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NATIONAL STANDARDS

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NATIONAL STANDARDS. “… the most important thing about a child's performance at school is their progress. So even those children who come in, who are not necessarily prepared for school, it's the progress that they're making against the standards that's important. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: NATIONAL STANDARDS

NATIONAL STANDARDS

Page 2: NATIONAL STANDARDS

NATIONAL STANDARDSNATIONAL STANDARDS

“… the most important thing about a child's performance at school is their progress. So even those children who come in, who are not necessarily prepared for school, it's the progress that they're making against the standards that's important.

It's not important where they are at any particular point. What is important is where they've come from and where they are and if they're not making the necessary progress what needs to be done to lift them”.

Anne Tolley, Q&A, 20 September 2009

“Lifting Māori educational achievement will help raise the overall performance of our education system, productivity and the economy. It is the right of every learner to be successful and the education system must deliver on this entitlement”.

Anne Tolley,

Foreword to Ka Hikitia, 2009

Page 3: NATIONAL STANDARDS

NATIONAL STANDARDS

Overview of this session:

1. Understanding the vision

2. Consultation feedback and what’s changed

3. 2010 – actions

4. Support and resources

5. Discussion time

Page 4: NATIONAL STANDARDS

NATIONAL STANDARDS

Page 5: NATIONAL STANDARDS

NATIONAL STANDARDS

Consultation - Issues and Responses

• Reporting needs to focus on value-added

• Need for practical support for assessment and moderation

• Short timeframe for implementation

• Ability of teachers to make consistent judgements

• Potential misinterpretation of data

Page 6: NATIONAL STANDARDS

NATIONAL STANDARDS

Parents, Families & Whānau feedback

• A focus on a well-rounded child • A range of ways of reporting• Plain language and honest reporting • Parents asked for suggestions of how they can provide

practical help at home.

Page 7: NATIONAL STANDARDS

NATIONAL STANDARDS

2010 Actions

• At least 2 written reports to parents, families and whānau a year in plain language on their child’s progress and achievement in relation to the National Standards

• Suggested headings include:

•Student’s current learning goals

•Student’s progress & achievement in relation to the standards

•What the school is doing to support the student’s learning

•What parents, family and whānau can do to support the student’s learning

•Results from assessments undertaken

• Report formats are a school choice

• Set 2011 charter targets

Page 8: NATIONAL STANDARDS

NATIONAL STANDARDS

ERO - Reporting about use of Standards 2010• The quality of teaching and learning within the NZ

Curriculum• Boards’, principals’ and teachers’ understanding of and

preparedness to use the standards

• How current school practices enable: • teachers to use assessment data to provide focused

teaching• judgements about student achievement and rates of

progress• teachers to report accurately to parents, families,

whānau and students• school leaders to benchmark achievement information

for self review, planning and reporting

Page 9: NATIONAL STANDARDS

NATIONAL STANDARDS

Mathematics Standards

• Aligned with the mathematics and statistics learning area of The New Zealand Curriculum

• One standard for each year/age level, comprising expectations under the three mathematics strands

• Level of difficulty is based on the achievement needed for students to be on track for success throughout schooling

Page 10: NATIONAL STANDARDS

NATIONAL STANDARDS

Reading and Writing Standards • The standards are set at desirable and achievable levels

• Writing and reading standards are aligned with the Literacy Learning Progressions

• Improved clarity with some of the illustrations

• English Language Learners (ELL) assessment against the standards

Page 11: NATIONAL STANDARDS

NATIONAL STANDARDS

An educationally sound approach to assessment

Page 12: NATIONAL STANDARDS

NATIONAL STANDARDS

Assessment Strategy and Process

Assessment should:

•Benefit students•Involve students•Support goals•Be suited to the purpose•Be valid and fair

Page 13: NATIONAL STANDARDS

NATIONAL STANDARDS

Overall Teacher Judgements

Gathering evidence & making an overall teacher judgement in relation to the standards is not a separate activity for teaching and learning, but rather a process of drawing on, and applying, the evidence.

Use a ‘best fit’ approach after drawing on multiple sources – not multiple tests. You decide on the assessment programme (mix of assessment information to gather) that best suits your context.

Students should participate in the determination of the overall teacher judgement about their work.

Overall teacher judgements are about progress (growth) and achievement (level).

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NATIONAL STANDARDS

•Effective assessment practice involves moderation.

•Moderation involves teachers in professional discussions about the judgments they are making

•A teacher’s overall judgement can be moderated within schools by teachers working with each other

•Many teachers/school leaders are already familiar with, and using, this type of process.

Moderation.

Page 15: NATIONAL STANDARDS

NATIONAL STANDARDS

Fit for Purpose Tools

•Alignment of assessment tools

•Development of e-asTTle

•Writing Tools

•Assessment Resource Banks

•Refresh and renew exemplars

•Enhancements to SMS and development of ‘assessment modules’

•TKI Assessment Community: tool selector and assessment resources maps

Page 16: NATIONAL STANDARDS

NATIONAL STANDARDS

Self Review Tool

What are our students’ strengths and learning needs?

What are our professionalStrengths andLearning needs?

What has been the impact of our changed actions on students? Engagement in

professional learning

Engagement of students in new learning

Page 17: NATIONAL STANDARDS

NATIONAL STANDARDS

National Standards and English Language Learners

•English Language Learning Progressions (ELLPs) enables teachers and schools to identify starting points for new learners of English, and to track and monitor progress over time.

•Works alongside the Literacy Learning Progressions. Learners will be working towards proficiency in the same reading and writing competencies as all NZ students.

•Progress and achievement of ELLs may be assessed and reported using the ELLP rather than National Standards for specified periods of time.

Page 18: NATIONAL STANDARDS

NATIONAL STANDARDS

Students With Special Needs

The only difference for these students is how progress of students is reported.

These are students who have:

•very significant learning disabilities, and

•are funded through the Ongoing and Reviewable Resourcing Schemes or are receiving Supplementary Learning Support, and

•are likely to learn long term within Level One of the New Zealand Curriculum.

Progress for these students will be assessed against the standards as part of their Individual Education Programme processes.

Boards of trustees will report on these students’ progress separately in their annual reports

Page 19: NATIONAL STANDARDS

NATIONAL STANDARDS

National Standards Support

National Standards Pack - November 2009

Regional facilitated sessions- from November 2009

Web seminars – from 9 November 2009

Online resources include:*General information about National Standards*Assessment *Literacy *Numeracy * Self review tool*Information for parents *Reporting to parents, families and whānau

All principals and lead teachers, teachers and boards will have the opportunity to take part in workshops and seminars. Further support will be tailored to meet your specific needs.

Page 20: NATIONAL STANDARDS

NATIONAL STANDARDS

National Web Conferencing Seminars

Starting 9 November 2009

1 hour session running over 5 weeks (Mon-Thurs)

9am, 12pm, 3.30pm and 7pm

http://www.e-admintraining.co.nz/

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NATIONAL STANDARDS

How will my teacher help me?

How will my parents/ whanau help me?

What do I need to learn next?

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NATIONAL STANDARDS

What now?• Discussion time

• Responses to questions

• Questions can be given now or sent to [email protected]