Spring Hill students receive three tests:
Kansas Assessment
MAP
The goal of the Kansas assessment program is high student
performance on test items derived from the Kansas curricular
standards. Kansas curricular standards have been defined for the
academic areas tested: mathematics, reading, science, social
studies, and writing. It is intended that these standards be
important components of local curriculum, instruction, and staff
development, as well as the focus of state assessment. When local
curriculum goals and objectives, classroom instruction, and staff
development include the Kansas curricular standards, which match
the Kansas state assessments, then "alignment" is
achieved. This alignment is an important part of reaching the goal
of higher student performance. The closer the alignment among all
components, the more likely that student achievement will rise.
Alignment is a process undertaken at the local level.
As part of alignment of standards, curriculum instruction,
staff development, and the state assessment, Spring Hill School
District attends to particular elements of the state assessments,
such as the:
- content and processes a given assessment measures
- item formats, performance assessment format/model, and
rubric criteria
- expectations for what students should know and be able to do
as identified in the Kansas
- curricular standards and the need to incorporate those
expectations into the local curriculum
- instructional methods and classroom activities that support
student achievement of the state and local curriculum
standards
- value of having multiple comparable measures which provide
an enhanced picture of student performance
NWEA Measures of Academic
Progress (MAP) are state-aligned computerized adaptive assessments
that provide accurate, useful information about student
achievement and growth.
NWEA believes in an assessment
that
- Gives a child the chance for
success.
- Students find engaging.
- Respects classroom time.
- Provides useful information.
MAP tests provide highly
accurate results that can be used to
Identify the skills and
concepts individual students have learned.
- Diagnose instructional needs.
- Monitor academic growth over
time.
- Make data-driven decisions at
the classroom, school, and district levels.
- Place new students into
appropriate instructional programs.
The assessment itself is unique
in that it adapts to the student's ability, accurately measuring
what a child knows and needs to learn. In addition, MAP tests
measure academic growth over time, independent of grade level or
age. Most importantly, the results educators receive have
practical application to teaching and learning.
To link to a parent toolkit
provided by NWEA, click on this link:
http://www.NWEA.org/assets/documentLibrary/Parent%20ToolKit1.pdf |