What do PARCC and Smarter Balanced offer in addition to their year-end tests? If you gave teachers across the country a pop quiz on that question, you鈥檇 probably get a lot of bewildered looks.
Many educators don鈥檛 know about the teaching tools that those two groups of states built as part of their projects to design end-of-year assessments for the Common Core State Standards. But when the U.S. Department of Education awarded the consortia $360 million five years ago, it sought more than summative assessments in English/language arts and math. It demanded 鈥渟ystems鈥 of assessment that allowed teachers to gauge student learning in real time and adjust instruction accordingly.
In response, the Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers and the Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium created online libraries of instructional tools for teachers to use. They include sample lessons, instructional videos, grading rubrics, and interim tests. Smarter Balanced鈥檚 resources made their debut last October, but word is still spreading about their availability. PARCC needed another year to finish its nonsummative resources. It anticipates releasing them this fall.
Bernadette Maes, a New Mexico reading coach who helped develop PARCC instructional tasks for grades K-2, said that teachers who piloted the tasks often found that they brought the abstract academic standards to life.
鈥淭he kinds of big 鈥榓-ha!鈥 moments that we heard a lot were, 鈥極h, so 迟丑补迟鈥檚 what the standard says!鈥 or, 鈥楽o 迟丑补迟鈥檚 what it means for a student to write at that grade level!鈥 鈥 she said. 鈥淚t gave them clarity about what they needed to do in the classroom.鈥 (See a comparison of different assessment types.)
For teachers, formative-assessment tools are far more important than summative tests because they offer real-time insight into students鈥 understanding, said Marianne Perie, the director of the Center for Educational Testing and Evaluation at the University of Kansas, which researches and builds state testing systems.
But in the past, teachers have had to contend with fragmented assessment systems, since states typically hired one vendor to build a summative test, and their districts bought interim tests from another, then perhaps hired other experts to build formative tasks, she said. The adoption of the common core by 40-plus states, and the development of a suite of tests and tools to match, opens up better-aligned options, Perie said.
Access to Assessment Content
That promise, however, isn鈥檛 available to all states, despite the urging of the federal Education Department.
In its original notice inviting applications in 2010, the department said that 鈥渁ssessment content鈥 developed with federal grants should be 鈥渨idely available, including to states that are not part of consortia.鈥 The agency clarified in 2013 that PARCC and Smarter Balanced 鈥渕ay consider charging a reasonable amount鈥 to cover the costs they incur to make materials available.
That isn鈥檛 happening this school year, however, since both PARCC and Smarter Balanced are restricting access to member states. PARCC officials said PARCC is working out a price for nonconsortium states that want to use its online resources in 2016-17, but Smarter Balanced officials said they have no plans to extend access to nonmembers.
For this academic year, PARCC鈥檚 11 members get both the summative tests and the instructional resources, including formative-assessment activities, for one price. Smarter Balanced uses a tiered-price structure. Two of its 18 members paid for the summative assessments only in 2014-15. The other 16 are paying $3.35 more per student to get the online instructional resources as well.
Formative Assessment Resources
The Smarter Balanced digital library is stocked with more than 2,600 resources and is still growing. Instructional videos, lesson and unit plans, and other tools have been submitted by teachers who have found them useful in their own practice or they are resources that teachers have created themselves. The collection has been curated by the consortium鈥檚 content experts. About 5 percent of the resources were commissioned by outside organizations, such as Amplify, which built interactive modules for the digital library, and Arizona State University, which designed modules for teachers who work with students who have disabilities.
Below are links to two interactive modules from Smarter Balanced鈥檚 digital library. Click on each image to interact with the modules.
This module is designed to help 8th grade teachers teach the Pythagorean theorem:
This module shows kindergarten teachers how to help students clarify their own learning goals:
SOURCE: Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium
When educators sign in to the Smarter Balanced portal, they see a thumbnail display of some highlighted resources, each with a brief summary. Some have green checkmarks, connoting high user ratings. Teachers can search the library by grade level, subject, the standards they鈥檇 like to cover, or by the highest-rated or most-viewed tools. Like shoppers who post product reviews on Amazon, teachers can read their colleagues鈥 reviews of the videos and lesson plans and post their own.
Some resources have a broad focus, such as a module that details strategies for teaching speaking and listening skills, or one that helps teachers understand how to use various types of assessments. Others zero in on 鈥渟maller grained stuff,鈥 such as guidelines for grading 3rd grade narrative writing, said Chrys V. Mursky, Smarter Balanced鈥檚 director of instructional supports.
One animated instructional module shows an 8th grade math teacher leading a discussion about the Pythagorean theorem. She sees from her students鈥 work that they don鈥檛 fully grasp how irrational numbers can be used to express the lengths of triangles鈥 sides. The segment follows her as she pinpoints this misunderstanding and facilitates a discussion among the students to help bring light to the idea.
The 10-minute module was designed to show how a teacher can identify and act on evidence of students鈥 learning, a key principle of formative assessment.
Teachers also have access to online discussion forums, where they can share their experiences with the resources. There are also two kinds of interim tests they can use: one 迟丑补迟鈥檚 meant to mirror the year-end summative test, and shorter 鈥渂lock鈥 interims that focus on specific ideas or clusters of standards.
The formative resources aren鈥檛 intended for use as summative-test preparation, Mursky said. They鈥檙e meant to help educators 鈥済enerate questions鈥 about students and where they are in their learning.
鈥淎 lot of people think of formative assessment as a thing, an event,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey use the term 鈥榝ormative鈥 because it鈥檚 associated with the classroom, as opposed to an end-of-year, large-scale test. We work really hard to make sure people understand that 迟丑补迟鈥檚 not what we鈥檙e talking about. We鈥檙e talking about the instructional process.鈥
PARCC鈥檚 Formative Assessment Portal
PARCC members will be able to access its online resources through a portal called the Partnership Resource Center. In the center, teachers will be able to use a bank of released test questions to build interim assessments. They鈥檒l also have access to diagnostic assessments for students in grades 2-8, formative tasks for K-2 students, and modules designed to help them teach speaking and listening skills in grades K-12.
One formative-assessment module guides kindergarten teachers through a read-aloud exercise. It supplies the storybook, Mouse Count, and offers examples of the kinds of questions teachers can ask to probe pupils鈥 comprehension and foundational skills in the counting fable about mice who escape a wily snake. The module includes ideas for writing exercises, and samples of student work, annotated to help teachers evaluate their students鈥 progress.
The accompanying checklists and rubrics are 鈥渇ocused on descriptive feedback, rather than on grading,鈥 said Bonnie Hain, PARCC鈥檚 director of English/language arts. 鈥淭he focus isn鈥檛 on how can I give this student a grade. It鈥檚 on capturing where the student is in their learning toward a particular standard, and shaping future instruction, and the feedback I can give students and parents to help students progress in their next steps.鈥
Another tool in the PARCC library will be a bank of released test questions. Teachers can assemble those into interim tests or use them formatively in classroom work, said Doug Sovde, the consortium鈥檚 math director.
PARCC鈥檚 online resources are curated by content experts from PARCC states. Many were crafted by companies or organizations with the help of teachers. Pearson, for instance, designed the diagnostic assessments for grades 2-8, while the Council for Aid to Education created the speaking and listening tools, Sovde said.
The consortium originally planned to produce 12th grade 鈥渂ridge courses鈥 to help 11th graders bolster skills before their senior year, as well as model instructional units. But a tight timeline and budget made that impossible, Sovde said. The consortium will crowdsource those tools instead, he said.
Midcourse Adjustments
How widely the PARCC and Smarter Balanced instructional resources will be used is an open question. Several educators said that rising antipathy toward testing could influence how teachers see the consortia鈥檚 teaching tools.
鈥淢y teachers don鈥檛 view state tests as a positive instructional experience, so I鈥檓 not sure that any formative tools associated with them would be their first choice innately,鈥 said Eric Conti, the superintendent of schools in Burlington, Mass., which, like other districts in the Bay State, had the choice of administering either PARCC or the state鈥檚 previous test, the Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System, or MCAS.
Conti is spreading the word among his teachers about PARCC鈥檚 instructional resources and says they鈥檒l be the judge of their quality and utility. But he said that his staff has 鈥渁lready invested decades of effort鈥 to build their own formative resources linked to the district鈥檚 curriculum, so he doesn鈥檛 foresee a huge uptake on PARCC鈥檚 offerings.
Stephanie Cotterill, a West Virginia English/language arts teacher who helped develop tools for Smarter Balanced, said she recommends them to colleagues at Wildwood Middle School in Shenandoah Junction.
鈥淚 know the rigor that goes into those materials before they get in there,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey [her colleagues] don鈥檛 accept things that aren鈥檛 well thought out and developed.鈥