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The STAAR-Ready Literate Classroom Lora Darden, Ph.D. Director of Curriculum & Professional Development [email protected]
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The STAAR-Ready Literate Classroom Lora Darden, Ph.D. Director of Curriculum & Professional Development

Jan 06, 2018

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Rodney Casey

 Test Schematics  Blue Prints Blue Prints  Assessed Curriculum  TEKS/SEs
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Page 1: The STAAR-Ready Literate Classroom Lora Darden, Ph.D. Director of Curriculum & Professional Development

The STAAR-Ready Literate Classroom

Lora Darden, Ph.D.Director of Curriculum & Professional

[email protected]

Page 2: The STAAR-Ready Literate Classroom Lora Darden, Ph.D. Director of Curriculum & Professional Development

Demystify the STAAR assessment documents

Examine the structure of Reading & Writing STAAR assessments

Experiment with 26 lines of text

Page 3: The STAAR-Ready Literate Classroom Lora Darden, Ph.D. Director of Curriculum & Professional Development

Test Schematics

Blue Prints

Assessed Curriculum

TEKS/SEs

Page 4: The STAAR-Ready Literate Classroom Lora Darden, Ph.D. Director of Curriculum & Professional Development

Reading Test Schematics3rd Grade 5th Grade

Page 5: The STAAR-Ready Literate Classroom Lora Darden, Ph.D. Director of Curriculum & Professional Development

STAAR reading assessments will emphasize students’ ability to

Understand how to use text evidence to confirm the validity of their ideas

Make connections within and across texts (“across texts” begins at grade 4)

Think critically/inferentially

“Go beyond” a literal understanding of what they read

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Page 6: The STAAR-Ready Literate Classroom Lora Darden, Ph.D. Director of Curriculum & Professional Development

Students must be provided in-depth instruction in all genres represented by the ELA/R TEKSEqual weight must be given to fiction and expository genres—the readiness genres—at elementary, middle, and high schoolInstruction must emphasize critical/ inferential thinking rather than isolated skillsStudents must be able to make connections between different genres (and be able to “see” the thematic links)

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Page 7: The STAAR-Ready Literate Classroom Lora Darden, Ph.D. Director of Curriculum & Professional Development

RC 1: Questions about vocabulary and connections across texts for grades 3−8 (vocabulary only at grade 3)

RC 2: Questions about single literary texts: fiction, literary nonfiction, poetry, drama (drama beginning at grade 4)

RC 3: Questions about informational texts: expository and persuasive (persuasive beginning at grade 5)

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Page 8: The STAAR-Ready Literate Classroom Lora Darden, Ph.D. Director of Curriculum & Professional Development

K-12 alignment document – this has been revised due to TEAs revisions on 8th grade standards

http://lead4ward.com/docs/Readiness_Standards_Reading.pdf

Page 9: The STAAR-Ready Literate Classroom Lora Darden, Ph.D. Director of Curriculum & Professional Development

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Revision and editing assessed separately, with increased focus on revision as students become more experienced and skilled writers

For Grade 4, 32% of multiple-choice score from revision (9 items) and 68% of score from editing (19 items)

Page 10: The STAAR-Ready Literate Classroom Lora Darden, Ph.D. Director of Curriculum & Professional Development

Example of Grade 4 revision stem: David would like to improve his story by adding

a strong concluding sentence after sentence 28. Which of these would be the BEST sentence to add?

Example of Grade 7 revision stem:The transition between the third paragraph (sentences 13–19) and the fourth paragraph (sentences 20–25) is abrupt. Which sentence could Veronica add before sentence 20 to help with this transition?10

Page 11: The STAAR-Ready Literate Classroom Lora Darden, Ph.D. Director of Curriculum & Professional Development

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Students will write two one-page essays (26 lines maximum) addressing different types of writingGrade 4—personal narrative and expositoryEssays will be weighted equallyNo “gatekeeper” (automatic fail of the writing test for a 1)

Page 12: The STAAR-Ready Literate Classroom Lora Darden, Ph.D. Director of Curriculum & Professional Development

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Expository, persuasive, and analytic prompts contain a stimulus and are scaffolded:Read, Think, Write, Be Sure to −

Personal narrative and literary prompts contain a stimulus and are scaffolded, though less so than other prompts

Page 13: The STAAR-Ready Literate Classroom Lora Darden, Ph.D. Director of Curriculum & Professional Development

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A rubric is being developed for each writing type, but three overarching aspects of writing are addressed in all rubrics

Organization/ProgressionDevelopment of IdeasUse of Language/Conventions

Page 14: The STAAR-Ready Literate Classroom Lora Darden, Ph.D. Director of Curriculum & Professional Development

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Organization/Progression—bullet #1: The degree to which the organizational structure is appropriate to the purpose and specific demands of the prompt.

This bullet “plays out” in slightly different ways depending on the purpose for writing.

The development of ideas is coherent and well controlled.

Page 15: The STAAR-Ready Literate Classroom Lora Darden, Ph.D. Director of Curriculum & Professional Development

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Development of Ideas—bullet #2: Specific well-chosen details add to the substance of the piece.

The writing is thoughtful and engaging.

The topic may be approached from an unusual or fresh perspective

Page 16: The STAAR-Ready Literate Classroom Lora Darden, Ph.D. Director of Curriculum & Professional Development

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Use of Language/Conventions—bullet #3: Word choice contributes to the clear meaning of the piece of writing.

Conventions contribute to the overall readability of the piece of writing.

Sentences are purposeful and varied, enhancing the effectiveness of the writing.

Page 17: The STAAR-Ready Literate Classroom Lora Darden, Ph.D. Director of Curriculum & Professional Development

High-Scoring Compositions Form and purpose match Explicit thesis or controlling idea Economical use of space: tight,

specific, logical, no wasted words Introductions and conclusions

short and effective Specific use of language and

appropriate tone Essay well-crafted Strong conventions

Page 18: The STAAR-Ready Literate Classroom Lora Darden, Ph.D. Director of Curriculum & Professional Development

Low-Scoring Compositions Wrong form for the purpose Weak, evolving, or nonexistent

thesis or controlling idea Wasted space—repetition,

wordiness, extraneous details or examples, looping/meandering, meaningless introductions and conclusions***

General/vague use of language or inappropriate tone

Essay poorly crafted Weak conventions