Monday, March 5, 2012

Test/ Essay item Rationale


Rationale behind the assessments:
Learning Objective 1 states the students will be able to pronounce the letter name by sight of the letter. This learning objective supports the Colorado Standard: Reading, writing, and communicating, standard 2, content 3a, iv; Recognize and name all upper- and lowercase letters of the alphabet (Colorado Department of Education, 2011). The test I have created for learning Objective 1is an auditory completion items test (Kubiszyn & Borich, 2010). Since the objective states that the child is able to pronounce the letter name by sight, this cannot be a strict pencil-and-paper test, but instead is an auditory test. Using the completion of a sentence, gives a clear question to answer for the students; they know what is expected from them for this test  (Kubiszyn & Borich, 2010). Since the prompt is a direct question, “It provides more structure” and is “often more desirable than an incomplete statement”  (Kubiszyn & Borich, 2010, pg 151). Additionally, this is a “good item” according to the text, since there is only one clear answer, the answer can be nothing other than the answer (Kubiszyn & Borich, 2010). Using all of these suggestions, I was able to create a proper completion test item for the learning objective.
Learning Objective 2 states that the students will be able to give the phonemes for the letter. This learning objective supports the Colorado Standard: Reading, writing, and communicating, standard 2, content 3d, i; Demonstrate basic knowledge of letter-sound correspondences by producing the primary or most frequent sound for each letter (Colorado Department of Education, 2011). The test that I created for this learning objective is a multiple-choice test (Kubiszyn & Borich, 2010).  Since the objective states that a student will know the phonemes for each letter, it is important that some of this test is auditory for the phoneme portion. The students will hear the phoneme said aloud, and are to pick the choice of the letter that matches the phoneme. The response options are short, concise, and clear in order to help the students, since they do not include additional unnecessary information (Kubiszyn & Borich, 2010). Also, there can only be one and only one correct answer for each phoneme; a phoneme cannot belong to two different letters (Kubiszyn & Borich, 2010). The multiple choices, the additional answers, the wrong answers, the “distractors”, are all plausible; making sure the students are not given the answer, but clearly make sure they understand the information (Kubiszyn & Borich, 2010, pg 148). Lastly, I picked “three to five options (two to four distractors plus one correct answer) to optimize testing for knowledge rather than encouraging guessing”  (Kubiszyn & Borich, 2010, pg 148). With all of these suggestions, I was able to create multiple-choice items, which will be used to evaluate this objective.
Learning Objective 3 states the students will be able to write the letter, both uppercase and lowercase, appropriately. This learning objective supports the Colorado Standard: Reading, writing, and communicating, standard 3, content 2a, i; Print many upper- and lowercase letters (Colorado Department of Education, 2011). The test that I created for this learning objective is an essay item (Kubiszyn & Borich, 2010). The test will require the “student to organize, integrate, and synthesize knowledge” in a higher level thinking skill (Kubiszyn & Borich, 2010, pg 158). In creating this essay item, I wanted to make sure that the level of thinking I am requiring is at an appropriate level for the kindergarten students. The students are to be creative in writing an essay response, however since they are in kindergarten I felt it was important to provide them some key words. On each of the alphabet cards, there is a picture and the word fully spelled out except a blank in place of the first letter aka the letter they are given; since the objective is to see if the students can write the letter, both upper and lowercase, it is important to give the students cards which do not have the letter on them. These cards will give them key words they may use, however, I did not want to restrict their story, that is why I am only requiring them to use three of these cards in their story (Kubiszyn & Borich, 2010). The benefits for having this an essay item, allow the students to be creative, use their memory, and eliminate guessing (Kubiszyn & Borich, 2010). The disadvantages for this essay is that since the students are in kindergarten the story might not look like a story and they are difficult to score (Kubiszyn & Borich, 2010). The reason I added the second part of this test, is to try to elevate these disadvantages. The students are going to read every single word or their story to a teacher who is dictating it, in order to create this story better (Kubiszyn & Borich, 2010). The words that are used from the picture cards will be underlined, allowing the teacher to clearly see the letters that are being fully evaluated (Kubiszyn & Borich, 2010). Having these provisions in place, allow for the scoring to be more equal for all students (Kubiszyn & Borich, 2010). In addition to these requirements, it is important for a teacher to have a clear rubric to grade each essay on; including the letters, the story, and the words from the cards (Kubiszyn & Borich, 2010). This essay item allows for the proper assessment of this objective, in a creative way.
Learning Objective 4 says that the students will be able to use their phonemic awareness to organize objects based on the starting letter. This learning objective supports the Colorado Standard: Reading, writing, and communicating, standard 1, content 3c; Identify words orally according to shared beginning or ending sounds (Colorado Department of Education, 2011). The test that was created for this learning objective is a matching test. The student must show the use of phonemic awareness as well as to show how it was used. This learning objective is based on the application level of Bloom’s Taxonomy (Kubiszyn & Borich, 2010). The students are to apply their knowledge of phonemic awareness and organize objects based off their phonemes. With either of the tests, the strictly matching (one-to-one), or the matching in columns (multiple in each column), the objective is to assess if a student can use their phoneme skills from saying a word, and associate it with a letter. These tests follow the suggestions of creating matching test items  (Kubiszyn & Borich, 2010). The lists are homogenous, to ensure that they are all plausible choices (animals and food items)  (Kubiszyn & Borich, 2010). The sounds are similar to each other, to make sure the students clearly understand the differences when they are saying it; they are not easy answers (Kubiszyn & Borich, 2010). Lastly, the directions are clear, and state how many times each answer may be used  (Kubiszyn & Borich, 2010). This assessment is a great assessment for this learning objective, since it makes the students use their knowledge in more real-life situations.
With all of these assessments, test items, and essay items that were created for these learning objectives, it is important to understand that the grades, evaluations, and leveling should not be relied solely on this one assessment. It is important to have a variety of assessment types for each objective, to ensure that all the learning, and testing types are covered; allowing all students to perform the best of their abilities  (Kubiszyn & Borich, 2010). The “choice of item format is sometimes determined by your instructional objectives. At other times the advantages and disadvantages of the different formats should influence your choice”  (Kubiszyn & Borich, 2010, pg 155).


References

Colorado Department of Education. (2011, August 11). Unit of academic standards.
Retrieved February 26, 2012, from CDE: improving academic achievement:

Kubiszyn, T., & Borich, G. (2010). Educational testing and measurement: classroom
application and practice (Ninth Edition ed.). Hoboken, New Jersey, US: John
Wiley & Sons, Inc.

Naz, B. A. (2009, July 23). Presentation on instructional objectives. Retrieved
February 26, 2012, from ERIC: http://www.eric.ed.gov/PDFS/ED505999.pdf


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