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Assessment in Early Childhood

Assessment in Early Childhood. Welcome. Life is full of “trick” questions. 1: Do they have a 4th of July in England? Yes No 2: How many birthdays does the average man have? 1 66 72. 3: Some months have 31 days; how many have 28? 12 1 6

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Assessment in Early Childhood

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  1. Assessment in Early Childhood Welcome

  2. Life is full of “trick” questions... 1: Do they have a 4th of July in England? Yes No 2: How many birthdays does the average man have? 1 66 72

  3. 3: Some months have 31 days; how many have 28? 12 1 6 4: How many outs are there in an inning? 2 3 6

  4. 5: Is it legal for a man in California to marry his widow's sister? Yes No 6: If there are 3 apples and you take away 2, how many do you have? 1 2 3

  5. 7: A doctor gives you three pills telling you to take one every half hour. How many minutes would the pills last? 60 90 120 8: A farmer has 17 sheep, and all but 9 die. How many are left? 17 8 9

  6. 9: How many animals of each sex did Moses take on the ark? 1000 499 0 10: How many two cent stamps are there in a dozen?
6       9       12

  7. Goals • Understand the purposes of assessment in early childhood • Understand different meanings of the term assessment • Understand the history of tests and measurement in early childhood • Develop an awareness of issue in testing young children

  8. “Assessment is the process of gathering information about children from several forms of evidence, then organizing and interpreting that information.”

  9. Child development • Developmental change in children is rapid. • If the development is not normal, the measurement and evaluation procedures use are important in making decisions regarding appropriate intervention services during infancy and preschool years.

  10. Why assess???? • See what the child has achieved… • Can be used for diagnosis • For intervention if there are developmental delays • To see if there is a need for special services • For research

  11. Assessment Concerns In Early Childhood • Developmental change in young children is rapid • There is a need to assess whether development is progressing normally • Assessment methods must be matched with the level of mental, social, and physical development at each stage

  12. Appropriate Assessment 1. Assessing to promote children’s learning and development 2.Identifying children for health and social services 3. Monitoring trends and evaluating programs and services 4. Assessing academic achievement to hold individual students, teachers, and schools accountable Important!

  13. Assessment "Assessment is the process of observing, recording, and otherwise documenting the work children do and how they do it, as a basis for a variety of educational decisions that affect the child. Assessment is integral to curriculum and instruction." (National Association for the Education of Young Children & National Association of Early Childhood Specialists in State Departments of Education, 1990)

  14. Assessment leaders • Charles Darwin, Stanley Hall and Lawrence Frank were leaders in the study of the child development. • Hall developed extensive methods of studying children • Dewey (Hall’s student) advocated educational reform that affected the development of educational programs for young children.

  15. Standardized Testing In the twentieth century Americans, educators, welcomed the opportunity to use precise measurements to evaluate learning. The tests grew out of the need to sort, select or otherwise make decisions about both children and adults.

  16. Standardized Testing The work of American psychologists made testing a science. • Terman at Stanford University: Stanford–Binet Intelligence Scale – a method of identifying intellectually deficient children for their placement in special education programs • Edward Thorndike designed measures to evaluate achievement in reading, mathematics, spelling, and language ability.

  17. Standardized Testing • Tests grew out of the need to sort, select, or make decisions about both children and adults • Objective tests were developed to determine the level and pace of instruction; and the grouping of students without regard for socioeconomic class

  18. Standardized Testing After World War II: the demand for dependable and technically refined tests grew and, • testing became more centralized which improved the quality of tests and the establishment of standards for test design • giant corporations grew that could assemble the resources to develop, publish, score, and report the test results

  19. Legislation for Young Children The need for measurement strategies and tests to evaluate federal programs led to the improvement of existing tests and the development of new tests to accurately evaluate program success and individual child progress.

  20. Legislation for Young Children • Head Start and the War on Poverty • Public Law (PL) 94–142, the Education for All Handicapped Children Act (renamed the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act—IDEA):

  21. Legislation for Young Children Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) guarantees all children with disabilities • the right to an appropriate education in a free public school • placement in the least restrictive learning environment • the use of nondiscriminatory testing and evaluation of each child

  22. Legislation for Young Children Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) • tests were no longer adequate for children with special needs • classroom teachers had to learn techniques to identify students with disabilities and to determine how to meet their educational needs

  23. Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) IDEA required that: • a team is used to identify and place students with disabilities • the team screens, tests the individual child • the team develops an individual educational plan (IEP) for the individual child

  24. Concerns about testing young children:The least restrictive environment (LRE) • As often as possible the child should be placed with children developing normally, rather than in a segregated classroom for students in special education - MAINSTREAMING • The ability of teachers to meet the needs of students with and without disabilities simultaneously in the same classroom is still debated

  25. Legislation for Young Children PL 99–457. Federal Preschool Program and the Early Intervention Program • Federal Preschool Programs extend the right of children with disabilities to children, ages 3-5 • In participating states Early Intervention Programs must now provide services for all infants and toddlers (birth to age 2) with developmental delays

  26. PL 101–576 Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) • all early childhood programs must be prepared to serve children with special needs • facilities and accommodations for young children, including outdoor play environments, must be designed, constructed, and altered to meet the needs of young children with disabilities.

  27. PL 101–576 Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) • INTEGRATION OR INCLUSION began – all young children learn together with the goal the individual needs of all children will be met.

  28. Individuals with Disabilities Education Improvement Act of 2004 • the NCLB Act of 2001 required that states must test at last 95 percent of their students with disabilities • IDEA required special education students to participate in state tests and states were to report results of those tests to the public • IDEA was aligned with the requirements of NCLB

  29. RTI • Response to Intervention – process involved providing intervention services for students. • Students who did not respond could be referred for special education services. • Students in private schools would be provided services through the public schools with IDEA of 2004

  30. No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 • Integrate scientifically based reading research into comprehensive instruction for young children • Set and monitor adequate yearly progress • Issue annual report cards on school performance and statewide test results • Implement annual, standards-based assessments in reading and math for grades 3 to 8 by 2005–2006 • Assure that all classes are taught by a qualified teacher by 2005–2006 What does each bullet mean? Can you give an example?

  31. No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 • Look at the report card... • What components are connected to NCLB?

  32. No Child Left Behind (NCLB) All states are required to administer tests developed by the state and to set and monitor adequate yearly progress.

  33. Concerns about No Child Left Behind (NCLB) Provisions Children With Special Needs • “Highly qualified teachers must be hired” states can create a state standard of evaluation for special education teachers • States can still use other methods of diagnosing children with learning disabilities • School districts are required to set aside a percentage of their federal funds for services for private school students

  34. Continuing effort to advocate appropriate assessments • Standardized tests and other measures used inappropriately to determine admission, promotion and retention of young children • Fairness of existing tests to evaluate culturally and linguistically diverse children • Early and appropriate assessment for children with disabilities

  35. Concerns about testing young children with cultural and language differences • Appropriate measurement and evaluation strategies that will enhance children’s potential for achievement • The fairness of existing tests for children of diverse backgrounds serves as an indicator of the need for alternative assessment strategies for young children. • How appropriate are tests and assessments in terms of the diversity of these young children? Is there bias?

  36. Concerns about testing young children with disabilities • Assessment should be based on the current understanding of development and better indicate what learning environments will best provide intervention services for the child’s optimal development. • Assessments are based on multiple sources of information that will reflect the child’s capacities and competencies • play-based assessment and • structured tests are a part of an integrated approach

  37. District Designation

  38. Other indicators include:11th grade OGT = 85%Attendance Rate = 93%Graduation Rate = 90%

  39. Components of AYP • Percentage of students who must score proficient or above in reading and math • Percentage of students who must participate in reading and math testing • Percentage of students who must be in attendance and graduate during the school year

  40. 4 Ways to meet AYP • Each subgroup meets or exceeds it’s target • Meeting the “Safe Harbor” provision • Meeting or exceeding the two year average • Meeting the growth measure standard

  41. Alternative Assessment Multidimensional approach that uses may sources of information. Includes work samples, observation results and teaching report forms.

  42. Authentic and Performance Assessment Rather than being narrowly defined as testing, assessment should link curriculum and instruction with program objectives for young children. Authentic and performance assessments are used that benefit the child, parents, and caregivers and teachers.

  43. Authentic Assessments Allows the teacher to observe progress; • have a connection to the real world • emerge from the child’s accomplishments • include the child’s natural interactions with materials or play activity

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