Sunday, February 17, 2013

15.1


(15.1) Turn to p. 559 in Ormrod’s text.  Now, imagine that you are meeting with Ingrid’s grandmother today to explain her scores on the recent standardized achievement test pictured at the bottom of p. 559.  What will you tell her about Ingrid’s performance? her strengths? her weaknesses?
Prior to the meeting with Ingrid’s grandmother, I will make sure to look into how Ingrid’s doing in all these subjects and try to see if her standardized achievement scores accurately reflect her strengths and weaknesses. Especially, I will try to talk to her spelling and math teachers and see if she’s actually struggling in these subjects.
During the meeting, I will start by telling Ingrid’s grandmother that the standardized achievement tests Ingrid took is norm-referenced, or that they compare Ingrid’s raw scores with that of the students at her grade level. The ultimate purpose of the standardized achievement tests is to help all students improve academically by assessing how much they’ve learned in selected subject areas. We, as teachers, hope to use this information to help improve our instructional strategies accordingly. However, standardized achievement tests provide only a rough idea of what students know and can do.
I will then go over the computer printout with Ingrid’s grandmother by first explaining the concepts of percentile (that percentile reflects the percentage of students at Ingrid’s grade that scored less than or equal to Ingrid), stanine (have a mean of 5 and a standard deviation of 2), and confidence intervals (the amount of error due to imperfect reliability of the test, or how Ingrid’s performances in the same subject area ranges) on the score report.
I will then tell Ingrid’s grandmother that Ingrid’s strengths are her well-above-average achievement in reading, comprehension, science, and social studies. Ingrid also scored average to above-average in math concepts. As suggested by the standardized achievement tests, Ingrid had more than average difficulty in spelling and math computations. Thus, according to the standardized achievement tests, spelling and math computations are areas that we might need to work more on in the next couple of years. Finally, this is the time I will also talk about how Ingrid’s actually doing in her classes and whether the scores actually reflect her performances in school.

2 comments:

  1. I like how you checked on Ingrid's class scores and achievement as well. After all, the textbook said that we should use more than one test score to make educational decisions.

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  2. Such a great idea to check on Ingrid's progress in her classes before generalizing her strengths and weaknesses to her efforts on the test! There seems to be such great emphasis on test scores that educators sometimes ignore the actual progress that their students have achieved in class! Sometimes we have to look at other factors during a test that may have prohibited the student from achieving what he or she is capable of, and we must take that into consideration.

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