In response to
the 11/17/2011 post, “A Reader Writes... Assessment vs. Benchmarks – Part 1,”
an old school LYSer writes:
SC,
I completely agree with your comments on November 17, 2011 about
Assessments vs. Benchmarks. While our superintendent wants benchmarks at
mid-term across the district for STAAR and EOC/TAKS, we are only using the unit
assessments (inclusive of CSCOPE assessment questions) to monitor our
progress. We will create a mid-term assessment (CSCOPE does not have a
mid-term nor a final which we could use as pre-assessments as well as post) to
monitor what has been learned and relearned as it applies to the current
course. Of course, for high schools that is a challenging proposition because
in many cases so much prior material has not yet been mastered that remediation
swallows up accelerated learning. We have to find the gear for
accelerated learning and get our students and faculty into it or two birds will
be killed with multiple stones.
I believe it would be valuable to have a true pre-assessment given
before the school year begins and develop schedules based on what students will
need to learn in the upcoming curriculum instead of blunting their educational
spirit by duplicating what is known in order to glean what is not yet
mastered. If students are going to be held accountable for current course
curriculum without supporting standards mastered at a high level then how will
they be able to grasp sufficiently the readiness standards?
As I run this over in my head, the same rigorous monitoring of teachers
we are advocating should also include a similar model for students (and
accompanying stakeholders.) I still like to promote that each classroom
is like a mini-school. Teachers are administrators of instruction
teaching students how to be instructional leaders on their own as peer
tutors. Students teaching students (proficiently) could be the most
valuable assessment of all. If you can't teach it then you don't know it.
I can’t wait to see you again. I really need to pick your brain on
an administrative issue.
SC Response
Again, there is gold in the archives.
First, the pre-assessment for a given year is the state test taken at
the end of the prior year. Though
not perfect, the results give us a significant head start in determining the
instructional needs of our incoming students. Sadly, I can count on one hand the number of schools that
actually use this data for effective pre-planning at the individual classroom
level for an upcoming year. The
schools that do so, do it for the very purpose you describe. The result of this significant brainwork?
Campus performance that outpaces peer campuses. Meaning at the very least, this work provides meaningful
intrinsic rewards.
If I don’t see you before the end of September, make sure you get to the
Fundamental 5 National Summit in October. Not only will I be there, the entire
LYS team be holding office hours.
Think. Work. Achieve.
Your turn...
- Call Jo at (832) 477-LEAD to order your campus set of “The Fundamental 5: The Formula for Quality Instruction.” Individual copies available on Amazon.com! http://tinyurl.com/Fundamental5
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- Upcoming Presentations: The Fundamental 5 National Summit (Multiple Presentations); NASSP National Conference
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