriculum map.

• Give priority to RED and BLUE frameworks and/or evidence outcomes.

• Each question may contain multiple parts, but be worth no more than nine points total.

• Answer must clearly detail how each point is earned.

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Example of CR Scoring Guide

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What to Assess?

• All content that is identified in the assessment column available for CBM 2.

• 1/3 of questions from Jan. 4 – Feb. 4, 2/3 of questions from Feb. 7 – May 13

• Give priority to RED and BLUE frameworks and/or evidence outcomes.

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Assessment Question TypeGrade Level/Content

Assessment Question Type Assessment

K-12 Specials & Electives (Visual Arts, Performing Arts, PE)

Multiple Choice CBM 2

K-12 English/Language Arts (Reading)

Multiple Choice – frameworks that are not passage specific

CBM 2

K-12 English/Language Arts (Writing)

Multiple Choice &SCR (K-3)/ECR (4-12) Prompt

CBM 2

K-12 Math Multiple Choice & CR CBM 2

K-5 Science Multiple Choice CBM 26-12 Science Multiple Choice & CR CBM 2

6-12 Social Studies Multiple Choice & SCR End of Course Exam

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When to Add Images  

• Images should only be added when required by the question.

• Images should be black and white and of high resolution (300 dpi).

• Images should not be from a copyrighted source.• Images are not be used for mere "decoration."

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How To Add ImagesTo Questions You Submit

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How To Add ImagesTo Questions You Submit

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How To Add ImagesTo Questions You Submit

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