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1 North Carolina National Assessment of Education (NAEP) 2009 LEA Training--Session A December 2008 Iris L. Garner, Ph.D. [email protected] NAEP State Coordinator North Carolina Department of Public Instruction

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North Carolina. National Assessment of Education (NAEP) 2009. LEA Training--Session A December 2008. Iris L. Garner, Ph.D. [email protected] NAEP State Coordinator North Carolina Department of Public Instruction. 1. Did you know…. In 2006, a Blue Catfish weighing - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of North Carolina

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North CarolinaNational Assessment of

Education (NAEP)

2009

LEA Training--Session ADecember 2008

Iris L. Garner, [email protected] State Coordinator

North Carolina Department of Public Instruction

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Did you know…

In 2006, a Blue Catfish weighing 89 lbs. was caught in North Carolina’s Badin Lake by Eric Fincher.

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Did you know…

This year a Blue Marlin weighing 1,228 lbs. 8 oz was caught in North Carolina’s Oregon Inlet by Trey Irvine.

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Did you know…

In 2006, a Blue Catfish weighing 89 lbs. was caught in North Carolina’s Badin Lake by Eric Fincher.

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North Carolina is known…

Vitality

Uniqueness

Resiliency

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1.4 Million

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Session A--Training Objectives:

1) To provide an overview of NAEP

2) To establish the importance and purpose of participation

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NAEP Overview

Training Objective #1

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NAEP Overview

The National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), also known as "the Nation's Report Card," is the only nationally representative and continuing assessment of what America's students know and can do in various subject areas.

NAEP is authorized by Congress and administered by the National Center for Education Statistics in the U.S. Department of Education.

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NAEP Overview Since 1969, assessments have been conducted

periodically in reading, mathematics, science, writing, U.S. history, civics, geography, and the arts.

Starting in 1990, NAEP assessments have also been conducted to give results for participating states. Those that chose to participate received assessment results that report on the performance of students in that state.

North Carolina has participated in the state-level assessments of NAEP since 1990.

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NAEP Overview State-level NAEP: reading, mathematics, science, and writing

Results: national and state level

No individual scores for individual students or schools

Results: are available for subgroups of the population (e.g., race/ethnicity, gender, free/reduced lunch eligibility, etc.)

Reporting components: subject-matter achievement, instructional experiences, and school environment for populations of students

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NAEP Overview

State Public

(Grades 4 & 8)

State Public

(Grades 4 & 8)

NationalPublic & Private

(Grades 4, 8 & 12)

NationalPublic & Private

(Grades 4, 8 & 12) National Public & Private

(9, 13 & 17 yr olds)

National Public & Private

(9, 13 & 17 yr olds)

District -TrialPublic

(Grades 4 & 8)

District -TrialPublic

(Grades 4 & 8)

The National Assessment of Educational ProgressThe National Assessment of Educational Progress

MAINMAIN LONG-TERMLONG-TERM

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NAEP Importance & Participation

Training Objective #2

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NAEP Importance When NC fell behind the nation on the grade 8

reading NAEP assessment in 2005, the state board of education proposed literacy coaches at the middle grades.

This initiative was added to the governor’s budget; we now have literacy coaches in the middle grades at several NC public schools.

Literacy coaches have been in place since the 2006-07 school year.

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NAEP Importance In the 2005-06 school year, the state board of

education increased the standard for proficient on the new edition of the EOG Mathematics assessments.

The following is a quote from the press release:

“The State Board of Education made good on months of discussion regarding the need to raise standards for student performance to more closely align with proficiency standards of the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) and to be more challenging in preparing students for 21st century skills and learning.”

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NAEP Importance

In the 2006-07 school year, the state board of education increased the standard for proficiency on the new edition of the Reading Comprehension EOG assessments.

The Reading Comprehension EOG standards for student performance were also raised.

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NAEP Importance Comparison of Achievement Levels on

the North Carolina EOGs and NAEP

2006-07 School Year

Percent at or Above Each Achievement Level

AssessmentGrade 4Reading

Grade 8Reading

Grade 4Math

Grade 8Math

NC EOGAt or Above

Level III85% 88% 68% 65%

NAEPAt or Above

Proficient29% 28% 41% 34%

NAEPAt or Above

Basic64% 71% 85% 73%

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NAEP Participation

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NAEP Participation "No Child Left Behind" legislation stipulates that

states, districts, and schools within districts that receive Title I funds must participate in NAEP if selected.

Reading and mathematics must be administered every two years in grades 4 and 8.

Schools and students that are selected to participate are kept confidential.

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NAEP Participation

State Board of Education Policy

HSP-A-001 (16 NCAC 6D .0302):

“To ensure adequate representation and generalizability of the data used to develop tests and to conduct evaluation studies, selected LEAs and schools, determined through stratified random samples, shall participate in field testing and other sample testing such as NAEP and other national or international assessments as designated by the department or the State Board of Education.”

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NAEP Participation

"No Child Left Behind" legislation stipulates that states, districts, and schools within districts that receive Title I funds must participate in NAEP if selected.

Reading and mathematics must be administered every two years in grades 4 and 8.

Students and schools that are selected to participate are kept confidential.

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Thank You

The NAEP 2009 Administrations would not be possible without the efforts of each one of you.

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