1 / 21

Presented by: Laura Hines MCAS-Alt Teacher Consultant October 2012

MCAS Alternate Assessment (MCAS-Alt) Creating Portfolios that Address Access Skills and Early Entry Points. Presented by: Laura Hines MCAS-Alt Teacher Consultant October 2012.

dori
Download Presentation

Presented by: Laura Hines MCAS-Alt Teacher Consultant October 2012

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. MCAS Alternate Assessment(MCAS-Alt)Creating Portfolios that Address Access Skills and Early Entry Points Presented by: Laura Hines MCAS-Alt Teacher Consultant October 2012

  2. “Although a student’s IEP objectives may be the overriding learning focus for that student, providing him or her with the opportunity to practice those objectives in the context of the general classroom and to receive instruction on those objectives in the context of general education activities represents one fundamental way of ensuring that students with significant disabilities do participate in the general curriculum.” Kleinert,H.L. & Kearns, J.F. (2001). Measuring outcomes and supports for students with disabilities. Baltimore: Paul H. Brookes Publishing Co.

  3. IEP as Written “Lee will hold a toothbrush for 2 to 4 seconds.”

  4. Condition, Behavior, and Criteria • Condition: Describes what factors are present for the behavior to occur • Behavior: Clearly explains what the observer will see the student do • Criteria: How observer will know the student successfully performed the task and what is considered mastery for this task.

  5. Example of a goal written as a critical skill: “Given a tool (Condition), Lee will be able to use it functionally for 2 to 4 seconds without dropping it (Behavior) in 50% of sessions observed (Criteria).”

  6. Remember! For Each Strand, Identify: • ONE Skill • ONE Standard

  7. Condition: Behavior: Criteria: When presented with an array of errorless words of phrases… …[Student] will choose word/phrase designed to complete a narrative by activating a switch… …within 30 seconds to indicate “that one.” Identifying an appropriate access skill

  8. Teacher-Scribed Work Sample • For students who do not produce written work • Documentation of a series of trials conducted at the same time • Contains more information than a field data chart • Specifically describes the materials/context of the activity • Indicates the student’s response (accuracy, independence) to each item/trial using his mode of communication • Labeled with name, date, accuracy, independence, other information as needed.

  9. Acceptable Core Set of Evidence • One bar or line graph summarizing • the same data shown on field data chart 1) One field data chart + • One additional • piece of primary evidence (e.g. teacher-scribed work sample) + = core set of evidence

  10. Thinking About Self Evaluation • Student choice-making and evaluation of one’s own work are essential components of the concept of self determination, which is an important predictor of successful postschool outcomes (Wehmeyer& Palmer, 2003; Wehmeyer & Schwartz, 1998) Kleinert,H.L. & Kearns, J.F. (2010). Alternate Assessment for students with Significant Cognitive Disabilities. Baltimore: Paul H. Brookes Publishing Co.

  11. Students Making Choices • Choices of materials, response format, order of events • Choice of partner • Choice of continuing or terminating the activity

  12. Commonly Asked Questions • Can the same access skill be used in more than one strand? • What if the student doesn’t make progress? • Why must access skills be practiced during standards-based (i.e., academic) activities? • Others?

More Related