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Administration Code Training

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2. Purpose. To review the appropriate practices for the state assessment system as defined ... Rhonda Sims, Director. Phyllis Shuttleworth, Branch Manager. Joy ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Administration Code Training


1
Administration Code Training
  • Office of Assessment and Accountability
  • Kentucky Department of Education

2
Purpose
  • To review the appropriate practices for the state
    assessment system as defined in the
    Administration Code for Kentuckys Educational
    Assessment Program (703 KAR 5080)
  • To review the Inclusion of Special Populations in
    the State-Required Assessment and Accountability
    Programs (703 KAR 5070)

3
Allegations for 200737, 31, 29, 29, 24, 16, 10,
7, 6, 5
  • Inappropriate Assistance/ Intervention by Staff
  • Test Security (Staff)
  • Test Security (Student)
  • Out of Order (Staff)
  • Out of Order (Student)
  • Special Education
  • Portfolio
  • Student Action
  • Missing Test Booklets
  • Other

4
Allegations for 200737, 31, 29, 29, 24, 16, 10,
7, 6, 5
  • Inappropriate Assistance/ Intervention by Staff
  • Test Security (Staff)
  • Test Security (Student)
  • Out of Order (Staff)
  • Out of Order (Student)
  • Special Education
  • Portfolio
  • Student Action
  • Missing Test Booklets
  • Other

29 16 37 31 10 24 5 7 6 29
5
Rationale
  • Professional Ethics
  • 704 KAR 20680
  • Educational Defensibility
  • Teach the content
  • Student Ownership
  • All work done entirely by the student
  • Note inclusion of writing portfolio materials

6
Appropriate Assessment Practices
  • Requires Training
  • Read, Sign and Comply
  • Prior to portfolio development (writing
    portfolios and alternate assessments)
  • Includes documents and administration manuals
    specific to state-required assessment components


7
Scrimmages
  • Testing for testings sake only can be
    counterproductive.
  • Students should receive meaningful feedback from
    open-response practice.
  • Use CATS-like questions regularly throughout the
    school year in classroom assessments.

8
Test Security
  • Central Office, School Office, Classroom
  • Shall not be reproduced in whole, in part or
    paraphrased in any way.
  • Destroy notes, rough drafts created by students
  • Ensure reusable materials are unmarked
  • Dont share information about items

9
Test Security (continued)
  • Released items can be used
  • Security issues with technology
  • Alert papers
  • Procedures for Reporting Errors


10
Core Content Blitz
  • Reviewing should be a regular instructional
    strategy, not a one time big event.
  • The Administration Code states that Activities
    that are created or implemented for the sole
    purpose of increasing test scores and do not
    contribute to the student's overall education are
    considered in violation of this regulation.


11
Posters
  • Posters are not allowed to stay on walls for the
    purpose of state assessment, but because they
    were used in instruction.
  • Posters can only be displayed in the location
    where instruction occurred.
  • Students may not get up to access posters or have
    posters read to them as an accommodation.

12
Posters
  • For Instruction
  • Documented in lesson plans
  • For Assessment
  • Do not move posters for CATS

13
Classroom Materials
  • Dictionaries/thesauri
  • On-demand Writing test ONLY
  • Calculators
  • required for KCCT mathematics

14
Classroom Materials
  • Shall not distribute any information or
    materials that are not sent or specified

15
Supervision Test Order
  • Lunch, interval, restroom breaks
  • Same grade, same section, same time
  • Illness during assessment session
  • Supervise and monitor students

16
Placement of Students for Testing
  • Testing locations based on space/ personnel
    availability, not in an effort to try to gain a
    testing advantage.
  • Movement of personnel to different rooms is a
    better than movement of students from room to
    room which can be confusing and stressful for all.

17
Disciplinary Practicesand Student Motivation
  • Re-administering for disciplinary purpose
  • The original responses, along with the rewritten
    ones clearly marked NOT TO BE SCOREDITEMS
    RETAKEN FOR DISCIPLINARY PURPOSES, shall be
    submitted to the testing contractor.


18
Administration Practices
General Instructions Do your
best. Assistance or Evaluative
Comments You can do better.
19
Good Faith Effort
  • Checklists
  • No evaluative statements
  • Feedback cannot be given until after test
    booklets are out of the building.

20
Rewards or Motivational Strategies
  • Shall be consistent with those applied within the
    regular curriculum or with the larger school
    program in general.

21
Funding of rewards
  • Follow School Food Services Guidelines and local
    and state boards finance policies
  • Local school board funds or cash awards from
    school activity funds generated by student shall
    not be used for student incentives


22
Writing Portfolio Development
  • Teachers may
  • Ask questions to clarify, indicate position of
    errors, share scoring rubric
  • Teachers may not
  • Make direct corrections, revisions, working after
    completion date (First day of testing window)

23
Writing Portfolios
  • Typewritten pieces are not required for the
    Writing Portfolio. Pieces can be handwritten.
  • If typewritten is desired, students should type
    their own Writing Portfolios unless physically
    unable to do so.
  • When signing and scribing is used, the exact
    words of the student should be written down.
    The student can then work on editing and adding
    needed articles, conjunctions, etc.

24
Writing Portfolio Scoring
  • Certified staff
  • Teacher or administrator certification
  • Employed by district
  • Certified or classified position or leave of
    absence
  • Current year training

25
Additional Information
  • Inclusion of Special Populations
  • 703 KAR 5070 (discussed after break)
  • Alternate Portfolios
  • Violations of the Administration Code
  • Review of Secure Materials
  • Reporting Nonacademic Information
  • Signature Sheet

26
Reporting Allegations
  • All allegations, or perceived inappropriate
    testing procedure or behavior, should be reported
    to the Building Assessment Coordinator (BAC) and
    then to the District Assessment Coordinator
    (DAC).
  • If the DAC is the one not following proper
    procedure and does not correct or report the
    situation, then a call or email can be placed to
    Patsy Kenner by any concerned person.

27
Time for a Break!
28
Inclusionof Special Populations
  • in the State-Required Assessment and
    Accountability Programs

703 KAR 5070
29
Standards used for Policy Decisions
  • CATS is designed to increase learning for ALL
    students so our assessment system must be fair
    and equitable.
  • Kentuckys assessment system is an inclusive
    system.

30
Kentuckys Great IDEA
  • Kentucky Education Reform Act in 1990 stipulated
    that our statewide assessment would be an
    inclusive system!
  • The Amendments of 1997 for IDEA stipulated that
    children with disabilities must be included in
    general state and district-wide assessments, with
    appropriate accommodations or in an alternative
    assessment.

31
Framework and Instruction for All Students
  • Learning Goals
  • Academic Expectations
  • Program of Studies (POS)
  • Content Guidelines for Assessment
  • School and District Curricular Parameters of
    Learning (Performance Standards)
  • Instructional Units
  • IEP, 504 Plans, Program Services Plan (PSP)

32
... More DECISIONS
  • What do we teach?
  • Program of Studies
  • Remediation of skills/processes/concepts through
    RESEARCH-BASED instruction
  • Strategies to enhance access of general
    curriculum and demonstration of learning

33
Decisions
  • When do we use accommodations/modifications?
  • At any point in which the students disability is
    a barrier to accessing curriculum and
    demonstrating learning!

34
What are accommodations and modifications?
  • Accommodations are alterations in the testing
    environment or process.
  • Modifications are alterations in the assessment
    instrument.

35
Accommodations and Modifications for the CATS
Assessment
  • Based on individual need NOT on a disability
    category or designation as limited English
    proficient.

36
Accommodationsand Modifications
  • Provide equity, not an advantage,
  • Enable students with disabilities to access
    curriculum and core content critical to achieving
    Kentuckys academic expectations, learning goals,
    and POS content, and
  • Allow students to participate and demonstrate
    what they know and can do.

37
CATS Accommodations vs. Classroom Accommodations
Classroom Accommodations
CATS Accommodations
38
Inclusion of Students with Disabilities
  • Participation with no accommodations and/or
    modifications
  • Participation with accommodations and/or
    modifications (IEP, 504 Plan, PSP)
  • Participation in the Alternate Assessment Program

39
Participation with NO Accommodations or
Modifications
  • Have remediation plan but have not been
    identified,
  • Have been referred to an ARC Committee or 504
    Committee but the evaluation and eligibility
    determination is not been completed
  • OR
  • Have a disability but are not receiving services
    under IDEA, or 504 interventions.

40
Participation with Accommodations and/or
Modifications for IDEA Students
  • must meet eligibility requirements under Kentucky
    Administrative Regulations Related to Exceptional
    Children,
  • have a current IEP,
  • are receiving special education services and
  • meet 3 conditions

41
Participation with Accommodations and/or
Modifications for 504 Plan Students
  • must meet eligibility requirements under Section
    504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 for having
    a physical or mental disability which
    substantially limits one or major life activities
    (i.e., LEARNING),
  • have a current 504 Plan and
  • meet 3 conditions

42
Conditions for Accommodations and/or
Modifications for IDEA and 504 Plan students
  • are part of the students regular instructional
    routine and are NOT introduced just for purpose
    of CATS,
  • related to individual students needs and the
    impact of the disability on specific areas of
    learning which are SUPPORTED by evaluation data
    (PLOP, goals and objectives, and SDI) and
  • are specified in the students current IEP or 504
    Plan.

43
Limited English Proficient (LEP) Students (as
defined in 703 KAR 5001)
  • All LEP students participate in CATS
  • Accommodations are permitted only if listed in a
    students Program Services Plan (PSP)

44
Accommodations may be used if the LEP student
  • meets criteria as a LEP student according to
    W-APT/ACCESS data
  • has a current Program Services Plan (PSP), which
    is individualized and notes appropriate
    accommodations
  • has access to the PSP accommodations on an
    on-going basis in the mainstream classroom

45
LEP Accommodation Decisions
  • English language proficiency results are combined
    with professional judgment shall determine when
    accommodations are no longer necessary.

Implementation of any accommodation or
modification shall not inappropriately impact the
content being measured.
46
Accommodations
  • Readers
  • Scribes
  • Paraphrasing
  • Use of technology and special equipment
  • Extended time
  • Reinforcement and behavioral modifications
    strategies
  • Manipulatives
  • Prompting/cueing
  • Interpreters (PSP)

47
Use of Readers
  • Evaluation information supports the verified
    disability and its impact on reading.
  • Student has a verified disability which
    significantly impacts the area of reading.
  • Students IEP includes specific goals, objectives
    and specially designed instruction related to
    reading or describes supplementary aids and
    services necessary for student to access and
    progress through general education curriculum

48
Use of Readers
  • Students 504 Plan documents the use of a reader
    as part of the intervention strategies and
    modifications.
  • Student uses a reader routinely for instruction
    to gain information and meaning from print
    material.
  • A reader shall not be a replacement for reading
    instruction or assistive/adaptive technology

49
Reader Responsibilities
  • Read directions, prompts, situations, passages,
    and stories as written.
  • Do not use information to lead the student to
    specific information needed for answering items.
  • Reread directions, prompts, situations, passages
    and stories ONLY if SPECIFICALLY requested by
    STUDENT.
  • Do not point out parts of the task, questions, or
    parts skipped by the student.

50
Use of Scribes
  • Evaluation information supports the verified
    disability and its impact on writing.
  • Student has a verified disability which
    significantly impacts written expression/basic
    writing skills or a physical disability which
    impedes the motor process of writing.
  • Students IEP documents specific goals and
    objectives related to writing.

51
Use of a Scribe
  • Students 504 Plan addresses written expression
    interventions/modifications.
  • Student uses a scribe as part of the students
    regular instructional routine to communicate
    information and knowledge.

52
Do Not Scribe if Student...
  • has no verified disability
  • has ability to translate thoughts or can
    motorically print/use cursive/use technology
  • is able to produce product, but product would
    better if scribed (enhance written products)
  • has a motoric/ physical disability but is able to
    use assistive/adaptive technology

53
Scribe Responsibilities
  • Record the students responses consistent with
    accommodations described on IEP or 504 Plan for
    instructional activities and classroom
    assessments.
  • Shall not inappropriately impact content being
    measured.
  • Record the students work to allow the student to
    reflect what the student knows and is able to do
    while providing the student with an alternative
    means to express his/her thoughts and knowledge.

54
Use of a Computer for KCCT
If a students appropriate accommodation for all
written work is through the use of a computer, it
is also permissible for open response questions.
55
Use of Extended Time
  • Students with disabilities who have IEPs, 504
    Plans or PSP that stipulate extra time is needed
    are allowed extended time, as long as extended
    time is an accommodation for assessments and
    completion of assignments as part of the
    students instructional routine.

56
To be allowed extended time students must be....
  • making constructive progress on completing
    responses and
  • provided with proper supervision to maintain an
    appropriate assessment atmosphere.

57
Manipulatives may be used during assessment...
  • if used by student to solve problems routinely
    during instruction and
  • is described on students IEP, 504 Plan or PSP.
  • NOTE A student should NOT be prompted to use
    manipulatives. Self-initiation must occur.


58
Prompting or Cueing
  • Cue cards or other strategies (e.g., edit/
    revision checklists, mnemonic devices, formula
    cards, visual organizers) may be used during
    assessment under certain conditions.

59
Prompting and Cueing
  • Cueing notebooks should be routine accommodations
    that are specific to the needs of each individual
    student.
  • Generic notebooks are in violation of the
    Administration Code.
  • Students must initiate the use of these Notebooks
    during the state assessment.

60
Who can assist with accommodations?
  • School district decision
  • Preferably someone familiar with the student
    (teacher, instructional assistant) and
  • Individual trained in the roles and
    responsibilities of appropriate accommodations,
    confidentiality and the Administration Code and
    the Inclusions Regulation.

61
Questions?
  • Division of Assessment Support
  • Rhonda Sims, Director
  • Phyllis Shuttleworth, Branch Manager
  • Joy Barr, Program Consultant
  • Kevin OHair, Program Consultant
  • Kathy Moore, Program Consultant
  • Pam Powers, Systems Consultant IT
  • Bridget Stanfield, Program Consultant
  • Chris Williams, Program Consultant
  • 502-564-4394

62
Time for an Activity!
  • Read your situation.
  • Look for information in the Administration Code
    and
  • Inclusions Regulation
  • Decide if violation and place on wall.
  • Be prepared to defend your decision.
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