Research On Student Assessment
Research On Student Assessment
Research On Student Assessment
benchmarks.
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general examination of factors that contribute to reading success, and
success.
hand with early literacy, and indeed with literacy at any level.
which they are read to. Upon statistical analysis of questionnaires and
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at least 3-4 times per week), preschool exposure, and age at which
success that QUEST students that were not exposed to the variable”
(Bailey, 2006, p. 314) In fact, regular parental reading was the only
children.
that connect the school and the home. John Holloway (2004) nicely
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summarizes some of the recent research at the time coming to the
classroom and build on the work of the school” (Holloway, 2004, p. 89).
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learning in support of student literacy achievement”. In Edwards,
Turner, and Mokhtari’s 2008 article of the same name, they explore
the frustrations that literacy educators deal with in the face of this
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for improving literacy assessment that includes helping students gain
a list of books read and preferred authors. They also suggest helping
make larger policy decisions that would impact selection of testing that
teachers and reading specialists with good intentions may not know
district wide and that there are already various screening assessments
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in use to catch students at risk in various and specific areas. The
scores have held steady for decades as well. What about research on
students’ reading and thinking (2nd ed.), Bader’s (2005) Bader reading
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and language inventory (5th ed.), Burns and Roe’s (2007) Informal
silently by the student being evaluated. Each of the IRIs took a slightly
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students, as well as some sections of the BRLI (Bader, 2005), are
attractive options. Most likely, those who work with middle and
high school students will find the QRI-4 (Leslie & Caldwell, 2006)
and ARA (Woods & Moe, 2007) passages and assessment options
those who work with diverse classrooms that are skills-based and
programs, the IRI-BR (Burns & Roe, 2007) with its appendix of
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they explore one study that put the validity of miscue analysis—insofar
students make the errors they make are still not completely clear, but
the fact that they make errors should be considered. They suggest
interpreted with caution. They encourage the use of error totals for
reading” (McKenna & Picard, 2006). They conclude that teachers and
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reading fluency and finally suggest an updated definition of fluency
speed and prosody, the speed being an indicator that the reading is
supplement its use. Second, they suggest that fast decoding not be
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as a few impromptu questions or a brief discussion about what was just
read. Finally they assert that oral reading fluency is only one measure
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students’ instructional level of reading, which varied greatly from one
although little research has been done in this area. Based on five
separate studies, it was found that there was generally a 70% inter-
findings both for teachers and for evaluating IRIs. They conclude that
despite issues with validity, IRIs are still valuable reading assessment
tools, and should be used in concert with some of the suggestions and
validity.
teachers themselves how useful the testing measures are to them, and
how they use them in their teaching. He suggests that this way of
and the data was processed to show the mean and standard deviation
of each of the responses. I found this article very interesting, and will
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validity, a reading specialist should consider the usefulness of the test
progress are simply not “valid” and there are no “high stakes” portfolio
family portfolios. While the inter-rater reliability for the estimate of the
six goals ranged from a dependability of .47 to .7, the holistic rubric
(Herman et al., 1992; Nunnally, 1978)” (p. 373). Despite the fact that
only the holistic rubric would qualify as acceptably valid under these
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understanding of families” (p. 375). The authors conclude that
not fully fluent in. Sireci, Han, and Wells (2008) provide a complex
evaluate test validity for ELLs in the future, although the evidence
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as the Connecticut Blueprint for Reading Achievement. The authors
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producing high-quality literacy standards if educators are unaware of
There have been those who question the effectiveness of the use
points and with different audiences could arrive at different ends using
the same guidelines, and that they do not help to address student
cannot change biased thinking and behavior. (p. 6)” The article is an
opinion piece, and it seems the author has made an assumption that
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student reading levels. However, his suggestion that the IRA and NCTE
“put some teeth into their declarations against bias in and out of
schools” (p. 7) is a relevant cry in 1995 when schools were only just
earnest.
Bibliography
61(6), 88-89.
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Program Planning, 26(1), 367-377.
230-251.
404-424.
378-380.
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resilience and reading: Building successful readers. The Reading
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