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Title: NeSA-W Grades 4/8/11 Writing Assessment


1
NeSA-WGrades 4/8/11Writing Assessment
  • Nebraska Department of Education Statewide
    Assessment
  • Pat Roschewski pat.roschewski_at_nebraska.gov
  • Edward Foy edward.foy_at_nebraska.gov
  • Julie Barger ESU 16, Ogallala, NE

2
The NeSA-W/DRC Partnership
  • Working together to improve teaching and learning
    for Nebraska students.

3
The Nebraska Department of Education and Nebraska
educators continue to direct the process of
statewide assessment.
4
Nebraska Educators continue to be involved in
these aspects of NeSA-W
  • Prompt Creation
  • Field Testing
  • Prompt Selection
  • Rangefinding
  • Appeals
  • Continued training and communication

5
The Rangefinding Process
  • Included 7-10 Nebraska educators from a variety
    of educational backgrounds
  • Two DRC reps facilitated the work

6
The Rangefinding Process
  • Analytically scored, discussed, and came to
    consensus on 90-100 papers from the field testing
    of the test prompt.
  • DRC will use the papers selected and scored by
    this group to establish the anchors and train the
    raters prior to the scoring of the assessment.

7
Grade 8 11 Online Assessment
  • Grade 8 will remain a descriptive essay.
  • Grade 11 will remain a persuasive essay.
  • 2. The 8th 11th grades NeSA-W assessment
    will only be available online.
  • 3. Students with IEPs or 504 Plans may take the
    test in pencil and paper if documented in an IEP.
  • 4. Students responding in Spanish will take a
    pencil and paper assessment.

8
  • 5. Paper/pencil responses at 8 and 11 must be
    written in 2 pencil. Papers written in ink will
    not be scored and will result in zero scores.
  • 6. In paper/pencil testing student may use only
    the paper provided. If additional sheets of
    paper are added to the booklets, they will not be
    scored.

9
  • 7. When making copies of the paper/pencil
    booklets for local scoring or possible appeals,
    do not take the booklets apart.
  • 8. Do not copy the entire booklet, but only make
    a copy of the actual students response.

10
  • 9. NeSA software is scheduled for release
    November 14th. (All subjects, including writing
    and practice tests.)
  • 10. Districts will need to schedule a download
    or update of software prior to administering the
    assessment.
  • 11. Students will be allowed to use up to 6,000
    characters in their writing responses
    approximately three pages. A pop-up warning will
    occur at approximately 4,000 characters.

11
  • 12. The TAB button is not compatible with the
    software. Student should be advised to space
    over 3-5 spaces. This does not affect scoring.
  • 13. The results will be analytically scored.

12
Grade 8 11 Online Assessment
  • Printing options are available.
  • Both the practice and operational test may be
    printed in 2012.
  • The printed copy may be used for local scoring,
    placed in a student portfolio, or shared with the
    student/parents.
  • Districts will need the printed copy for appeal
    purposes This copy is used to decide if an
    appeal is warranted and, if so, a copy must be
    attached to the appeal form.

13
Rubric Changes
  • Changes have been made to the 8th and 11th
    grade rubrics.
  • The rubrics were changed to analytic rubrics in
    the fall of 2010 from the previous holistic
    rubrics.
  • The content of each new rubric has been
    tightened, and although most of the previous
    criteria remain, they have been redistributed
    into fewer domains.
  • Grade 8 and 11 analytic rubrics will be in use
    this year with the 2012 assessment.

14
Rubric Changes
  • The domains of the rubrics will be weighted as
    follows
  • Content/Ideas 35
  • Organization 25
  • Word Choice/Voice/Tone 20
  • Sentence Fluency/Conventions - 20

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17
Rubric Changes
  • Changes were made to the rubric for a number of
    reasons.
  • A revision of the Language Arts standards
    occurred in 2008-2009.
  • An external study determined that the new
    standards and the writing assessment rubrics did
    not match, necessitating a review/revision of the
    rubric.

18
Rubric Changes
  • Influence favoring analytical assessment was
    expressed in an effort to provide more specific
    data to data users.
  • The use of a computer based assessment reflects a
    real world application of writing.
  • Five vendors responded to the RFP (Request for
    Proposals.)

19
Rubric Changes
  • The new rubrics are available on the Assessment
    page of the NDE website.
  • http//www.education.ne.gov/Assessment/NeSA_Writin
    g.htm

20
NeSA-W Assessment
  • NeSA-W testing window is January 23,
    2012-February 10, 2012
  • 8th and 11th grade tests will be administered
    online.
  • Students with IEPs or 504 plans may take the
    test using paper/pencil if documented in an IEP.
  • Students responding in Spanish or a language
    other than English will take a paper/pencil
    assessment.

21
NeSA-W Grades 8 11 On-line
  • The recommended testing time is 90 minutes to
    occur on one day.
  • The test is not timed, but 90 minutes is
    recommended by NDE as the amount of time to
    schedule for the assessment.
  • If a student needs more than 90 minutes, that is
    allowable, the same as for NeSA-R.

22
NeSA-W Grades 8 11 On-line
  • Pre-writing may be done on paper furnished by the
    district. Students may choose to prewrite and
    produce a rough draft on paper before entering it
    on the computer, or they may choose to work
    entirely on the computer.

23
NeSA-W Grades 8 11 On-line
  • A new thesaurus, dictionary, and cut/paste are
    available. The spell check will not be
    available.
  • An online practice test for 8th and 11th grade
    writing will be made available. You can access
    this assessment through the CAL software on
    November 14th.

24
Practice Test Instructions 8 11
25
Practice Test Prompt
26
Practice Test Self Assessment Tool
27
NeSA-W On-line Grade 11Pilot Test Times Data
  • Time Span in Minutes in Each Span
  • 0 - 30 minutes 6
  • 30 - 60 minutes 58
  • 60 - 90 minutes 31
  • 90 minutes 5

28
Grade 8 11 Online Assessment
Additional Information
  • Graphic organizers, story starters, and story
    frames are not to be provided to students as part
    of the state testing program.
  • In the testing room, visual aids and clues should
    be removed or covered and remain covered
    throughout the administration of the writing
    assessment.

29
Grades 8 11 Online Assessment
Additional Information
  • Teachers are NOT to provide editing assistance to
    students on the NeSA-W.
  • No NeSA-W online tests will be provided in
    Spanish. All Spanish tests will be administered
    via paper/pencil test booklets.
  • Districts submitted requests for Spanish prompts
    via eDirect.

30
Grade 8 11 Online Assessment
Additional Information
The composite score is calculated from the domain
scores as 1. Composite 1.4D1 1.0D2 0.8D3
0.8D4 D1, D2, D3, and D4 are the sums of the
two reader scores for the four domains. The table
below illustrates the calculation for a student
who received a 2 or 3 from each reader on each
domain.
R1 R2 DR1R2 W WD
Ideas / Content 3 3 6 1.4 8.4
Organization 2 3 5 1.0 5.0
Voice / Word Choice 3 2 5 0.8 4.0
Sentence Fluency / Conventions 2 2 4 0.8 3.2
Composite Score 20.6
The corresponding Scale Score can then be
retrieved from the table supplied by DRC.
31
Grade 8 11 Online Assessment
Additional Information
  • Current information about the NeSA-W assessment
    and all NeSA assessments can be found on the NDE
    website.
  • Go to http//www.education.ne.gov
  • On your left, click on Statewide Assessment.
  • Click on NeSA Writing.

32
The Process of Analytical Scoring
  • The New Statewide Process

33
Holistic vs. Analytical Scoring
  • Analytic scoring involves a score being given
    for each domain and its criteria. These
    individual weighted scores are combined to
    calculate the final score.

34
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36
The Analytical Scoring Process
  • The Process
  • First read focus on Ideas/Content and
    Organization--assign a score to each domain of 1,
    2, 3, or 4.
  • Then review paper focus on Word Choice/Voice and
    Sentence Fluency/Conventions-- assign a score to
    each domain of 1, 2, 3, or 4.

37
The Analytical Scoring Process
  • The Process
  • Each paper is scored by two readers.
  • Agreement Exact matches or adjacent scores .
  • A Third Read by the table leader is required for
    each domain if scores are not in agreement.

38
The Analytical Scoring Process
  • Rules for obtaining the final score for a student
    after the third read
  • If the third score is an exact match to one of
    the original scores, the two matching scores are
    used.
  • If the third score is adjacent to one of the
    original scores but not the other, the third
    score and the score adjacent to it are used.
  • If the third score is adjacent to both scores,
    the third score is used twice.

39
The Analytical Scoring Process
  • Possible impact of analytical scoring
  • Information Each student report will include
    four sub scores and one scale score. These
    reports are shared with students and parents.
  • Trends Over time, data from this assessment can
    indicate domain strength or weakness at a
    classroom, school, and/or district level.

40
Scoring Practice
41
Think about your dream house.  It could be any
place you wish.       Write an essay describing
your dream house by creating a vivid mental
picture using sensory details for the readers so
that they can see it, experience it, and be able
to understand why you would want to live there. 
8th Grade Prompt
42
My dream house is located . . .
  • 8 see top right

43
Analytical Scoring
  • Ideas Content 2
  • The picture of what is being described is
    somewhat limited some digressions from the
    topic.
  • Organization 3
  • Intro, body, conclusion are functional pacing is
    controlled transitions functional paragraphing
    is generally organized.
  • Voice Word Choice 3
  • Wording is generally expressive language
    generally precise adequate vivid words and
    phrases.
  • Sentence Fluency Conventions 3
  • Sentences generally vary in length or structure
    occasionally the phrasing sounds unnatural
    fragments do not distract the reader grammar,
    usage, punctuation do not distract.

44
Have you ever wanted to see, . . .
  • 6 see top right

45
Analytical Scoring
  • Ideas Content 2
  • Limited sensory details limited picture of what
    is being described.
  • Organization 2
  • Structural development of an intro, body,
    conclusion is limited pacing is inconsistent
    transitions are weak.
  • Voice Word Choice 1
  • Wording is inexpressive and lifeless little
    sense of the writer language is neither
    specific, precise, or varied few vivid words or
    phrases.
  • Sentence Fluency Conventions 2
  • Sentences seldom vary, phrasing occasionally
    unnatural, conventions do not distract the reader

46
Grade 11 Scoring Guide
  • The packet you have in your handout represents
    a shortened version of the actual scoring packet
    that raters use when scoring Nebraska papers. In
    the actual raters packet two sample papers are
    included for each score point in each domain,
    totaling 32 papers that are used by raters as
    anchors for the rubric. Also note the rationale
    that is provided for the score on each paper.

47
Grade 11 Scoring Guide
  • Ideas/Content 4 example
  • The writer conveys a clear opinion regarding the
    benefits of taking a class in Medical
    Terminology. The content is well focused
    throughout the response and the reasoning is
    logical and compelling. The supporting examples
    are numerous and relevant.

48
Grade 11 Scoring Guide
  • Organization 2 example
  • A limited structural development is evident in
    this essay about the need for a weights class. A
    weak introduction and a brief conclusion are
    present, but the main body is a list of somewhat
    random ideas regarding the benefits of a class,
    which are connected using a few weaker and
    repetitive (also) transitions. Paragraphing
    while present is not successful and pacing is
    somewhat inconsistent.

49
Grade 11 Scoring Guide
  • Voice/Word Choice 3 example
  • The writer demonstrates a general commitment to
    the merits of a gym class. While the voice is
    appropriate for the purpose and audience, it is
    not particularly enthusiastic or passionate about
    the topic and projects only a generally
    persuasive tone. The language is generally
    specific and engaging and the writer generally
    anticipates the readers questions.

50
Grade 11 Scoring Guide
  • Sentence Fluency/Conventions 1 example
  • Frequent grammar, usage, punctuation and spelling
    errors distract the reader through this response.
    Sentences seldom vary in length and structure,
    and the run-on sentences confuse the reader.
    Phrasing sounds awkward and unnatural.

51
  • What scores would these papers receive in other
    domains?

52
Questions?Nebraska Department of Education
Statewide AssessmentPat Roschewski
pat.roschewski_at_nebraska.govEdward Foy
edward.foy_at_nebraska.gov
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