This slideshow explains the Ministry of Education's guidelines and expectations around overall teacher judgements and reporting against the National Standards.
Presentation by Andreas Schleicher Tackling the School Absenteeism Crisis 30 ...
OTJs and Reporting: Guidelines from the MoE
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Notes de l'éditeur
The National Standards are designed as a tool to inform teaching and learning so that the next steps for each child are clearly identified. The aim is to identify what the child needs to learn next and what support they need to ensure they make progress. An OTJ is not an assessment task - there is no National Standards test An OTJ is only one of many judgments teachers make about student achievement It can be used both summatively (summarises information from a certain time period) and formatively (used to inform teaching and learning strategies)
Use as much evidence as you need to understand where a student is at, their progress, and what needs to happen next After quality information, not just quantity Use assessment tool alignment information on TKI to help guide judgements Shouldn’t need new tests / tools. Use what already exists
A suggested moderation process Teachers meet – each teacher brings three to four samples of student work or other evidence that they believe shows a child is meeting a particular standard. To start, each teacher makes independent judgments using the samples and shared criteria. (Have the curriculum, the National Standards and the literacy and numeracy progressions available as resources.) Then the group discusses and compares their results. The group discusses the degree to which they have a shared understanding of the National Standards, how consistent their judgments are and what further actions they may need to take. Some critical questions may be asked at moderation meetings or following them: 1. What should these children’s next learning steps be, and what does that mean for my teaching? 2. Which children do we need to consider as a whole staff or syndicate? Where the moderation process sits The National Standards describe a nationally consistent benchmark in words. The illustrations in the standards provide more concrete reference points for teacher judgments. Assessment tools that are linked to the standards provide an external reference point for teacher judgments. Moderation processes enhance teachers’ understanding of what quality and progress means in relation to the standards, and the consistency of teacher judgments. Related weblink Further information for teachers on using the moderation process is on TKI: http://assessment.tki.org.nz/Effective-use-of-evidence/Moderation Material for teachers from script scrutiny will also appear in the effective use of evidence section.
(NB in writing can be electronic)
These apply to all reporting, not just for National Standards
Schools are encouraged to find the most appropriate way to report a student’s progress and achievement in relation to national standards. Reporting to parents should enable them to understand what their child can do and how they have progressed, and their child’s progress and achievement in relation to the expected standard. Exactly how teachers frame this is for their professional judgment. There is no requirement to use the words above, at, below, or well below.
Schools should look ahead to reporting to boards when adjusting their parent reports.