Tuesday, June 28, 2011
Wednesday, June 22, 2011
Aspirational Measures Reported
So the press included the source of data this time; however, they avoided using the term "extrapolation."
The excerpt says:
"The formula for college readiness comes from an analysis of data from city community colleges, which found that scoring a 75 on the English Regents exam and an 80 on the math Regents roughly predicted that students would get at least a C in college-level courses in the same subjects. Scores below that meant students often had to take remedial classes before they could do college-level work."
They failed to mention that the students were from one cohort year of students graduating from NYC high schools.
I am still waiting for the comparable data from the rest of the state that replicates the NYC findings. Or maybe replicating with another cohort. Or maybe replicating with Integrated Algebra data. Or connecting Regents exams to college placement exam data that are often used to determine which courses students are ready for. I know based our datasets, we were not able to replicate these cutpoints. How about you?
The excerpt says:
"The formula for college readiness comes from an analysis of data from city community colleges, which found that scoring a 75 on the English Regents exam and an 80 on the math Regents roughly predicted that students would get at least a C in college-level courses in the same subjects. Scores below that meant students often had to take remedial classes before they could do college-level work."
They failed to mention that the students were from one cohort year of students graduating from NYC high schools.
I am still waiting for the comparable data from the rest of the state that replicates the NYC findings. Or maybe replicating with another cohort. Or maybe replicating with Integrated Algebra data. Or connecting Regents exams to college placement exam data that are often used to determine which courses students are ready for. I know based our datasets, we were not able to replicate these cutpoints. How about you?
Article regarding Data "Truths"
What do you think? Are these truths self-evident? Have we made progress in our use of data over the past 10 years?
Monday, June 06, 2011
Wednesday, June 01, 2011
Vendor Email Comment(ary)
I just got (again), an email from a vendor. The title of the sales pitch is:
"Prep for the Test: How to Prepare Your Students." I will share some FREE information - how do you prepare students for the test? TEACH THEM! Quality curriculum, instruction, and assessment (that involves student feedback!) will prepare students for more than just the test.
For more information about keys to quality assessment, check out Stiggins' work at www.assessmentinst.com or contact our office!
"Prep for the Test: How to Prepare Your Students." I will share some FREE information - how do you prepare students for the test? TEACH THEM! Quality curriculum, instruction, and assessment (that involves student feedback!) will prepare students for more than just the test.
For more information about keys to quality assessment, check out Stiggins' work at www.assessmentinst.com or contact our office!