administering the dra2 and edl2 denver public schools spring 2008 grades 4–8

26
Administering the DRA2 and EDL2 Administering the DRA2 and EDL2 Denver Public Schools Denver Public Schools Spring 2008 Spring 2008 Grades 4–8 Grades 4–8

Upload: henry-cole

Post on 29-Dec-2015

219 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Administering the DRA2 and EDL2 Denver Public Schools Spring 2008 Grades 4–8

Administering the DRA2 and EDL2Administering the DRA2 and EDL2Administering the DRA2 and EDL2Administering the DRA2 and EDL2

Denver Public SchoolsDenver Public SchoolsSpring 2008Spring 2008Grades 4–8Grades 4–8

Page 2: Administering the DRA2 and EDL2 Denver Public Schools Spring 2008 Grades 4–8

Agenda Topics• What good readers do• CBLA Expectations for grade level targets• Administration of the DRA2 with different

levels of readers• Word Analysis tasks and instruction• Instructional information gained from the

DRA2/EDL2

Page 3: Administering the DRA2 and EDL2 Denver Public Schools Spring 2008 Grades 4–8

What is the purpose of DRA2/EDL2 testing?

• For Teachers: To get instructional information

• For the State: To meet CBLA requirements (Spring)

• Inform the state of students’ reading levels (K–3).• After third grade: Inform the state as to the

progress of those students identified at the end of third grade (Grades 4–11).

Page 4: Administering the DRA2 and EDL2 Denver Public Schools Spring 2008 Grades 4–8

Foundation for the DRA2/EDL2:What do good readers do?

Brainstorm at tables:

What do good readers do?

Page 5: Administering the DRA2 and EDL2 Denver Public Schools Spring 2008 Grades 4–8

How has “What Good Readers Do”been incorporated into

DRA2/EDL2 Text Reading?• Assesses:

– Reading Engagement– Oral Reading Accuracy and Fluency – Comprehension (Predictions, Retellings and Summaries,

Connections, Inferences, Reflections)

• Determines student’s Independent level and provides focus areas for instruction.

• Look in the handout at the Good Readers Chart. Put a checkmark next to every strategy on which you have provided mini-lessons. Note Rationale.

Page 6: Administering the DRA2 and EDL2 Denver Public Schools Spring 2008 Grades 4–8

How has “What Good Readers Do”been incorporated into

DRA2/EDL2 Text Reading?

Activity: Read through the sample Continuum for Oral Reading (Level 38, Amelia Earhart, nonfiction). – How might teachers use this information to

guide instruction?

Page 7: Administering the DRA2 and EDL2 Denver Public Schools Spring 2008 Grades 4–8

DRA2 4–8

DRA2 4–8 has slightly different processes for administration at each of the following levels of reading:– Bridge (L. 20–38)– Intermediate (L. 40–50)– Middle School (L. 60–80)

Page 8: Administering the DRA2 and EDL2 Denver Public Schools Spring 2008 Grades 4–8

DRA 4–8: Bridge Pack• For students in grades 4–8 who are reading

BELOW L. 40• Texts at Levels 20, 24, 28, 38

– If students need a lower text, coordinate with your facilitator or a primary teacher to use the DRA2 K–3.

• Teacher provides more scaffolding at lower levels

Page 9: Administering the DRA2 and EDL2 Denver Public Schools Spring 2008 Grades 4–8

In grades 4–8, which students should take the DRA2/EDL2?

• Administration of the DRA2/EDL2 in the Spring is required:– For students who are in the third grade cohort group

(identified in third grade as being below grade level) and– For students who did not score Proficient on Benchmark

Assessments for Reading or are not reading at grade level, according to other indicators, including CSAP.

• Administration of the DRA2/EDL2 is OPTIONAL:– For students who are NOT in the cohort group AND scored

Proficient on Benchmark Tests for Reading and are reading at or above grade level, according to other classroom indicators.

Page 10: Administering the DRA2 and EDL2 Denver Public Schools Spring 2008 Grades 4–8

CDE Guidelines:CBLA Benchmark Levels

Adapted from the CDE PowerPoint at: http://www.cde.state.co.us/action/CBLA/Updated_DRA2_EOY_Reporting.ppt

End of Year Benchmark Level on DRA2

Grade 3 L. 38 Independent

Grade 4 L. 40 Independent

Grade 5 L. 50 Independent

Grade 6 L. 60 Independent

Grade 7 L. 70 Independent

Grade 8 L. 80 Independent

Page 11: Administering the DRA2 and EDL2 Denver Public Schools Spring 2008 Grades 4–8

What is Independent Level on the DRA 4–8?

• Use the Continuum descriptors to evaluate the student’s reading behaviors.

• Find highest level at which the student scores Independent or Advanced in BOTH the total of the ORF and the total of the Comprehension scores.

Page 12: Administering the DRA2 and EDL2 Denver Public Schools Spring 2008 Grades 4–8

Consider going to a higher text level

Go to a lower text level

Highest Independent Level

Page 13: Administering the DRA2 and EDL2 Denver Public Schools Spring 2008 Grades 4–8

Why is it important to find students’ Independent level?

• 85% of everything children read should be easy for them

• 15% should be a bit of a challenge• 0% should be at the difficult level

because it provides no purpose for learning

» Richard Allington

Page 14: Administering the DRA2 and EDL2 Denver Public Schools Spring 2008 Grades 4–8

Administering the DRA2/EDL2 with Consistency

• Read only the bold directions in the Teacher Observation Guide. – Paraphrasing or giving more information

can compromise the reliability of the test.

• Use a stopwatch to time the reading. – If a student is stuck on a word, give 5

seconds of wait time, then supply the word and mark it as a miscue.

Page 15: Administering the DRA2 and EDL2 Denver Public Schools Spring 2008 Grades 4–8

Administering the DRA2 Bridge PackL. 38: Hayato

• Read through Hayato’s Reading Survey. What would you give him for Reading Engagement on the Continuum?

• Read through the Observation Guide and Continuum for Amelia Earhart, L. 38.

• Watch DVD of Hayato, following along with the transcript and taking notes.– Underline the words and phrases to show how

Hayato phrases words as he reads them.– Score his ORF immediately. Is he Independent?

Should you go on?

Page 16: Administering the DRA2 and EDL2 Denver Public Schools Spring 2008 Grades 4–8

Administering the DRA2 Bridge PackL. 38: Hayato

• Look through Hayato’s “Student Booklet.”– Note: Student examples are included in Teacher

Guide to support scoring.– Score the Continuum. At what level is Hayato

reading? • Look at Focus for Instruction sheet and check

three to five areas to focus on with Hayato.– What would you work with him on in guided

reading?– What would you do with him in your reading

conferences?• Watch the conference between the facilitator

and the teacher.

Page 17: Administering the DRA2 and EDL2 Denver Public Schools Spring 2008 Grades 4–8

Word Analysis Assessment

• For DRA2 4–8:– If students are significantly below grade

level, teachers might choose to do some of the Word Analysis tasks to determine the extent to which word analysis problems are interfering with the students’ reading progress.

– Teachers collaborate with their facilitator or primary teachers about the administration of the Word Analysis tasks.

Page 18: Administering the DRA2 and EDL2 Denver Public Schools Spring 2008 Grades 4–8

Activity: Administering the DRA2 4–8 Level 40

• Watch DVD of the student reading L. 40, All the Way Under and the conference between the facilitator and the teacher.

• How is this process different from the Bridge Pack format?

Page 19: Administering the DRA2 and EDL2 Denver Public Schools Spring 2008 Grades 4–8

Using the DRA2/EDL2 for Instructional

PurposesLook at the following DRA2 Summary Sheet

for students at the Bridge level.• What do you notice?• What questions does this raise for you?• How can this information be used for

instructional purposes?

Page 20: Administering the DRA2 and EDL2 Denver Public Schools Spring 2008 Grades 4–8

DRA2 Summary Sheet: Bridge Pack

Page 21: Administering the DRA2 and EDL2 Denver Public Schools Spring 2008 Grades 4–8

Using the DRA2/EDL2 for Instructional Purposes

• Use information to support appropriate book bags for students.

• Use Summary Sheets to group students and plan whole group and small group instruction.

• Use Continuum rubrics and Focus for Instruction sheets to identify areas for instruction.

Page 22: Administering the DRA2 and EDL2 Denver Public Schools Spring 2008 Grades 4–8

Using the DRA2/EDL2 for Instructional Purposes

• Use Continuum rubrics to assess student progress, e.g., in SMART goals. For example: If students score low on Reflection,

• Make a student-friendly chart of the Reflection rubric,

• Model and teach students how to reflect during Guided Reading, and

• Teach students the rubric for Reflection and have them write their own reflections and score them.

Page 23: Administering the DRA2 and EDL2 Denver Public Schools Spring 2008 Grades 4–8
Page 24: Administering the DRA2 and EDL2 Denver Public Schools Spring 2008 Grades 4–8

Using the DRA2/EDL2 for Instructional Purposes

• Keep Continuum on clipboard during conferences or guided reading as a reference.

• As students improve in the areas of instruction identified initially, use the Focus for Instruction sheets to identify new areas for instruction and to set goals with students in Reading Assessment Notebooks.

What else?

Page 25: Administering the DRA2 and EDL2 Denver Public Schools Spring 2008 Grades 4–8

Preparing for the Assessment:Teachers

• Gather materials—Teacher Guides, stopwatch, clipboard, books

• Make copies of necessary forms.– Teacher Observation Guide and Continuum for each

book – Student Booklet for writing responses (L.28–40)– Focus for Instruction form– Word Analysis record forms (if necessary)

• Read the books and Teacher Guides ahead of time. • Use information from instruction to guide choice of

levels and tasks. • If new to running records, ask facilitator for training

and tape students’ reading.

Page 26: Administering the DRA2 and EDL2 Denver Public Schools Spring 2008 Grades 4–8

In closing…The DRA2 and EDL2 – Provide a clear and shared vision of what

student proficiency looks like– Offer specific guidance for instruction– Support ongoing discussions of student

work and implications for instruction

ALL are critical for enhancing student achievement.