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Informal GAA Information Session August 2010

Informal GAA Information Session August 2010. Celebrations from 2009-2010 What do the scores mean? GAA scores in Goalview Cautions from 2009-2010 Differences from last year GAA 101 How is HS ACCESS instruction different now Resources. Celebrations. 524 portfolios. Celebrations.

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Informal GAA Information Session August 2010

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  1. Informal GAA Information SessionAugust 2010

  2. Celebrations from 2009-2010 • What do the scores mean? • GAA scores in Goalview • Cautions from 2009-2010 • Differences from last year • GAA 101 • How is HS ACCESS instruction different now • Resources

  3. Celebrations • 524 portfolios

  4. Celebrations • 93% Passing rate • Only 8 portfolios failed because of generalization • Only 20 portfolios failed all 4 areas.

  5. Reading Score Reports

  6. Cautions from last year • Be sure activity aligns to standard & element • Only 1 characteristic of science • Distinct window between collections • 4 distinct instructional activities • 3-5 photos on 2 page – not 1 photo on a page • Only 4 pieces of evidence – nothing extra • Not teaching materials • NO SHEET PROTECTORS • Don’t staple – makes it hard to read/score

  7. Changes for 2010-2011 • 1 & 2nd – no GAA portfolio but must do Brigance (HELP for SID/PID) and put scores in Goalview • HS has 8 standards instead of 6 • students must PASS all 8 sections. • 2 retake opportunities in 2011-2012 (Fall & Spring) • Students must pass GAA to go to Transition Academy • Forms are tweaked • Cobb will require annotation form this year

  8. High School ACCESS Courses & GAA • ACCESS courses are intended to be integrated instruction rather than isolated classes. • Cannot meet 8 standards before winter break unless instruction is integrated across curriculum • Expectation on timeline is evidence to be collected before winter break

  9. Language! is required for all MID classes

  10. GAA Score must be in Goalview • It is the current case manager’s responsibility to put last year’s GAA scores into Goalview. • 1st & 2nd grade HELP & Brigance scores need to be put in Goalview by next IEP or Feb. 17th – whichever comes first.

  11. Georgia Alternate AssessmentIntroduction for New Teachers Fall 2010-2011 Amended from presentation on www.gadoe.org/ci_testing.aspx?PageReq=CI_TESTING_GAA

  12. We don’t teach GAA….. GAA is evidence of appropriate instruction • No “GAA” time on schedule or lesson plan • GAA evidence should come out of instruction aligned to GPS & IEP • No “GAA” days • No GAA planning time on lesson plan or schedule • Do not tell parents that daily instruction, homework, or planned events cannot be accomplished because of GAA. • If you are working on gathering GAA evidence for 1 student, be sure other students are actively engaged in appropriate instructional activities.

  13. GAA Window • Sept 7th Collection window opens • Oct. 6 -Oct. 13 GAA Accountability Review • November 5, 2010 1st Collection Completed continue gathering evidence for 2nd Collection • December 1 -Dec. 7 GAA Accountability Review • February 11, 2011 Evidence collection completed **Brigance and HELP scores must be in Goalview by Feb 11 or the IEP whichever comes first. • NOTE – All evidence should be collected prior to the winter break to allow time to complete portfolios.

  14. Overview of the GAA The GAA is a portfolio of student work provided as evidence that a student is making progress toward grade-level academic standards, oftenat a pre-requisite or entry level. Why do we have to do GAA? Teacher accountability • Evidence provided must show student work that is aligned to specific grade-level standards, adapted to meet the student’s cognitive, communication, physical and/or sensory impairments. • The Georgia Alternate Assessment meets NCLB and IDEA mandates. It’s the law!

  15. 2010-2011 GAA Blueprint The Blueprint outlines the requirements of the GAA. The Blueprint identifies the curriculum standards that are required and eligible for assessment on the GAA. The Blueprint, by grade, can be found in Appendix D of the GAA Examiner’s Manual, 2010-2011. Page 151

  16. Portfolio Components(p 151-158) Grades K*, 3-8 (GKIDS is recommended option) ELA – 2 entries Math – 2 entries Science – 1 entry (3-8 only) Social Studies – 1 entry (3-8 only) *Please note: if local districts mandate an assessment for grades 1 and 2, an alternate assessment must be provided for students with significant cognitive disabilities. In Cobb - grades 1 & 2 must complete Brigance and record scores in Goalview under current functioning. (SID/PID will complete H.E.L.P.)

  17. Portfolio Components -Grade 11(p 159) • ELA – 2 entries Reading and American Literature* *may use any high school literature Communication - Writing or Listening/Speaking/Viewing • Math – 2 entries Math I - Algebra, Geometry, Data Analysis Math II - Algebra, Geometry, Data Analysis • Science – 2 entries Biology Physical Science • Social Studies – 2 entries US History Economics

  18. The Anatomy of a GAA Entry Primary Evidence Collection Period 1 Initial/Baseline Secondary Evidence Entry 14 calendar days Primary Evidence Collection Period 2 Progress Secondary Evidence Note: There must be 14 days between Primary Evidence in CP1 and Primary Evidence in CP2. There must be two distinct collection periods; CP1 must be completed before CP2 begins.

  19. High School

  20. Collection Periods For each entry, there are two collection periods. Collection Period 1 shows the student’s initial skill. BASELINE/PRETEST – BEFORE INSTRUCTION Collection Period 2 shows the student’s progress. For each collection period, there must be two pieces of evidence: Primary Evidence and Secondary Evidence. Therefore, there are 4 pieces of evidence in each entry.

  21. All Collection Period 1 tasks must be completed before Collection Period 2 tasks are begun.

  22. Types of Evidence • Primary Evidence Showcase student • Demonstrates knowledge/skills by showing the student’s engagement in instructional tasks • Secondary Evidence Supports Primary • Reports knowledge/skills by documenting, charting, or interpreting the student’s performance

  23. Choosing the Standard and Element for Assessment Choosing the type of evidence to best showcase the student’s skill MUST SHOW PROGRESS – Choose to show progress

  24. Effective Evidence Documentation • The following information must be documented somewhere within the entry for each piece of evidence: • the student's name (Who) and date (When) • description of task–documented on Entry Sheet (What) • the setting in which the task was completed (Where) • specific evaluation of student response (How Well) • interactions that occurred during the task (With Whom) • Independence–type and frequency of prompting (Prompts)

  25. Annotating Evidence Who: the student’s name must be on each piece of evidence always refer to the student by name, not “the student” or “students” What: specific description of the task what was the student asked to do? do not be vague or overly general in the description Where: setting in which the task was completed must be purposeful for the particular task

  26. Annotating Evidence When: date each piece of evidence record the date on which the task was completed, even if the task took multiple days to complete for Data Sheets, a minimum of 3 distinct dates are required for scoring How Well: evaluate the student’s performance document the questions or actions asked of the student and his/her actual responses grade, score, evaluate, or provide an answer key so that the student’s performance can be clearly determined

  27. Annotating Evidence With Whom: describe the interaction with whom did the student interact during the task and what was the nature of the interaction reciprocal communication should be specifically documented Prompts: Level of Independence prompting should be documented only if it guides the student to the correct answer (e.g., directions and encouragement are not considered prompting) annotate both the type (e.g., physical, gestural, model, verbal) and frequency (e.g., continuous, frequent, limited, independent) of prompting provided

  28. Now what do I do? Where do I start? PLAN PLAN PLAN

  29. Keys to Success with GAA

  30. Resources forEffective Classroom Instructon

  31. DATA, DATA, DATA • IEPs should be data driven • IEPs do not address standards • IEPs should address the functional skills that would prevent student from access general curriculum • Data should be clear to a total stranger • IEP objectives need to be easily measureable.

  32. Cobb Curriculum Guide for Students with Significant Cognitive Disability • Addressing GPS from Day 1 until last day of school • Has been given to administrators as expectations for curriculum access • Will provide instruction that will meet GAA • Not optional • Can be adjusted

  33. DOE Testing Info • http://www.gadoe.org/ci_testing.aspx?PageReq=CI_TESTING_GAA

  34. DOE Electronic Resource Board • http://admin.doe.k12.ga.us/gadoe/sla/agps.nsf

  35. Cobb Support Blog • http://www.pickettsmill.typepad.com/pritchard

  36. Cobb School DistrictTesting Site • http://support.cobbk12.org/SSSpecialEducation/gaa/gaa.htm

  37. Information on GPS • www.georgiastandards.org

  38. Cobb Virtual Library • http://cvl.cobbk12.org/

  39. Boardmaker Share • www.boardmakershare.com requires password

  40. Activity Exchange for Classroom Suite • www.intellitools.com requires password

  41. Local Support • AT staff • ID Trainers • Local educators • Peers in other schools • Focus groups • IF you need help – you have to ask • document

  42. Teacher Focus Groups • HS/MS meeting • Aug. 31st in the Media Center PL training MJM • Elementary • Oct. 4th - TBA

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