1 / 48

Understanding Proficiency and IPAs

Understanding Proficiency and IPAs. Ohio Foreign Language Association . Presenter Information. Martha Pero Hudson City Schools perom@hudson.edu. Objectives: You will be able to... . 1) Explain the characteristics of the proficiency levels. 2) Explain the 3 modes of communication.

hanzila
Télécharger la présentation

Understanding Proficiency and IPAs

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Understanding Proficiency and IPAs Ohio Foreign Language Association

  2. Presenter Information Martha Pero Hudson City Schools perom@hudson.edu

  3. Objectives: You will be able to... 1) Explain the characteristics of the proficiency levels. 2) Explain the 3 modes of communication. 3) Explain the use of IPAs for SLOs. 4) Explain the parts of an IPA. 5) Develop an example IPA.

  4. One Stop Shopping for Information http://oflaslo.weebly.com

  5. Performance performance in familiar contexts practiced and rehearsed connected to specific curriculum I. Proficiency Vs. Performance Proficiency • to communicate meaningful information • in spontaneous interaction • understandable to native speakers • does not mean perfection

  6. Proficiency OR Performance? A. Mrs L. is a French teacher who just completed a chapter on food with her French 1 class. She decides to take her students to a local African restaurant as a capstone activity. At the restaurant, students are expected to order their food and provide opinions in the target language (all functions they have rehearsed in class). The students do very well in performing these tasks. B. Suddenly, two African men come to the table and start interacting with her students. Their questions are not necessarily related to food. After the initial shock, Mrs L.'s students start uttering a few words ("Yes", "No", "sometimes") and using simple sentences ("I am 13 years old", "Yes, I like French"), they have a hard time understanding the native speakers.

  7. II. Proficiency Levels What are the proficiency levels? Novice Advanced Intermediate Superior

  8. Proficiency Levels

  9. Proficiency Levels for SLOs Level 1: Novice-mid Level 2: Novice-high Level 3: Intermediate-low Level 4: Intermediate-Mid Level 5: Intermediate-High AP: Advanced-Low

  10. Proficiency Levels Defined

  11. Proficiency Sublevels LOW a baseline performance for the level; sustained but skeletal for the level; “Just hanging on” MID solid performance for level; quantity/quality for the level; may have some features of the next level HIGH sustained performance close to the next major level

  12. Examples Determine why the speakers are Novice and Intermediate Novice Intermediate

  13. Further Proficiency Descriptions http://actflproficiencyguidelines2012.org/ http://www.actfl.org/sites/default/files/pdfs/PerformanceDescriptorsLanguageLearners.pdf

  14. Proficiency Sublevel Differences • Differences between low and mid is the quantity and quality with the same function • Differences between mid and high is not being able to sustain criteria for the next level

  15. Peaks and Lows of Proficiency • Students might spike into the next proficiency level • They are unable to sustain it and return to the lower proficiency level

  16. III. The Modes of Communication Interpersonal Interpretive Presentational

  17. Interpersonal Communication 1) Interpersonal communication is... 2) Interpersonal communication is NOT...

  18. Interpretive Communication 1) Interpretive communication is... 2) Interpretive communication is NOT...

  19. Presentational Communication 1) Presentational communication is... 2) Presentational communication is NOT...

  20. IV. IPAs Explained Integrated Performance Assessment

  21. Why IPA? • Proficiency based (new Ohio Standards are proficiency based, too!) • SLO guidelines do not allow the use of multiple choice tests • Approved by the Ohio Department of Education

  22. Characteristics of IPA Authentic Performance-based Based on three modes of communication Integrated Show developmental progress of proficiency Blend with classroom instruction/experiences

  23. V. Where IPAs Fit In

  24. Steps to write an IPA 1) Language function to be targeted 2) Decide interpretive task* 3) Decide presentational task* 4) Decide interpersonal task* *Do NOT have to be in this order

  25. PROFICIENCY Rubrics for IPAs http://oflaslo.weebly.com/proficiency-rubrics.html#.UecsA2Q9Cng

  26. VI. Examples of IPAs http://oflaslo.weebly.com/integrated-performance-assessment-ipa-center.html#.Uecsj2Q9Cng Spanish 2: http://www.weebly.com/uploads/1/9/5/2/19527349/spanish_ii__ipa_food-gazpacho.docx French 1: http://www.weebly.com/uploads/1/9/5/2/19527349/fr1b_c6_ipa.docx

  27. Selected Thematic Focus: Family Language Level of Students: Novice-Mid Essential Question: Can you describe your family? Elements to explore within the thematic focus: Function: Describe your family. Text type: Lists isolated sentences.

  28. Selected Thematic Focus: Family Task: You are participating in an exchange program with a student from country X. To get to know them before you visit them and they visit you, you exchange letters. You and your classmates have received your letters (with their pictures!) today in your language class.

  29. Selected Thematic Focus: Family 1) Interpretive: Students receive a letter, with a picture, from a host family. They need to answer questions about the host family. 2) Interpersonal: Students, in groups, compare and contrast their host family pictures. 3) Presentational: Respond to your host family's letter to describe your family.

  30. VII. Let's Create an IPA! Using the template, create an IPA with your partner/group. Be prepared to share your ideas at the end of the work time!

  31. IPA format

  32. Final thought... How do IPAs, proficiency, etc., transform how we think about language instruction?

  33. Works Cited ACTFL PERFORMANCE DESCRIPTORS FOR LANGUAGE LEARNERS. Alexandria, VA: American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages, 2012. Print. "ACTFL Proficiency Guidelines." ACTFL Proficiency Guidelines. N.p., n.d. Web. 18 July 2013. Bleicher, Arnold. "Assessing Performance to Demonstrate Growth." ACTFL Workshop. Dublin Scioto High School, Dublin. 15 July 2013. Lecture. Pero, Martha, and Cecile Laine. "WELCOME TO THE OFLA ONE-STOP SHOP FOR ALL YOUR STUDENT LEARNING OBJECTIVES NEEDS! - Home."WELCOME TO THE OFLA ONE-STOP SHOP FOR ALL YOUR STUDENT LEARNING OBJECTIVES NEEDS! N.p., n.d. Web. 18 July 2013. Sandrock, Paul. Through World Languages: Developing Literacy through Language Learning. N.p.: American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages, n.d. PDF. Sandrock, Paul. The Keys to Assessing Language Performance: A Teacher's Manual for Measuring Student Progress. Alexandria, VA: American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages, 2010. Print. Swender, Dr. Elvira. "ACTFL Proficiency Levels in the Work World." Proc. of CIBER 2012 Conference, Chapel Hill, North Carolina. N.p.: n.p., n.d. 5-16. Print.

More Related