PART TWO: Assessment & Instruction Flashcards

Chapters 3 - 7 of Diaz-Rios textbook

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1
Q

process of instruction

A
  1. aligning curriculum with grade-level standards and students’ assessed levels (curriculum calibration)
  2. using grade-level formative (in-process) and summative (final) assessments to improve student achievement
  3. applying effective instructional strategies to ensure student mastery of standards taught
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2
Q

best practice: backwards planning

A

teacher picks 2 ELD standards to address, uses these to create 3 objectives. Students work in intermediate (create a list) and advanced (create a matrix chart) groups, then quiz other groups at the same level using the materials they created. Formative assessment is teacher circulating to help groups, summative is a quiz

p. 96-97

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3
Q

three need-based groups

A
  1. benchmark, may be experiencing minor difficulties
  2. strategic, test results show slightly below the mean
  3. intensive, extremely and chronically low performance in one or more measures
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4
Q

reclassification process (California)

A
  1. CELDT score
  2. teacher evaluation based on report cards or another measure used by district
  3. consultation w/parent or guardian
  4. performance in basic kilss as measured by California English Language Arts Standards Test (CELAST?)
    p. 98
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5
Q

issues of fairness in testing ELLs

A

Test anxiety, time limits, problematic test content, validity, reliability, practicality

p. 99

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6
Q

best practices: in testing

A

Does the assessment match what has been taught?
Do conditions for assessment resemble those of instruction?
Does assessment build on experience of students? Is it relevant to their lives, and can it be matched to developmental level?
Is the atmosphere positive, avoiding distractions?

p. 100

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7
Q

formative assessment

A

takes place during instruction. Ranges from informal verbal feedback to preliminary scoring. May also include self-assessment and peer assessment.

p. 101

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8
Q

summative assessment

A

occurs at the end point and provides basis for a final letter grade

p. 101

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9
Q

best practice: performance assessment

A
  • contains materials similar to that found in real books, rather than reproduced paragraphs written with a controlled vocabulary
  • administered by a concerned adult who is usually present to help
  • be observational and interactional, valid and reliable, and available for comparison and reporting purposes
  • offer a picture of students reading strengths and weaknesses
  • be motivating and fun so students by taking it would be encouraged to read more
    p. 101
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10
Q

best practice: anecdotal observations

A

teacher keeps sticky notes in pocket, jots notes while circulating in classroom, saves notes in folder, shares sheet of photocopied notes at conferences

p. 104

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11
Q

best practice: developing a scoring rubric

A
  1. identify desired results - what students should know and be able to do at end of lesson
  2. what is considered to be acceptable evidence - what performance task will the student do
  3. what are the criteria for judging - point values connected to each aspect of the work
  4. if time permits, show examples to help students visualize grading criteria
  5. students can check their work against the criteria in a formative way before final grading, which enables “transparent” assessment which keeps students informed of their progress
    p. 104
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12
Q

best practice: grading and assessment plan

A
  • ensure school or school district has a fair policy for grading ELs that everyone follows
  • grade a combo of process and product for all students
  • early in class, explain to students what and how you grade, and show examples
  • use rubrics
  • involve students in developing criteria for evaluating assignments
  • use a variety of products to assess
  • adapt tests and test administration (i.e. allow more time, read the test aloud)
  • teach test-taking skills and strategies
  • grade beginning ELs as at/above/below expectations until end of year, then assign a letter grade for the year
  • put a note on report card to identify student as an EL and write comments to clarify how student was graded
    p. 106
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13
Q

scaffolding assessments

A

building a temp structure to support instruction that is remove once learning takes place

e. g. test questions with key terms underlined, divided into subsections, or with direct references to prior knowledge
p. 109

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14
Q

adapting listening tasks

A

before, during, and after listening - list on p. 112

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15
Q

adapting reading tasks

A

before, during, and after reading - list on p. 113

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16
Q

adapting writing tasks

A

Writing is used for 2 main purposes: to capture and demonstrate content knowledge and to express creativity. In general, teachers of students with special needs in inclusive settings change response mode to oral when appropriate.

p. 113

17
Q

developmental bilingual programs

A

designed for ESL students, goals are maintenance and full development of primary language, full proficiency in English, grade-appropriate achievement in all academic domains, integration into EO classrooms, positive identification with culture of both language groups

p. 126

18
Q

additive bilingualism

A

academic & language instruction in 2 languages so students can become proficient in both

p. 131

19
Q

newcomer (front-loaded) English

A

foster rapid English learning during period of early acculturation - more common at secondary level. Only ELD is offered on intensive basis, limited access to core curriculum

p. 136, p. 137

20
Q

bridging

A

linking concepts and skills to student experiences or eliciting/using examples from student’s lives

p. 143

21
Q

schema building

A

using scaffolding strategies to link new learning to old

p. 143

22
Q

contextualization

A

strategies that augment speech and/or text through pictures, realia, dramatizations, etc.

p. 143

23
Q

cycle of instruction

A
Observe students to set objectives
Plan lesson
Deliver content
Conduct a summative assessment
Reflect

p. 151

24
Q

lesson objectives

A

content objective: knowledge or skill in a subject area

language-development objective: knowledge or skill in some facet of English

learning-strategy objective: knowledge, skill, or learning strategy that teaches student how to acquire or process info

p. 153

25
Q

CALLA

A

cognitive academic language learning approach

Developed by Chamot for English learners at early intermediate to advanced levels. Contains content, language-development, and learning-strategy objectives.

p. 158-9

26
Q

metacognitive learning strategies

A

helps students plan, monitor, and evaluate their learning processes

p. 159

27
Q

cognitive learning strategies

A

include using reference materials resourcefully, taking effective notes, summarizing material adequately, applying rules of inference, etc.

p. 160

28
Q

social-affective learning strategies

A

elicit needed clarification, work cooperatively with peers in problem solving, use mental techniques to reduce anxiety and increase sense of personal competency

p. 160

29
Q

guidelines for cooperative learning

A
positive interdependence
face-to-face interactions
individual accountability
social skills training
group processing (reflection)

p. 162

30
Q

components of CALP

A
communication
conceptualization (concepts become abstract and fit into larger theories, i.e. rain becomes precipitation cycle)
critical thinking
context
culture

p. 173

31
Q

types of graphic organizers

A

representative/explanatory (includes sequential, Venn, t-chart)

generative (includes mind map, KWL)

evaluative (includes grade scale, rubric)

p. 178

32
Q

cognitive apprentice model

A

Teachers model how to enjoy reading - why they like certain genres, why a certain turn of phrase is delightful, why a plot is compelling, etc. Students become apprentices to the teachers’ thinking about literature.

p. 198

33
Q

oracy

A

learning to speak and listen

p. 211

34
Q

restrictive correcting

A

focus on only a few types of errors at one time

p. 266