Our district uses a writing portfolio as a final assessment rather then the traditional pen and paper test for our 8th grade students. We have been using this form of assessment for several years. It is a document that continues to evolve. While we are happy with the way this document assesses our students' writing ability, we are not quite sure it assesses their work in reading or using reading strategies. Does anyone have any suggestions?
When I taught in a middle school in the city, we were developing a writing portfolio form of assessment. It was a tough go, because we had just made a major jump into using rubrics for assessing writing and then wanted to use that as a way to assess their overall progress through the year. We used the citywide or state test as a basis for the reading assessment. That alone was the contributing factor to student success in reading. If they scored a one or a two, then running records were required to determine their placement in summer school or not.
I wonder if the district feels that the continual "record" of reading ability from the state assessments fills this void.
I didn't really answer your question very well....but...
That was the main focus. Before the state exams went 3-8, the city tested reading with citywide mulitple choice exams. This was considered the definitive reading assessment for the 3, 5, 6, and 7th graders. The writing portfolio was used to supplement an ELA grade and overall scope for those years that were lacking a writing part of the test.
Don't miss our Classroom 2.0 live Web meetings. A schedule is on our wiki. From "Web 2.0 for Beginners" to our weekly "Web 2.0 Review" and our special guest sessions, there's something for everyone. Want to start your own show? Email steve@hargadon.com.
Translate This Network
Click on flag to open new window in your language. For different language close window and repeat. Signing in reverts site to English. Code at Translated.
More Information
Create a Ning Network for your own class, group, project, or event:
Finding Interesting Discussions:
Forum posts can be organized by the use of "tags." To see discussions on specific topics, click on the links below. Standardized tags you can use to have your posts included in the link results are shown in parentheses. You can also help by adding tags to others' posts. (To participate in the discussion on standardized tagging here at Classroom 2.0, see this page.)
By Tool: