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Written by Debra Bowling McKenna |
1.
The fundamental purpose of any educational assessment of students should
be to promote meaningful learning.
2.
The design of standards of excellence and assessment systems should
be negotiated by the participants; including parents, teachers, administrators
and students; in districts and states in order to insure commitment
and ownership among primary stakeholders.
3.
Assessment should elicit student's genuine effort, motivation and commitment
to the goals of assessment and foster self-appraisal and self-regulated
learning.
4.
The strategies, skills and knowledge required to excel on academic assessments
should be the same as those required to master the curriculum on a daily
basis.
5.
Assessments should be based on authentic and meaningful tasks that are
aligned with the regular curriculum and instruction provided in the
classroom.
6.
Assessment should provide credibility and legitimacy to a broad range
of talents and accomplishments of students across the curriculum.
7.
A single national test of academic achievement should be avoided because
it cannot do justice to the diversity of student's accomplishments in
our heterogeneous and multicultural society.
8.
Assessments should be fair and equitable to all students regardless
of prior achievement, gender, race, language or cultural background.
9.
Assessments should provide for periodic review and revision among the
participants and consumers of assessment information.
10.
Assessment should occur continuously in classrooms in order to provide
longitudinal evidence of individual growth and progress.
11.
Assessments should measure student's motivations, attitudes, and affective
reactions about the curriculum as well as their cognitive skills, strategies
and knowledge.
12.
Assessments should include exhibits, portfolios, and performances to
demonstrate achievement in addition to traditional paper and pencil
tests.
13. The results of assessment should provide clear, comprehensible
and immediate feedback to the participants.
14.
Assessments need to include provisions for multiple plausible responses
and growth in understanding through "errors."
15.
Assessment can allow for creative and self-determining constructions
and expressions of knowledge, rather than continuously focusing on predetermined
problem and answer sets.
16.
Design assessment strategies that provide information about how learners
are learning as well as information about what they have learned. Include
instructional strategies that will provide information about how learning
is taking place.
17.
Assessment information may be utilized to plan further learning activities
that build on student strengths and meet their needs for further growth.
Help students evaluate progress towards their own learning goals based
on diagnostic information about individual student learning.
18.
Assessments may include planned subjective tests that students do in
a cooperative learning style (groups of two). Variations include working
without a text and discussing opinions and facts, sharing ideas and
using the texts and notes to justify answers or perspectives,
19.
Assessments may include access to technology, educational media, and
materials for all students to develop accessing skills, and problem
solving strategies.
20.
Assessment can foster personal learning goals and outcomes as redefine
success for each individual student and teacher, and students may participate
as team members in the assessment, evaluation, and communication processes.
Caution: What we look for is often what we see! |
Effective Assessment is integrated with instruction to continue learning progress and is authentic in content and performance requirements. Effective measures should enhance personal progress, growth and achievement, rather than comparing an individual’s performance with the performance of others. Assessment should foster personal learning goals, objectives, and outcomes as redefine success for each individual student and teacher. Students should participate in the assessment, evaluation, and communication processes. State and district standards should be based not on competition but on self-selected or collaborative learning goals that promote self-generated solutions, which enables students to make various choices |
The choices might include types of products for demonstrating achievement of educational standard measures for student growth, which allow for the highest levels of performance on developmentally appropriate standards. Standards are formulated in such a way that every student has an opportunity to excel at something, which promotes students' self-reflection on their growth by providing opportunities for self-assessment and thoughtful feedback on the learning process.
Consider alternative scoring and reporting strategies that focus on individual achievement of valued standards rather than normative grading practices, which will lead to the desire for all students to participate fully and successfully in our society as lifelong learners.
Click on the link for a recent article from the Educational
Researcher Magazine by author Robert Linn. The article is an interesting
history of assessments and accountability from 1950 to current times.
Assessment of students with learning differences is serious business
as Salem-Keizer School District found out from twelve (12) parents.
Please click here
for more on the Gifted and Talented students at the Salem-Keizer District
of Oregon.
Other reasons for assessments in special educational settings include:
Screening and identification: to screen children and identify those
who may be experiencing delays or learning problems
Eligibility and diagnosis is most commonly used to determine whether
a child has a disability and is eligible for special education services,
and to diagnose the specific nature of the student's problems or disability
Know what you want from an assessment. Another way to think about it
is to answer the question, "What do I want to know about the student
upon completion of the assessment?"
Two common goals include:
Individualized
Education Program (IEP) development and placement: to provide detailed
information so that an IEP may be developed and appropriate decisions
may be made about the child's educational placement;
Instructional
planning: to develop and plan instruction appropriate to the child's
special needs; and Evaluation: to evaluate student progress.
There are “Alternative” methods that educators can utilize to enhance the spirit of “Exceptional Learner/Gifted/Talented” students and challenge the minds of all other youngsters within the same classroom on the same day. Some of the characteristics teachers might use to identify with in an exceptional learner who is gifted or talented include the following:
Checklist for Exceptional Learners - Gifted
and Talented
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Click here to get ideas and read “True Stories” of regular classroom teachers who today look at inclusion and assessments through a new window of opportunity:
A web site of ideas for curriculum alternatives to motivate gifted and talented students:
Although a child may be gifted in many areas they are not covered by the regulations of IDEA 97. Many believe that schools can usually provide these services. Multicultural perspectives of giftedness acknowledge a cultures value and will encourage special areas of giftedness that are valuable to the survival of that culture. Giftedness is frequently judged on the basis of a formal IQ score. A gifted student may be identified by an IQ of at least 130, which includes only two percent of the population. For further information, click here.
Emotional & Behavioral Disorders and Assessment (34CFR403.203-- Sec. 403.203)
There are a wide variety of characteristics that increase the severity of emotional and behavioral problem in children. Recent gene research confirms the probability that elements of personality are likely to be inherited. In addition, Poverty can be associated with increased emotional/behaviorally problems from infancy throughout life. A number of social issues can disrupt or, encompass a child’s life and contribute to emotional and behavioral disorders. School rejection can be an exacerbating force. Mia Farrow recalls a high school dance in which every girl was asked to dance on the floor except her. The late cartoonist Charles Schulz probably never forgot how the high school yearbook refused his cartoon. John Denver was called four-eyes all through his school years. Ali McGraw reports never having a date through school. Gregory Peck was regarded as the least likely to succeed in life. Henry Kissinger was referred as the “little fatso with whom nobody would eat lunch.” My friend once had a teacher ask me in class if my mother had any children who lived. A child's well-being can be affected in a positive or negative light by school treatment. Comedian Mel Brooks sums it up as follows: “Thank God for athletes and their rejection. Without them there would have been no emotional need and …I’d be a Crack Jack salesman in the garment department.”
Assessment formats a teacher might utilize to focus on student behavior include:
Interpersonal interaction observations
Teacher and parent observations
Communication skills assessment (e.g. personal interviews & conferences)
Instructional analysis (task, abilities and related processes)
Criterion-referenced assessments (individualized techniques)
Social functioning data assessments (sociometric techniques both individual
and group) Norm-referenced instruments (including behavioral rating
scales)
Direct Observations
There are numerous tests that a psychologist or psychiatrist can give to enhance understanding of a child's emotional status. Many of us are familiar with the Rorschach or inkblot test, the MMPI - that famous 450+ set of questions that identifies scores and how they help us sort through personality profiles. There are tests based on what we draw - such as the House-Tree-Person and ways to interpret responses to open-ended questions. There are multiple choice, checklist, observational, interview and blood tests... and they are the realm of those with training in recognizing the patterns and actions of children and adults who are experiencing emotional distress. Once the youngster is given a battery of these tests the results are compared with symptoms in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual - the DSM-IV (fourth edition) and determinations are made about the seriousness of manifestations. It if vital to remember several points with respect to children who are acting out. 1) Is the behavior episodic or long term 2) Is it endemic, or part of a reaction to a series of life stressors 3) Is the child a clear danger to self or others, or involved in appropriate self protection 4) Is the behavior keeping the youth from learning or just inconvenient for others 5) Are there underlying physical causes for the child's actions |
Communication Disorder (34 C.F.R., Sec. 300: [b] [6]) is identified in two categories: speech disorder and language disorder. Academic, social and emotional growth can be delayed/impaired due to communication issues. A language disorder 34(C.F.R., Part 300, Sec 300.7) is an impairment and/or disorder that mirrors a person’s inability to develop or comprehend a message.
High risk factors include:
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Malformations of the ear, nose or throat |
Rubella during pregnancy | Rh incompatibility |
Family history of hearing loss | Apgar score from 0 - 3 | Severe neonatal infections |
Low birth weight (under 3.3 lbs.) | Hyperbilirubinemia | Meningitis |
Severe respiratory distress and/or prolonged mechanical ventilation (10 days or more) | Ototoxic medications |
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Presence of neonatal risk factors |
Head trauma | Stigmata Ototoxic medications |
Childhood infectious diseases associated with hearing loss (e.g. mumps, measles) | Meningitis | Neurodegenerative disorders |
Parent/caregiver concern regarding hearing, speech, language and/or developmental delay | Ototoxic medications |
Milestones of Normal Development in Communications area Some babies have a significant hearing loss due to unknown factors. These developmental guidelines may alert parents or caregivers. Watch for hearing and speech milestones. (Remember, these are guidelines. Some children develop language before learning to walk while others are early walkers and later talkers.) |
0 - 4 months - Stops movement or quiets in response to speech. Startles to loud sounds. Moves eyes toward sound source. Arouses from light sleep to sudden loud noises. 4 - 7 months - Begins head turn toward sounds and voices out of sight (4 months) and turns head directly toward the sound source (7 months). Smiles in response to speech. Looks in response to own name. Babbling begins. 7 - 9 months - Turns to find a sound source out of sight. Gurgles or coos to sounds out of sight. Intonation patterns heard in speech. Comprehends "no." Babbles in multiple syllables. 9 - 12 months - Acquires first true word. Imitates sounds. Looks at a common object when named. Responds to music. Understands simple commands. 13 - 18 months - Uses sentence-like intonation. Perceives emotions of others. Uses 3 - 20 words. Uses all vowels and consonants in jargon. 19 - 24 months - Uses more words than jargon. Asks question by rising intonation at end of phrase. Comprehends about 300 words. Uses about 50 words. Produces animal sounds. Combines 2 words into phrases. Listens to simple stories. |
A child of any age can have an audiological evaluation. The evaluation technique used depends upon the developmental age of the infant or child. Some methods include
Auditory Brain stem Response (ABR) testing at any age (including
premature infants)
Visual Response Audiometry (VRA) designed to elicit consistent
and reliable responses from only a few months of age
Play Audiometry is used at around 2 1/2 years of age until the
child is able to respond consistently to the conventional evaluation
techniques used with adults.
Speech disorder is a cluster of disorders/impairments that affect the production/composition of sounds, rhythm of speech, and/or voice control. If speech and language development begins normally and then stops, this could be a signal to the parent, guardian, and/or teacher to request for a hearing evaluation. Speech pathologists can provide assessment expertise and support for children, families and school personnel.
Characteristics that represent speech disorders/impairments include:
Articulation of speech sounds, fluency, or voice
Problems sending messages
Impairments in pitch, intensity, resonance, and vocal quality
Mispronouncing words, distorted sounds
Language disorder: Comprehension of information, formulating a spoken,
written, or symbolic response
Difficulty organizing ideas
Sounds word forms
Word order and sentence meaning Social use of language
Types of assessments for language and communication disorders might include the following:
Norm-referenced instruments (including behavioral rating measures)
Teacher and parent observations
Criterion-referenced assessments a. speech and language tests
Oral-muscular functioning
Ecological assessment techniques
Systematic observation techniques
Individual trait or personality assessments (e.g. interviews and conferences)
Social functioning data assessments (e.g. sociometric techniques both
individual and group)
Visual Impairments come in a variety of forms. (34 C.F.R., Sec. 300: [b] [6])
Functionally Blind
Legally blind
Low vision
Tunnel Vision
Key indicators: * continual build up of matter or crusting in eyes * watery eyes * itchy eyes * complains of or appears to be describing blurred vision * holds books/toys at a distance when reading or playing * headaches with nausea * reads with one eye closed, * reads leaning on one eye * complains continually about eyes * stumbles over things, * walks into people with lack of awareness * bumps into people when turning or reversing course
These indicators suggest screening by a professional since they are also associated with migraine headaches and allergies.
Assessment tools
Ophthomological assessment
Teacher and parent observations
Functional vision evaluation
Orientation and mobility evaluation
Learning media assessment
Click on these links
for more information on vision
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Severe and Multiple Disabilities (34 C.F.R., 315.4 [d])
There is “not one simple” definition that accompanies severe and multiple handicaps. Almost 90% of children with mental retardation are limited in activity because of the condition. Children in the severe category can have an IQ of 25 to 39. These individuals may learn how to talk, do some simple tasks but require extensive supervision. Organic mental retardation is attributed to brain damage or by genetic disorder.
Down Syndrome is a classic example of organic mental retardation. These children carry an extra chromosome. Most people with Downs have an IQ of 0 to 50.
Cerebral palsy limits mobility and decreases the person's ability to maintain willful control of the body. In some cases the intelligence is affected, but in many youngsters, the intelligence is intact. Notable examples are Christy Brown and Steven Hawkings.
Epilepsy and diabetes rank next in causing activity limitation, although the level of risk is roughly half that of mental retardation and cerebral palsy.
Other selected impairments include cleft palate and spina bifida.
Students with severe and multiple disabilities may have their lives affected in the areas of:
intellectual functioning
adaptive behavior
motor development
sensory functioning
health care needs
communication.
Types of assessments Occupational and Physical therapists can provide assessment expertise and support for many of the issues surrounding physical limitations. In addition, the following types of assessment provide insight in providing optimum services for youth:
APGAR
scales Developmental assessment
Teacher and parent observations
Ecological
assessment
Behavior states assessment
Action plan assessment
Adaptive behavior scales
Self-determination scales
Medical
evaluation
Medical history
Mobility assessment
Learning Disability (PL) 94-142 This is the largest group of students identified as having special needs. Close to fifty percent or 1/2 of all students in special education are identified with a learning disability. Each state has criteria for identifying students with learning disabilities, which usually refer to IDEA and NJCLD.
The three criteria that children must meet in order to receive learning disability classification include:
Severe discrepancy between demonstrated ability and actual achievement
Exclusion of other factors that might explain the discrepancy
Substantiated need for special services
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Other resources of study for this “monolithic group” include:
Autism (34 C.F.R., Part 300, 300.7 [b][1])
Imagine having a seemingly healthy son one day who increasingly behaves more out of character before the young age of three. Three to four times as many males as females are diagnosed with autism. The early indicators of autism include difficulties in maintaining eye contact, gestural communication, proto declarative pointing, and echolalia
The United States Department of Education in 1996 reported that 22,768 students with Autism were being served by schools nation wide. Characteristics that accompany autism are wide ranging and may include:
Language delay or failure
Social interaction
Stereotypical behavior
Behavioral challenges
Need for environmental predictability
Sensory and movement disorders
Impaired intellectual functioning
Evaluation and assessment of whether a student is a candidate for autism include:
Medical
or psychological professionals, teachers, and parents observe the child
Physical examinations
Psychological evaluations
Individual
trait assessment or personality assessments (e.g. interviews and conferences)
Criterion-referenced assessments
Speech and language tests
Oral-muscular functioning
Individualized intelligence test
Individualized achievement tests
Adaptive behavior scales
Autism-specific scales
Direct observation
Anecdotal records
Links
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Health Impairments (34CFR403.203-- Sec. 403.203)
In 1975, over one million children with disabilities were excluded from public schools. Another four million children with disabilities, while attending school, were not receiving educational services they needed-either because their disabilities were undetected or because schools did not offer the services they needed. Virtually no disabled preschoolers received services. [Files of the Office for Civil Rights]. After PL94-142 was enacted, services began to increase. Child Find was initiated and funded and Block Grants were provided to states to increase preschool services. In one generation the program has progressed so that the majority of young children are identified and either provided infant stimulation services at home or served in early childhood programs in local communities.
Though not the most severe impairment, Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD) and Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) draw attention because of the child's apparent inability to cooperate and parental and teacher feeling of the child being out of control. A child will usually show signs before the age of seven. The actual causes are not known although candidates for explaining ADD and ADHD include heredity, prenatal damage, diet, environmental assaults, including allergies and toxins. A recent study suggests that children with the syndrome may have lower brain glucose levels than children of the same age and gender group.
ADD ADHD and the pattern of symptoms were recognized for over a decade. AD/HD is divided into three separate subfields:
Predominantly Combined Type - the child will have a variety of
character tics such as impulsivity, inattention, and hyperactive.
Predominantly Inattentive Type - the child will display much
inattention with little hyperactivity or impulsivity.
Predominantly Hyperactive-Impulsive Type - the child will show
signs of hyperactivity, impulsivity, but little inattention.
ADD
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Lack of attention span | Problem solving deficit | Cognitive distortion |
Fidgeting | Inability to learn from listening | Self-control deficit |
Assessments
An EDUCATIONAL EVALUATION may be performed by a school psychologist or by a private professional trained to test for learning disabilities. A PSYCHOLOGICAL EVALUATION (IQ test) must be administered by a licensed psychologist. Many children are also tested by family doctors.
Attention-deficit/hyperactivity
disorder scales
Wechsler
Intelligence Scale for Children
Continuous
performance tests can determine difficulties with attention and/or memory.
Teacher and
parent observations Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder scales
Behavior rating
scales
Direct observations
Criterion-based
assessments
Medical evaluations
Ecological
assessments
Developmental
assessment
Suggested Questions to Ask Before the Assessment What is the professional's background? (specialty, education, training, etc.) What is his or her experience with ADD / ADHD assessment? How does the professional test for ADD / ADHD? How much does an assessment cost? What methods does the professional use to treat ADD / ADHD? (medication, therapy, behavior modification, etc.)?
After the Assessment/ Discussing the Results: What are the follow-up recommendations? What are the options? What are some suggestions for handling the challenges of parenting?
Internet
Support
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Today, 5.6 million children are served under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). This federal law, along with other federal disability legislation, has changed exclusion to participation, dependence to independence, lost potential to learning and productivity - Nineteenth Annual Report to Congress on the Implementation of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, 1997, page A-1.
Effective assessment is integrated with instruction to continue learning progress and is authentic in content and performance requirements. Effective measures should enhance personal progress, growth and achievement, rather than comparing an individual's performance with the performance of others, assessment should foster personal learning goals, objective and outcomes a it is possible to redefine success for each individual student ant teacher. shoulders can participate in the assessment, evaluation and communication process.\
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formative and summative testing power and timed tests criterion and norm referenced tests measurement scales used in testing the importance of the norming sample a test uses to compare scores why a student should be tested in his or her first language |
State and district standards should be based not on competition but on self-selected or collaborative learning goals that promote self-generated solutions, which enables students to make various choices. The choices might include types of products for demonstrating achievement of educational standard measures for student growth, which allow for the highest levels of performance on developmentally appropriate standards. Standards are formulated in such a way that every student has an opportunity to excel at something, which promotes students' self-reflection on their growth by providing opportunities for self-assessment and thoughtful feedback on the learning process. Consider alternative scoring and reporting strategies that focus on individual achievement of valued standards rather than normative grading practices, which will lead to the desire for all students to participate fully and successfully in our society as lifelong learners.
Social History
Demographics: Address: City: State & Zip:
Phone Number(s): Home: ( ) Work: ( ) Date form completed: Day
Month Year Child's Legal Name: Preferred Name: Parents Name: Who
lives in house Birth date
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Pregnancy and Infancy: (Describe anything
out of the ordinary) Labor (induced yes / no ) Forceps ( yes /
no ) C - sect ion ( yes / no ) Breast Feeding (Describe the length
and character of feeding effort) Formula (Brand name or type)
When was food introduced?
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Childhood: Date or age you suspected delayed development Does your child speak? if not, does your child make sounds? Describe: Did your child lose spoken words? if so, describe speech regression: Frequency and age of first ear infection(s): Did your child lose social and/or motor skills: ( yes / no ) Describe: Did you associate a decline in your child's functions after a vaccine? (MMR, DPT, Polio, etc) Does your Child has Asthma/Allergies Describe: Major Food Cravings: List all foods commonly consumed: Potty trained? ( yes / no ) What age? Describe bowel movements? Does your child have auditory defensive behavior? ( yes / no ) What type of touch bothers your child? What are the sleep patterns like? |
Daily living: Describe a typical schedule, school day and weekend. In what ways does your child need help you must help your child with (dressing, feeding, bathing): What aspects are most troubling to you? Describe your child's sleep pattern from birth to now in simple terms? Right or Left Handed |
Family: How many children are in the family? What is this child's place and role in the family? Who does this child respond to in a positive way? Who may have trouble with this child if left to care for him or her? Who does this child like to spend time with? Are there special friends of the family or relatives who find this child difficult? If so, what do they tend to talk about? Is there anyone who feels especially close to this child? What things do they say? what are this child's strengths and weaknesses? What does the child like to do in spare time? Does the child talk about growing up and doing something special with his or her life? What helps the child to behave? What is the child's favorite - food, color, pastime, clothing, toys. |
Medications: List any currently used? List any medications that have failed to help and those that reacted badly with your child? List all current nutritional supplements? List any nutritional supplements that you think have helped your child? What has benefited your child the most? |
Therapy: List all therapies your child has received. List current therapies. |
School programs: Describe the school programs your child has received. Provide feedback about the child's response, your personal feeling about the programs and how effective you believe them to be. Are there services you believe your child needs that are not being provided. |
Grade level: Grade in school, kind of program and any report cards or material showing level of achievement or success. |
Trauma, surgery, medical problems: List and discuss accidents of trauma your child has been through. Include family tragedies and deaths. Has your child had surgery? List procedures and dates and also include hospitalization. Other Medical Problems: List all diagnostic tests performed on your child (Chromosomes, MRI, EEG, etc). Has your child had seizures? Are there any known allergies? Comments: |
No matter how many adaptations we make to instruction, evaluations and grades can keep youth from feeling successful. We can adapt instruction more successfully when we align evaluation and grading to support and faithfully report learning successes.
Link on evaluation |
E-mail J'Anne Ellsworth at Janne.Ellsworth@nau.edu
Course developed by J'Anne
Ellsworth
Copyright © 1999
Northern Arizona University
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED