The following is an exchange I had with a district
curriculum director concerning 3-week checkpoints (common assessments).
DIRECTOR
This is a question I'm getting fairly often now, “Why
don't the checkpoints get progressively longer as the time for the EOC exam
nears?
I restate and remind our teachers about the purpose of checkpoints. But the questions keep coming up. What
else can I add to my response?
SC
Teachers are worried about how their students will perform
on the long, rigorous, high stakes test.
A legitimate concern. Share
with them that World Class marathon runners train thru a regiment of short
sprints and mid-length runs. They do not constantly run marathons.
We mimic this with the following assessment series:
Weeks
3 and 6 – short checkpoints
Week 9 - a mid-length midterm
Weeks 12 and 15 –
short checkpoints
Week 18 – a longer final
Finally, we are checking to see if students have mastered
what we taught and did we re-teach our identified deep holes. We are not
checking to see if students can navigate thru 40 problems in four hours.
DIRECTOR
The same teachers that complain about the test being the
center of everything, then complain that the test isn't the center of
everything. Do they realize how schizophrenic that makes them look?
SC
Unfortunately, no.
But this is not unique to your district. It is the manifestation of teacher stress, fear, and superstitious
behaviors. And it’s better than your teachers not caring.
DIRECTOR
Just to clarify, are you saying that the 9-week checkpoint
should be cumulative?
SC
Yes. But not stupid length cumulative. 15 questions,
max. Also, if the district looks
at assessment data, it should only look at the data from the 9, 18, 27 and 36-week
tests. All the other checkpoints
are for campus use. And the tests
for weeks 18 and 36 (which are in lieu of a traditional final exam) can be 20
to 30 questions.
DIRECTOR
Got it!
Think. Work. Achieve.
Your turn...
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