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Assessing the Curriculum

Assessing the Curriculum. Gary L. Cates, Ph.D., N.C.S.P. Curriculum. Structured set of learning outcomes or tasks Learning Objectives Should focus on learning of all students Individualized instruction (means flexible process of decision making).

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Assessing the Curriculum

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  1. Assessing the Curriculum Gary L. Cates, Ph.D., N.C.S.P.

  2. Curriculum • Structured set of learning outcomes or tasks • Learning Objectives • Should focus on learning of all students • Individualized instruction (means flexible process of decision making). • Organized by content/skill/cognitive complexity

  3. Curriculum Focus • Facts • S-R • Concepts • Stimulus class with shared characteristics • Rules • Basis for organizing attributes of concepts • If – then; correlation • Strategies • Process of work: How do you arrive at the product

  4. Integrating Curriculum with Instruction • Review related background • Branch into new areas • Provide a framework and provide opportunity to use it. • Write and/or speak about it to others

  5. Assessing the Academic Environment Gary L. Cates, Ph.D., N.C.S.P.

  6. I. Objectives of assessment • Determine how academic environment impacts observed academic problem • Determine degree to which problem is a skill versus performance deficit • Determine instructional, mastery, and frustration levels of instruction • Serve as tool for making instructional decisions

  7. Riky • 8th grade female referred for low mathematics performance • What information do you want/need?

  8. Using RIOT to Develop Hypotheses • Review: (e.g. Student grades/patterns, Work samples) • Interviews • Observation • Test (e.g. formal and informal such as CBA/E, Rubrics, Behavior rating scales/checklists)

  9. Types of Data Collection • Verbal Reports (e.g. interviews) • Rating Scales (e.g. BASC) • Record Review (e.g. Cumulative file, homework – permanent products) • Observation Systems (e.g. BOSS) • Direct Systematic Behavioral Observation (e.g. Interval recording, frequency counts)

  10. Things to keep in mind with regard to teacher interview • You have 20 minutes max • Teachers will story tell • Your goal is to get an operational definition that is observable and measurable.

  11. Specific Questions to Teachers: Behavior Problems • What does the behavior look like? • How often does it occur • What happens immediately before the behavior? • What happens immediately after? • What have you tried so far? • What behavior would you rather see?

  12. Specific Questions to Teachers: Academic Problems • How are instructional assignments presented? • What is expected? • Where is the student currently? • How are opportunities for practice presented? • How is feedback provided? • What has or has not worked?

  13. Instructional Planning Form Student Name_________________ ___ Teacher Name________________ School Year ____________ Goal ___________________________________________________________________________________ 10/03 Adapted from the U of Oregon

  14. Practice Analyzing an ABC Log • See handout • Why do you think the behavior is occurring? • What might you do for an intervention? • What is an acceptable alternative behavior? • How would you monitor progress?

  15. Practice Using A Frequency Count/Rate Measure Log • See Handout • Determine the rate of behavior • Determine Discrepancy Ratio • The average child does this on average 1.8 times per day. • Write a hypothesis: Remember ICEL • Develop a method for hypothesis testing: Remember RIOT

  16. Systematic Direct Behavioral Observations: Interval Recording • Partial Interval Recording: Occurs anytime within interval • Whole Interval Recording: Occurs majority of Interval • Momentary Time Sampling: Within 3 seconds • Duration Recording: How long behavior occurs

  17. Target Child Composite Child

  18. Consider Multiple Domains: ICEL Instruction Curriculum Learner Environment

  19. CURRICULUM • Content of materials • Difficulty level of materials • Sequencing • Organization • Perceived relevance INSTRUCTION • Instructional philosophy • Instructional approach or method(s) • Expectations/objectives • Clarity & organization • Pace • Opportunities for practice • Duration of continuous instruction • Nature & frequency of feedback • Academic engaged time • Classroom Management Content of Domains

  20. ENVIRONMENT • Arrangement of the room • Furniture/equipment • Rules • Management plans • Routines • Expectations • Peer context • Peer (e.g., attention) and family influence (e.g., cultural beliefs) • Task pressure LEARNER • Appropriateness of curriculum and instruction • Perception of learning environment • Academic skills • Social/behavioral skills • Adaptive behavior skills (e.g., self-help, ) • Motivation Organization • Medical Issues

  21. Focus on Changeable Variables • Focus on those variables that we have direct control over, including: • Curriculum • Instruction (e.g., arrangement, response format) • Allotted/Engaged Time • Classroom Environment • Motivational Strategies (individualized) • This does not suggest that other variables are not important, but that we may have less control over some variables in the school environment.

  22. Rating Scales • Academic Competence Evaluation Scales • Academic Performance Rating Scale • They provide additional evidence for or against your hypothesis • They should not be used to make definitive diagnoses • They do not always lend themselves to intervention development.

  23. Permanent Product Review • Look for error patterns • Percent of homework completion • Percent of homework turned in • Type, amount of feedback • Performance related to peers • Consistency in performance

  24. Other Tips • Make a drawing of the classroom and where the child sits • Don’t use your jargon • Listen for what the teacher really wants and figure out how to balance that with what the child needs • Don’t gossip • Don’t give out info in pieces.

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