The School Principal – Aggregating Student Typical Academic Testing Miscues from Performance Results
Academic testing serves multiple purposes. For the most part, teachers test to learn about and improve their students’ performance. Yet, students continue to struggle with similar areas of a subject and related tasks from grade to grade. While statewide testing focuses on grades 3-8, middle grades 5-8 are the most critical to correct the areas and tasks presenting a continuous struggle.
We are able to identify and aggregate areas and tasks in most subjects which present common challenges for many students coming out of elementary school and entering middle grades. Let’s take English language arts as an example. Aside from test anxiety which should be addressed as a separate challenge, comprehension and writing rest at the center of this subject, and the areas and tasks most challenging as indicated below.
Comprehension & Analysis
- Inferencing and Evidence: Difficulty drawing conclusions or finding specific textual support for answers, especially with complex texts.
- Vocabulary: Complex/unfamiliar language: idioms, vocabulary, and syntax.
- Text Structure/Format: Struggling to identify how a text is organized (e.g., cause/effect, compare/contrast).
- Organizing Thoughts: Thinking in terms of related chunks of content.
- Long Passages: Overwhelmed by the length and detail in reading materials.
- Complex Comprehension: Citing evidence, and inferring.
Writing Skills
- Planning: Skipping the Planning Stage: Using graphic organizers leads to disorganized responses.
- Incomplete, or Rambling Responses: Not using paragraphing to structure and order a response.
- Mechanics: Issues with grammar, punctuation, and language conventions.
- Supportive Writing: Crafting persuasive or analytical responses with strong supporting details.
Teachers tend to be familiar with the area of challenge and related tasks in the subjects they teach; however, students continue to repeat miscues in these areas and related tasks year after year. The issue may reside in the fact that being identified is not the same as correcting them. A good place to begin is to identify examples and share them with students early in a school year with examples and student interactions leading to correctives with rationales. Here is where the power of testing impacts the readiness of learning. Teachers working in subject-grade level teams are able to find examples which may be taken directly from tests.
Students need to acknowledge their areas of challenge and learn how to overcome them. With the assistance of technical support such as EdVistas’ DataMate Assessment and Reporting System, common areas and related tasks may be identified and monitored to record progress throughout a school year.
Those interested in learning more about EdVistas’ DataMate Assessment and Reporting System to support assessment monitoring and reporting may do so by contacting Pete Cooper at 518-925-6021 or pcooper@edvistas.com.
Dr. Bruce H. Crowder is a senior researcher for Educational Vistas, Inc. His work is primarily focused on creating pathways for deeper learning for all students through student performance and a dynamic curriculum replete with strategic teaching. Dr. Crowder may be reached at bcrowder@edvistas.com