parcc presentation for parents of the woodbridge township school district january 21, 2015

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PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21 , 2015

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Page 1: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School DistrictJanuary 21, 2015

Page 2: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

• Sarah Cice– Supervisor of English 6-12– District Test Coordinator– [email protected]

• Christopher Callahan– Supervisor of Technology– PARCC Technology Coordinator – [email protected]

• Catherine Wehrle– Supervisor of Math K-12– [email protected]

Page 3: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015
Page 4: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

Middle School•PBA—March 2, 2015—March 27, 2015

•EOY—April 27, 2015—May 22, 2015

High School•PBA—March 23, 2015—May 1, 2015

•EOY—May 8, 2015—June 5, 2015

Page 5: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

• The Common Core State Standards in English Language Arts/Literacy and Mathematics were created by educators around the nation.

• Nearly every state in the nation is working individually and collectively to improve its instruction and assessments to ensure students graduate with the knowledge and skills most demanded by college and careers.

• The PARCC assessment rewards this commitment by providing an assessment focused on the instructional shifts and academic skills needed to prepare all students for college and career readiness in the 21st century.

Page 6: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

• The new standards are designed to help students of all ability levels achieve.

• They focus on problem solving and critical thinking skills—not just memorizing answers.

• How students learn is just as important as what they learn; the CCSS support different learning styles and educational levels.

Page 7: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

Partnership forAssessment ofReadiness forCollege andCareers

● Common assessments aligned with the Common Core Standards● Educational Testing Services (ETS) is the test developer● Pearson is the assessment provider● Content will include English Language Arts and Mathematics

Page 8: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

1. Determine whether students are college and career ready or on track

2. Connect to the Common Core State Standards3. Measure the full range of student

performance, including that of high- and low-achieving students

4. Provide educators data throughout the year to inform instruction

5. Create innovative 21st century, technology-based assessments

6. Be affordable and sustainable

Page 9: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

NJ ASK/HSPA• Paper/Pencil Test• Students tested once

per year• Did not measure

critical thinking• Primarily “bubble

tests”• Results received after

the school year ends

PARCC• Computer Based Test• Students tested twice

per year• Faster results • Comprehensive Critical

Thinking and Problem Solving Tasks

• Assess whether students are on track for success in college and careers

Page 10: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

• Readiness Surveys• Preparing the infrastructure: wireless campus,

bandwidth• Selecting a device for instruction and assessment• Field testing as a pilot school district for PARCC

administration

Page 11: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

• Use technology to determine student understanding in authentic ways– Drag and drop– Shade text– Cut and paste– Move items– Use of math tools– Online calculators (6-11)– Graphing tools– Type written responses in ELA and Math

Page 12: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

• 2013-2014 NJASK/HSPA

• Grades 3-8 ELA & Math

• Grade 11 ELA & Math

• 2014-2015 PARCC• Grades 3-8 ELA and

Math• Grades 9, 10 & 11

ELA• Math assessed at

the end of a course, for example, Algebra I, Algebra II, Geometry

Page 13: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

• Performance Based Assessment (PBA)– Occurs after approximately 75% of year (March)– Language Arts—focus on writing effectively when

analyzing text– Math—focus on solving multi-step problems by applying

skills and conceptual understanding

• End of Year Assessment (EOY)– Occurs after approximately 90% of year (May)– Language Arts—focus on reading comprehension– Math—focus on key content areas and demonstration of

fact fluency

Page 14: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

PBA Unit 1

PBA Unit 2

PBA Unit 3

EOY Unit 1

EOY Unit 2

Grades 6-8 ELA

75 90 60 60 60

Grades 6-8Math

80 70 80 75

Algebra 18th grade Honors Math Only

90 75 80 75

Page 15: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

PBA Unit 1

PBA Unit 2

PBA Unit 3

EOY Unit 1

EOY Unit 2

ELA I, II, III

75 90 60 60 60

Algebra I, Geometry, Integrated Math I, II

90 75 80 75

Algebra II, Integrated Math III

90 75 90 75

Page 16: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015
Page 17: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

1. Complexity: Regular practice with complex text and its academic language.

2. Evidence: Reading and writing grounded in evidence from text, literary and informational.

3. Knowledge: Building knowledge through content rich nonfiction.

Page 18: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

Types of Questions➢ Range of Prose Constructed Responses (PCR)-

• Elicits evidence that students have understood a text or texts they have read and can communicate that understanding well both in terms of written expression and knowledge of language and conventions. • Writing Task

•➢ Technology-Enhanced Constructed Response (TECR)- • Uses technology to capture student comprehension of texts in authentic

ways that have been difficult to score by machine for large scale assessments • drag and drop, cut and paste, shade text, move items to show

relationships).

➢ Evidence-Based Selected Response (EBSR) • Combines a traditional selected-response question with a second selected-

response question that asks students to show evidence from the text that supports the answer they provided to the first question. Underscores the importance of Reading Anchor Standard 1 for implementation of the CCSS. • Multiple Choice

Page 19: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015
Page 20: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

• Drag the words from the word box into the correct locations on the graphic to show the life cycle of a butterfly as described in “How Animals Live.”

• Words:

Pupa Adult

Egg Larva

Page 21: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015
Page 22: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

• Literary Analysis Task—– The Literature Task plays an important role in honing

students’ ability to read complex text closely, a skill that research reveals as the most significant factor differentiating college-ready from non-college-ready readers. This task will ask students to carefully consider literature worthy of close study and compose an analytic essay.

– Part A—Reading Passage 1:– Long fiction passage: prose, poem, or drama– Interactive Literacy/Short Answer Questions

– Part B—Reading Passage 2:– Short Fiction Passage: prose, poem, or drama (possibly

audio or visual)– Interactive Literacy/Short Answer Questions

– Part C—Literary Analysis writing task

– Long Passages—Middle School=1000 words or less High School= 1500 words or less Short Passages—400 words or less

Page 23: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

Example:Using what you have learned from reading the “Road Not Taken” by Robert Frost, and the excerpt from the chapter, “The Dragon Wakes” by Laurence Yep, write an essay that provides an analysis of how choice is treated in the two texts.

As a starting point, you may want to consider what is emphasized, absent, or different in the two texts, but feel free to develop your own focus for analysis.

Students will develop the essay by providing textual evidence from both texts.

(Fare, 2014)

Page 24: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

• Narrative Task– The Narrative Task broadens the way in which students

may use this type of writing. Narrative writing can be used to convey experiences or events, real or imaginary. In this task, students may be asked to write a story, detail a scientific process, write a historical account of important figures, or to describe an account of events, scenes or objects, for example.

– Part A—Reading Passage 1:– Short or long fiction or non-fiction passage, text or audio or

video, or a combination of both– Interactive Literacy/Short Answer Questions

– Part B—Narrative writing task

– Long Passages—Middle School=1000 words or less High School= 1500 words or less-Short Passages—400 words or less

Page 25: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

Example: (from the introduction to the short story “Eleven,” by Sandra Cisneros.) In the above excerpt, the author develops an interesting situation where the narrator, Rachel, is discussing her feelings about her eleventh birthday. Think about the narrator’s current situation regarding the sweater, her hesitation, along with the details surrounding this classroom environment.

Write an original story to continue where the passage ends. In your story, be sure to use what you have learned about the character of Rachel as you tell what happens next.

(Fare, 2014)

Page 26: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

• Research Simulation Task– In this task, students will analyze an informational topic presented

through several articles or multimedia stimuli, the first text being an anchor text that introduces the topic. Students will engage with the texts by answering a series of questions and synthesizing information from multiple sources in order to write two analytic essays.

– Part A—Reading Passage 1:– Long nonfiction Passage: article, speech, argument, opinion, biography, court case– Interactive Literacy/Short Answer Questions

– Part B—Reading Passage 2:– Short nonfiction Passage: article, speech, argument, opinion, biography, court case– Interactive Literacy/Short Answer Questions

– Part C—Reading Passage 3:– Short non-fiction text or video or audio clip– Interactive Literacy/Short Answer Questions

– Part D—Research Simulation writing task

– Long Passages—Middle School=1000 words or less High School= 1500 words or less Short Passages—400 words or less

Page 27: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

Example:You have read three texts about ocean exploration. All three discuss challenges faced by ocean explorers. The three texts are:

• “Oceans: Earth’s Final Frontier”• “Dive Technology”• “Lights, Cameras, Invention!”

Think about the information the authors provide to show how explorers are improving exploration under water.

Write an essay that describes challenges that explorers face in at least two of the texts. Tell how they can overcome those challenges through the use of underwater technology. Remember to use textual evidence to support your ideas.

(McGraw-Hill, 2014)

Page 28: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

• On the end-of-year assessment, students have the opportunity to demonstrate their ability to read and comprehend complex informational and literary texts. Questions will be sequenced in a way that they will draw students into deeper encounters with the texts and will result in more thorough comprehension of the concepts.

Page 29: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015
Page 30: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

Mathematics The 3 CCSS Shifts in Assessment 1.Focus: The PARCC assessment will focus strongly where the Standards focus. 2.Coherence: Think across grades and link to major topics within grades. 3.Rigor: In major topics, pursue conceptual understanding, procedural skill and fluency, and application

Page 31: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

• A bat and ball cost $1.10.• The bat costs one dollar more than the ball.• How much does the ball cost?

• You probably answered 10¢. If the ball costs 10 ¢, then the total cost will be $1.20 (10¢ for the ball and $1.10 for the bat), not $1.10.

• The correct answer is 5¢. (5¢ for the ball and $1.05 for the bat), for a total of $1.10.

Page 32: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

Type 1: Tasks assessing “concepts, skills and procedures” • A mix of conceptual understanding, fluency, and application • Machine Scorable • On PBA and EOY

Type 2: Tasks assessing expressing mathematical reasoning” • Written arguments/justifications, critique, and precision. • Mix of machine scored and hand scored. • On PBA

Type 3: “modeling/applications” • Modeling/application in a real-world context or scenario and

precision. • Mix of machine scored and hand scored. • On PBA

Page 33: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

PARCC Assessment Design - Math

•Math Reference Sheet Given

•Scrap paper & pencils allowed

•Calculator Policy• Grades 6-7—Four function with Square Root and

Percentage Functions• Grade 8—Scientific Calculator• Algebra I, Geometry, Algebra II—Graphing Calculator

Page 34: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

PARCC Video

Page 35: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

• PARCC Sample Questions:

Grades English Language Arts Math

3-5 Life in the Limbshttp://www.parcconline.org/sites/parcc/files/PARCCSampleItems_ELA-Literacy_Grade5ItemsFinal.pdf

Numbers of Stadium Seatshttp://ccsstoolbox.agilemind.com/parcc/about_elementary_3776.html

6-8 Amelia Earharthttp://www.parcconline.org/samples/english-language-artsliteracy/grade-7-elaliteracy

Anne’s Family Triphttp://ccsstoolbox.agilemind.com/parcc/about_middle_3808.html

9-12 Greek Mythologyhttp://www.parcconline.org/samples/english-language-artsliteracy/grade-10-elaliteracy

Golf Balls in Waterhttp://ccsstoolbox.agilemind.com/parcc/about_highschool_3834.html

Page 36: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

ACCOMMODATIONS FOR ALL STUDENTS

•Accessibility Features for All Students •Blank Paper (provided by test administrator) •Eliminate Answer Choices •Flag Items for Review •General Administration Directions Clarified (by test administrator) •General Administration Directions Read Aloud and Repeated (by test administrator) •Highlight Tool •Headphones •Magnification/Enlargement Device •Notepad •Pop-Up Glossary •Redirect Student to Test (by test administrator) •Spell Checker •Writing Tools

Page 37: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

NJASK/HSPA• 3 levels• Scale of 100-300• Basic data• Received in the Fall

of next year• Ceiling Score

PARCC• 5 levels• Scale of 1-5• Rich data• Year 1 receive in

Fall of next year• Years after receive

by June of current year

• Score beyond grade level

Page 38: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

• 2 Tests (PBA and EOY)• Receive one score for Math and one score for ELA

Level Descriptor

5 Students performing at this level demonstrate a distinguished command of the knowledge, skills, and practices embodied by the CCSS assessed at their level.

4 Strong Command

3 Moderate Command

2 Partial Command

1 Minimal Command

Page 39: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

• To assist teachers in supporting students• To inform parents and students on progress

towards “on track” college and career readiness

• To inform schools and districts on curricula, instructional and professional development needs

• By NJ’s college and universities as one of the indicators of a student’s readiness for entry-level, credit-bearing college courses

Page 40: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

• To impact student’s grades• To retain students• As measure for placement in various

programs

Page 41: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

• Support students with homework• Encourage your children to read • Expose to literature and making connections• Practice automaticity of math facts• Encourage problem solving in multiple ways• Explain the process for problem solving• Listen to students justify their answers• Practice typing• Use technology tools: drag and drop, slide, cut/copy/paste• Expose your children to different kinds of texts: stories,

newspapers, magazines, biographies, science/history • Talk with your child about what they read • Practice fluency with math facts • Encourage your child to justify their reasoning

Page 42: PARCC Presentation for Parents of the Woodbridge Township School District January 21, 2015

• www.parcconline.org• www.parcconline.org/samples/item-task-prototypes• www.corestandards.org• www.achievethecore.org• www.njcore.org• http://parccgames.com• www.ccsstoolbox.agilemind.com/parcc/

PARCCprototypemain.html• www.state.nj.us/education/cces/

AchieveResources.htm.• http://www.ccsstoolbox.com/parcc/

PARCCPrototype_main.html