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High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) [email protected]
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High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) [email protected].

Dec 21, 2015

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Page 1: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States

(grades 6-12)

Dr. Eric Milou2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ)[email protected]

Page 2: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Types of Exit Exams

MCEs - Minimum Competency ExamsBasic Skill below the HS level

SBEs - Standards Based ExamsAligned with state standards - usually at 9th/10th grade level

EOCs - End-of-Course ExamsStandards Based but given after a student completes a specific HS course

Page 3: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Exit Exams & GraduationSuccessful Exit Exam score required for diplomaExit Exam required but alternative assessments are

available as a pathway to graduationAlternative assessments available for students with

disabilities and ELLExam is considered in the graduation decision, but it

is NOT used to deny a diplomaState exit exam results and/or local performance

assessmentsDifferentiated diplomas or diploma endorsements

Page 4: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

What follows in this study?

Descriptive (not evaluative)Based on released tests or just released items

Why were certain states/problems selected?Range of level (basic skill to higher order)

To show commonalitiesUniqueness/Differences

A wealth of open-ended problems

Page 5: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Utah (MCE)

http://www.schools.utah.gov/eval/DOCUMENTS/UBSCT_Subtest_Math2.pdf

Simplify this expression12 – 9(2 × 25)

Simplify this expression

8 + 6 × 2

4

Page 6: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Utah (MCE)Lucy wants to treat her

pond for mosquitoes. What is the best estimate of the area of her pond?

A. 12 sq. kmB. 18 sq. kmC. 24 sq. kmD. 30 sq. km

Page 7: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

California (SBE)

California High School Exit Examination (CAHSEE)

http://www.cde.ca.gov/ta/tg/hs/mathrtq05.asp

All Multiple Choice questionsSome sample items are similar to a MCE

3/4 - 1/6

Page 8: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

California (SBE)If x is an integer,

what is the solution to |x-3| < 1

If perimeter, P, of a square may be found by using the formula

where A is the area of the square. What is the perimeter of the square with an area of 36 square inches?€

1

4

⎝ ⎜

⎠ ⎟P = A

24

Page 9: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Texas (SBE)

TAKShttp://www.tea.state.tx.us/

student.assessment/resources/release/taks/2004/gr11taksjulyb.pdf

All multiple choice

Page 10: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Texas (SBE) Herman claimed that the square of a number is always

greater than or equal to the number. Which of the following examples disproves Herman’s claim? A) A comparison of (-1.5)2 with -1.5 B) A comparison of (-0.5)2 with -0.5 C) A comparison of (0.5)2 with 0.5 D) A comparison of (1.5)2 with 1.5

The graph of y = 11x2 + c is a parabola with a vertex at the origin. Which of the following is true about the value of c? A) c > 0 B) c < 0 C) c = 0 D) c = 11

Page 11: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Texas (SBE)

The 12-foot-long bed of a dump truck loaded with debris must rise to an angle of 30° before the debris will spill out. Approximately how high must the front of the bed rise for the debris to spill out? 6 ft

Page 12: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Texas (SBE)

Start with a 1-unit-by-1-unit unshaded square. In each iteration, the following steps occur for the smallest unshaded squares resulting from the previous iteration.Step 1: Divide the square into a 3-by-3 grid of

squaresStep 2: Shade only the center square of this 3-by-

3 gridWhat fraction of the 1-unit-by-1-unit square is

shaded after the second iteration?

17/81

Page 13: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Connecticut (SBE)

Connecticut Academic Performance Test (CAPT)

http://www.csde.state.ct.us/public/cedar/assessment/capt/resources/released_items/2005/Released_Math_Items2.pdf

Released open ended items, sample student work, and rubrics

Page 14: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Connecticut (SBE)Delia’s drafting teacher gave her these instructions for

drawing a geometric figure to be used in a design for a birdhouse. Draw isosceles triangle ABC so that angle A is a right angle

Draw line l through point A that is parallel to BC

Draw line m through point B that is perpendicular to BC

Label a point E at the intersection of lines l and m

Draw the geometric figure in the space provided in your answer booklet.

Delia was asked the measure of angle EBA. What is the degree measure of angle EBA? Show your work or explain how you found your answer.

Page 15: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Which is correct?

Triangle ABC is not isosceles

Page 16: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

A few more…

Page 17: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Statewide results

4-point rubric (0-3 scale)3 pts - 30% of students2 pts - 15% of students1 pt - 14% of students0 pts - 29% of studentsomitted - 12% of students

Page 18: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Connecticut (SBE)Elena plans to rent a

motorbike at the beach. She uses a rental service that charges a fixed fee of $25 plus $15 for each hour or part of an hour that she uses the bike. Fill in the table and extend the patterns to show the total charges if she works from 9:15 am to 5:40 pm.

Hours Charges

0 < h ≤ 1

1 < h ≤ 2

2 < h ≤ 3

3 < h ≤ 4

Page 19: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Connecticut (SBE)Three-course dinner special $9.95 - choose one

dish from each group belowSalad: Mixed Greens, Waldorf, CaesarMain Dish: Eggplant, Salmon, Pork, ChickenDessert: Chocolate Mousse, Pecan Pie

How many different three-course meals are possible?

The manager wants to add one item to the menu that will increase the number of possible three-course meals. What should he add to give the greatest possible choices of three course meals?

3 x 4 x 2 = 24

Dessert

Page 21: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

South Carolina (SBE)

Mr. Jones is planning to put a fence around a rectangular part of his yard. He wants the area to be 216 square feet. The fenced part of his yard has a length of 18 feet. a. How many feet should the width of the fenced yard

be? Show your work to support your answer.b. Mr. Jones wants to put a 3-foot gate on one side of

the fenced yard. How many feet of fencing does he need for the rest of the fenced yard? Show your work to support your answer.

12

57

Page 22: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

South Carolina (SBE)

Which of the following will always represent a subset of integers? Ⓐ minimum wage Ⓑ grocery receipt total Ⓒ amount of gas in a car Ⓓ number of students in the lunchroom

Page 23: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Washington (SBE)

WASLSample test and open ended itemshttp://www.k12.wa.us/

assessment/WASL/WASLPractice-Teacher.aspx

Page 24: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Washington (SBE)Joseph and Cindy made up a game in their

mathematics class. To earn points in the game, each player rolls a six-sided cube with numbers 1 through 6 on the sides and then flips a coin. When the coin lands “tails up,” the player gets a total number of points equal to the number at the top of the cube. When the coin lands “heads up,” the player’s points are doubled for that turn. In the box below, list all the possible outcomes for each turn. Then indicate the probability of a player getting 6 points in one turn.

Page 25: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Game results

Probability of getting 6 points?

2/12 = 1/6Better question: What is

the probability of getting at least 6 points

T1 1

T2 2

T3 3

T4 4

T5 5

T6 6

H1 2

H2 4

H3 6

H4 8

H5 10

H6 12

Page 26: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Washington (SBE) Briefly describe the changes that took place for one group during the entire time period shown. Name the group and describe the changes using numbers and years in your description.

Describe one way that any two of the groups changed in relation to one another during a particular period of time. Name the two groups. Give the time period you are considering. Describe how the two groups changed in relation to one another during that particular time period.

Page 27: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Massachusetts (SBE)

MCAShttp://www.doe.mass.edu/mcas/200

5/release/Sample test with open ended items

Page 28: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Massachusetts (SBE) The graph below shows the number of milligrams of a

medication in the bloodstream from the time it was administered to 300 minutes after administration. Using the information from the graph, which of the following statements is true?

A. The maximum amount of medication in the bloodstream was 12 milligrams.

B. The minimum amount of medication was in the bloodstream 300 minutes after administration.

C. The amount of medication in the bloodstream increased at a faster rate than it decreased.

D. The maximum amount of medication was in the bloodstream 100 minutes after administration.

Page 29: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Massachusetts (SBE) In a report on the history of irrational numbers, Celine compared three

different values that have been used to approximate π. The values are listed below.

Egyptian approximation……. Chinese approximation……

Archimedes’ approximation (Greek)……..

a. Celine compared the approximation used by the Egyptians to a value (22/7) often used for π. She converted both to decimals rounded to four decimal places (nearest ten-thousandth). To the nearest ten-thousandth, what is the absolute value of the difference between them. Show or explain how you got your answer.

b. Celine also compared the approximation used by the Chinese to 22/7. To the nearest ten-thousandth, what is the absolute value of the difference between them.

c. Celine knows that π is approximately 3.1415927. Place the four approximations in order from least to greatest.

4

3

⎝ ⎜

⎠ ⎟4

355

113

22

7

Page 30: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Idaho (SBE)

Direct Mathematics Assessments (DMA)

http://www.sde.state.id.us/instruct/math/statewidetest.htm

Page 31: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Idaho(SBE)a. In the space provided, draw in the diagonals for

the six-sided polygon. b. How many diagonals are there in an 8-sided

polygon? Show or explain how you found your answer.

c. Explain how you would determine the number of diagonals in a 15-sided polygon.

9

Page 32: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Idaho (SBE) A new game called Right Triangle Toss is becoming very popular. Take a beanbag and toss it onto the board while blindfolded. The object is to toss three beanbags into the same region. What is the area of each colored region? Show or explain how you find your answer.

What is the probability of one beanbag being tossed into the red region? The blue region? The yellow region?

Find the probability of a beanbag landing in the yellow region three times in a row.

Page 33: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

New York (EOC)

Multiple Choice and Open-EndedJanuary 2006: Math A

http://www.nysedregents.org/testing/mathre/a106.pdf

January 2006: Math Bhttp://www.nysedregents.org/testing/mathre/

b106.pdf

Page 34: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

New York (EOC) - Math A

The equation6 20

3 5is equivalent to

(1) 3 15 (3) 8

(2) 2 15 (4) 4

Simplify :x 2 + 6x + 5

x 2 − 25

Page 35: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

NY - Math AAs shown in the accompanying

diagram, a ladder is leaning against a vertical wall, making an angle of 70° with the ground and reaching a height of 10.39 feet on the wall.

Find, to the nearest foot, the length of the ladder.

Find, to the nearest foot, the distance from the base of the ladder to the wall.

Page 36: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

NY - Math BOn the accompanying diagram, draw a

mapping of a relation from set A to set B that is not a function. Explain why the relationship you drew is not a function.

Page 37: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

NY - Math B

An architect is using a computer program to design the entrance of a railroad tunnel. The outline of the opening is modeled by the function f(x) = 8 sin x + 2, in the interval 0 ≤ x ≤ π, where x is expressed in radians.

Solve algebraically for all values of x in the interval 0 ≤ x ≤ π, where the height of the opening, f(x), is 6. Express your answer in terms of π. If the x-axis represents the base of the tunnel, what is the maximum height of the entrance of the tunnel?

Page 38: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

f(x) = 8 sin x + 2

Maximum height (π/2, 10)

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressorare needed to see this picture.

Page 39: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Tennessee (EOC)

Secondary TCAP Assessmenthttp://www.tennessee.gov/

education/assessment/pdf/Math%20Item%20Sampler%2006.pdf

Multiple Choice only

Page 40: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Tennessee (EOC)Melissa is sewing a

quilt using this pattern. To continue the pattern, which piece should she place at the arrow?

Page 41: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Tennessee (EOC)The graph shows the weight of a puppy as a function of age in weeks. What is the domain of the function shown on the graph?

Page 42: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Tennessee (EOC)When his bus arrives, Calvin is 40 ft east of the corner. The door of the bus is 30 ft north of the corner. If Calvin runs directly across the field to the bus, how far will he run?

Page 43: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Virginia (EOC)

SOL end-of-course assessmentsAlgebra I & Geometryhttp://www.pen.k12.va.us/VDOE/

Assessment/Release2005/RIB_EOCA1_WEB.pdf

Multiple Choice

Page 44: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Virginia (EOC)

What property makes this equation true?A) ReflexiveB) AssociativeC) CommutativeD) Distributive

6a2 − 2a = 2a(3a −1)

Page 45: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Virginia (EOC)The ordered pairs in the sets shown

below are of the form (x, y). In which set is y a function of x?A) {(1, 3) , (2, 6) , (3, 1) , (6, 3)}B) {(1, 3) , (3, 1) , (3, 4) , (4, 3)}C) {(1, -2) , (1, 0) , (1, 5) , (1, 7)}D) {(0, 3) , (1, 4) , (2, 4) , (2, 8)}

Page 46: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Virginia (EOC)Sam and Max sell bags of peanuts and popcorn

at baseball games. One matrix (bottom left) shows the number of bags they sold during the July 1st game. The second matrix shows the number of bags sold during the July 2nd games. Which matrix shows how many more bags were sold during the second games than in the first?

Page 47: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Center on Education Policy How have High School Exit Exams changed our Schools?

Perspectives from Virginia and MarylandExams have had a “noticeable impact,” leading to significant

changes in instructional content and methods, allocation of resources, staffing patterns, and school climate.

Teachers and principals – even those who disagree with the exit exam policy – seem committed to helping students pass the exams.

Educators spend more time emphasizing topics and skills likely to be tested and on test taking skills, bringing greater focus to instruction but potentially inhibiting more in-depth learning and time for non-tested topics.

Page 48: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Center on Education Policy While students are generally aware of the exam

requirements and remediation options, some did not know about key aspects including the content likely to be covered on the tests.

Schools have changed staffing patterns to assign some of their strongest teachers to teach tested subjects and to make staff available for remediation.

Districts devote the most time and energy to in-school remediation and test prep classes, rather than after-school or summer school programs.

Districts emphasized the need for more resources to cover additional costs related to exit exams.

Page 49: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Mixed MessagesWhat State High School Tests Communicate

About Student Readiness for CollegeCenter for Educational Policy Research (University

of Oregon)States should undertake studies of students

scores on state tests and subsequent performance in college

State tests should be revised to include additional optional items for college bound students.

States should work closer with representations from postsecondary education to help promote greater alignment with college entrance skills.

Page 50: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Wall Street Journal: March 23, 2006

Florida and Houston, Texas have adopted plans tying teacher salaries to student test scores.

Denver, Colorado and some districts in Minnesota are basing teacher salaries on a variety of performance criteria, including test scores.

Page 51: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Other Required Reading

Multiple Measures Approaches to High School GraduationThe School Redesign Network at

Stanford UniversityDo Graduation Tests Measure Up?

A Closer Look at State High School Exit ExamsAchieve

Page 52: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Summary

As of June 2005 – 19 states required an exit exam for graduation

By 2012, 26 states will require an exit exam (75% of the students in America)

Majority of exit exams contain open ended items, but this number is decreasing

End of Courses exams are gaining popularity My website with links to all states’ released items

http://www.rowan.edu/math/milou/STATES/Researchstatehsexam.html

Page 53: High Stakes Assessment: Comparing the States (grades 6-12) Dr. Eric Milou 2006 NCTM Annual - St. Louis Rowan University (NJ) milou@rowan.edu.

Thank You!

Dr. Eric MilouRowan [email protected]

REMINDER: Speaker proposal deadline for NCTM 07 in Atlanta: May 1, 2006