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Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals Exceptional Children Division Policy, Monitoring, and Audit Section

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Page 1: Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals Exceptional Children Division Policy, Monitoring, and Audit Section

Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward

Measurable Annual Goals

Exceptional Children DivisionPolicy, Monitoring, and Audit Section

Page 2: Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals Exceptional Children Division Policy, Monitoring, and Audit Section

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Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals

• How the child’s progress toward meeting each annual goal will be measured.

• Reports on the child’s progress toward meeting each annual goal will be provided concurrent with the issuance of report cards, or more often as determined by the IEP Team. [NC 1503-4.1(3)(i)(ii)]

Example: Student may have two academic goals and one behavioral goal.

IEP Team decides progress on the behavioral goal will be provided every two weeks.

Page 3: Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals Exceptional Children Division Policy, Monitoring, and Audit Section

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• The method used to measure progress must:

1. Measure the skill stated in the annual goal;

2. Yield accurate data regarding that skill;

3. Provide clear evidence of progress (or lack of progress) toward attaining the annual goal;

4. Use language the parent can understand; and

5. Pass the stranger test, i.e. A stranger can pick up the IEP, read the annual goal, read how progress will be measured, and know what to do without asking any questions.

Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals

Page 4: Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals Exceptional Children Division Policy, Monitoring, and Audit Section

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• Jordan will grow six inches in one calendar year.

• Dad• Uses observation to

measure Jordan's progress.• Tells pediatrician Jordan is

on track to meet goal.

Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals

Page 5: Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals Exceptional Children Division Policy, Monitoring, and Audit Section

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• Nathan will grow six inches in one calendar year.

• Dad Uses observation, along with

other tools; Makes mark on wall; Writes the measurement and today's

date on the wall; and Tells pediatrician the exact number

of inches Nathan has grown since the last measurement.

Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals

Page 6: Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals Exceptional Children Division Policy, Monitoring, and Audit Section

Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals

• When well-written evaluation criteria are stated in objective, measurable terms in the annual goals, how progress will be measured flows naturally from the goal statement.

Adapted from the National Dissemination Center for Children with Disabilities (NICHCY)

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Page 7: Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals Exceptional Children Division Policy, Monitoring, and Audit Section

What is in a name? That which we call a roseBy any other name would smell as sweet;

-Juliet to Romeo

William Shakespeare

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Responsiveness to InstructionCurriculum-Based Measurements

Formative Assessment

Page 8: Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals Exceptional Children Division Policy, Monitoring, and Audit Section

Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals

• What is progress monitoring?

Assessing a student's academic and/or behavioral performance, using brief measures, on a frequent basis.

Curriculum-Based Measurement (CBM) is the scientifically validated form of progress monitoring.

Data-Based Instruction in Special Education Douglas Fuchs and Lynn S. Fuchs

Vanderbilt University

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Page 9: Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals Exceptional Children Division Policy, Monitoring, and Audit Section

Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals

• CBM is:

A specific approach to measuring student learning;

Repeated measurements - weekly or monthly - across extended periods of time;

Equivalent forms of the same task;

Reliable and valid;

Easy to administer;

Time efficient; and

Effective - provides functional information.

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Page 10: Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals Exceptional Children Division Policy, Monitoring, and Audit Section

Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals

• CBM is:

Backed by 30 years of sound research.

Evaluates the success of the instruction the child is receiving.

Results in scores easy to understand - no need for interpretation.

For example, the number of words correctly pronounced in a one-minute reading.

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Page 11: Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals Exceptional Children Division Policy, Monitoring, and Audit Section

Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals

• How does progress monitoring work?

Determine student's current level.

Identify goal for learning that will take place over time.

Measure on a regular basis (weekly or monthly).

Compare expected and actual rates of learning.

Adjust teaching based on the measurements in order to meet individual needs of student.

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Page 12: Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals Exceptional Children Division Policy, Monitoring, and Audit Section

Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals

• When progress monitoring is implemented correctly, the benefits are great for everyone involved.

• Some benefits include: Accelerated learning because students are receiving

more appropriate instruction; Informed instructional decisions; Documentation of student progress; More efficient communication with families and other

professionals about students’ progress; and Higher expectations for students by teachers.

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Page 13: Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals Exceptional Children Division Policy, Monitoring, and Audit Section

• Graphs can: Provide clear visual representation of progress over

time. Increase productive communication at IEP meetings. Be used to develop more appropriate goals. Provide solid information to easily share with new

teachers and administrators. Enable students to keep track of their own progress. Result in motivating students to work more diligently

toward their goals.

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Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals

Page 14: Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals Exceptional Children Division Policy, Monitoring, and Audit Section

Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals

• 11/25/11 Baseline: 75 wpm with 95% accuracy• Measurable annual goal:

Given a 2nd grade reading passage, Kara will read 150 wpm with 95% accuracy over five consecutive sessions.

• How progress will be measured: Kara will read orally for one minute each week. The teacher (or other appropriately trained adult) will

observe and document the number of words and errors.

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Page 15: Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals Exceptional Children Division Policy, Monitoring, and Audit Section

• Determine the rate needed for Kara to reach her goal before making the final decision. 75 WPM Baseline

(present level) 150 WPM Goal 27 Number of

instructional weeks left in the school year

• 150 – 75 = 75

• 75 ÷ 27 = 2.78 • To meet the goal,

Kara will need to increase the wpm by 2.78 words each week while maintaining 95% accuracy

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Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals

Page 16: Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals Exceptional Children Division Policy, Monitoring, and Audit Section

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Make instructional change

Goal line

Trend line

Kara: Baseline 75 Goal 15027 instructional weeks left in the school yearNeeds to gain 2.78 wpm each week

Page 17: Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals Exceptional Children Division Policy, Monitoring, and Audit Section

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Goal lineTrend line

May consider raising goal or leaving as is since trend and goal lines are close together and some weeks she has only increased her wpm by 2.0

Kara: Baseline 75 Goal 15027 instructional weeks left in the school yearNeeds to gain 2.78 wpm each week

Page 18: Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals Exceptional Children Division Policy, Monitoring, and Audit Section

Report on Progress 02/03/12

Goal: Given a 2nd grade reading passage, Kara will read 150 wpm with 95% accuracy.

•Good progress.

•Sufficient to meet goal by end of school year.

Report on Progress

02/03/12

Goal: Given a 2nd grade reading passage, Kara will read 150 wpm with 95% accuracy.

•11/25/11: 75 wpm

•02/03/12: 102 wpm

•No regression over winter break! At this rate, she should meet her goal by the end of the school year.

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Meets requirements

Goes beyond dotting the i’s and crossing the t’s. Gives parent objective information

about child’s progress.

Page 19: Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals Exceptional Children Division Policy, Monitoring, and Audit Section

In Summary

• After developing a present level of academic achievement and functional performance that contains information/data used to establish a baseline; and

• After developing a measurable annual goal;

• The IEP Team must determine how progress toward attaining the goal will be measured using an objective, reliable, and valid method of measurement.

Page 20: Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals Exceptional Children Division Policy, Monitoring, and Audit Section

Then teachers

and related services providers

must:

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Measure

on each student's progress toward

attaining his/her annual goals.

Report

Monitor &

Record

Page 21: Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals Exceptional Children Division Policy, Monitoring, and Audit Section

Progress Monitoring is Not Exclusive to RtI

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401K

Housing Market

New Child

Blood Pressure

MLB 2011 Homeruns

Heart Rate

Page 22: Measuring and Reporting Progress Toward Measurable Annual Goals Exceptional Children Division Policy, Monitoring, and Audit Section

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Questions??