1 / 14

Blending Assessment with Instruction Program (BAIP)

Blending Assessment with Instruction Program (BAIP). BAIP Power Point Presentation Legacy Document 1. Blending Assessment with Instruction Program (BAIP) Implementation: Training Planning Session. Center of Educational Testing and Evaluation University of Kansas July 26, 2007.

jag
Télécharger la présentation

Blending Assessment with Instruction Program (BAIP)

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. Blending Assessment with Instruction Program (BAIP) BAIP Power Point Presentation Legacy Document 1

  2. Blending Assessment with Instruction Program (BAIP)Implementation: Training Planning Session Center of Educational Testing and Evaluation University of Kansas July 26, 2007

  3. The BAIP Vision of CETE The reality…. • The need for instructional support to compliment Kansas Assessments has been a ten year goal of CETE. • Curriculum and assessment standards must be aligned with instruction • Teachers need resources to help them in the alignment process • All students benefit from instruction aligned with curriculum and assessment standards. • Today’s technology enhances the design and distribution of instructional resources for teachers and students.

  4. The BAIP Vision of CETE The future… • BAIP has been designed to fulfill the instructional vision of CETE. • BAIP strengthens the practice of evidence based decision making. • The principles and design of BAIP generalize to other subjects. • BAIP has implications for teacher education • BAIP has implications for parent involvement in instruction. • BAIP represents a major development effort that is in place for the future.

  5. BAIP Development Process

  6. BAIP Includes instructional resources that: • Align curriculum and assessment standards • Enhance teacher knowledge • Are self-contained for teachers • Provide immediate feedback to teachers

  7. We were diligent in systematically creating the lesson and tutorial designs by: • Researching the literature • Reviewing best practices • Engaging Subject Matter Experts (SMEs) • Subjecting prototypes to review • Developing content for prototypes • Testing designs with content

  8. Writer Selection and Training • Schools with record of continued improvement • KNEA recommendations • Experienced content developers • Trained writers in specification of lesson and tutorial designs • Sample lessons and/or tutorials provided • Close monitoring of writing process

  9. Writing Process • Standards/indicators provided • Draft submission required • Internal review of draft • SME detailed content review • Feedback provided in detail • Repeated the process • Only effective writers retained

  10. Technology • Experienced technology staff • Experienced content management staff • Math oriented data entry staff • Graphics reviewed by SMEs • Interface designs aligned with focus on BAIP • Production closely monitored and refined

  11. Evaluation • Alpha testing completed by internal staff • SME review • External review • Pilot testing

  12. Lessons Learned • Elementary teachers are oriented toward math activities rather than teaching concepts • Relating indicators to teaching concepts and applied examples is important to teachers • Writing lessons against a research-based model is difficult but effective • Language of math is not uniform among teachers • Activities are easier to write than teaching concepts • For standards to be understood, the focus must be on teaching concepts • Teachers appreciate the self-contained model • Assessment, subject matter, technology instruction and content management expertise are central to creating BAIP type products • Need for district-wide or building-wide commitment to formative data collection • Pilot test indicates BAIP makes a difference

  13. BAIP Demonstration http://elearndesign.org/baip_site/

  14. John Poggio Co-Director of CETE Phone: 1- 785-864-9605 Email: jpoggio@ku.edu Ed Meyen Co-Director of the eLearning Design Lab Phone: 1-785-864-0675 Email: meyen@ku.edu Diana Greer BAIP Project Coordinator Phone: 1-785-864-0452 Email: dgreer@ku.edu Cheryl Harrod Assistant Director of the eLearning Design Lab Phone: 1-785-864-0760 Email charrod@ku.edu Contacts

More Related