Changes come in with new year
Deirdre Newman
The final domino in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District’s
alignment with required state standards will be gradually falling
into place this year -- standards-based report cards.
The district has already aligned its curriculum and assessment
with state mandates in subjects like language arts, math, social
science and science. Standards define what students are expected to
know and the reports cards will measure students’ mastery of these
standards for grades two through six.
The new report cards, approved by the school board Tuesday, will
be brought in throughout the school year to give teachers and parents
enough time to get comfortable with the changes.
District officials invited significant feedback from more than 300
teachers and close to 100 parents in creating the new cards, which
took about two years, said Bonnie Swann, director of elementary
education and curriculum.
In comparison to the former report cards, the new system will send
a definitive message to parents about what students know and what
they still need to learn, Swann said.
The cards are divided into different subjects with grades being
replaced by numbers that represent how much of the standard has been
mastered. Four is the highest, an above grade-level standard, and one
is the lowest as a below grade level standard. An ‘x’ signifies that
the standard has not been addressed yet, which will be more common in
the beginning of the school year, Swann noted.
In addition to the standards, students will also be graded the
traditional way -- Outstanding, Satisfactory, Improving and Needs
Improvement -- in categories like work habits and citizenship.
There is also room for teachers to suggest interventions for
students who are struggling in certain areas. And another section
provides parents with suggested home-learning activities like reading
with their children and having them create and solve math word
problems.
Workshops will be held throughout the year for parents to help
them understand the new reporting procedure.
The goal is to issue computerized standards-based report cards by
the 2003-04 school year.
Many trustees lauded the new system.
“I think it’s great,” said Serene Stokes. “It helps parents see
where their child is at any given time during the semester.”
New ways to grade
To help teachers gauge student progress against the state
standards, the district will be aided by a new assessment and
Web-based reporting software.
StandardsMaster, approved by the board Tuesday, is touted as a
high-tech, immediate-results system.
“It takes the guesswork out of student achievement,” said Kurt
Suhr, administrative intern at Rea Elementary School in Costa Mesa.
The committee that worked on devising the standards-based report
cards requested an assessment tool that would make the data used on
the cards consistent throughout the district. A state review called
COMITE also requires a way to benchmark the progress of students
throughout the year.
StandardsMaster expedites a lot of the work teachers used to have
to do by hand by scanning the results of a traditional paper and
pencil test, with results available within five to seven minutes.
Several reports can then be generated, including an opportunity to
praise students in English or Spanish on their achievements, and how
many students in a class mastered a certain skill.
Debbra Maury, who teaches fifth grade at Killybrooke in Costa
Mesa, said the new software will make teachers’ lives a lot easier.
“It’s taking a load off teachers to make assessment friendly,”
Maury said. “So you can get information that day and can see where
your kids are and use it to drive instruction.”
Trustee Jim Ferryman is equally impressed.
“I think this is fabulous,” Ferryman said. “This really is a
valuable tool in finding out where [students’] weaknesses are.”
A choice of books
The school district is trying two different elementary language
arts textbooks proposed by the state this year to see which one it
will eventually adopt.
New language arts textbooks are brought in every seven years and
for the next cycle, the state has recommended either Houghton-Mifflin
or Open Court. But instead of blindly leaping into one program or the
other, the district has chosen the methodical approach of
experimenting with each one, Swann said.
“I’m a product of pilot wars and want everyone to have a fair
assessment of both products and go from there,” Swann said.
For the first part of the year, teachers in second through sixth
grade will try Open Court. For the latter half, they will use
Houghton-Mifflin.
Students likely will not notice the difference, Swann said.
In kindergarten and first grade, teachers will use the same
textbook year-round to ensure consistency.
At the end of the year, teachers will come together and share
their opinion of the textbooks. Then a recommendation will be made to
the school board, Swann said.
The district used the same approach with different math textbooks
two years ago.
Science tests await
Science will be joining other subjects in statewide tests starting
this year with an integrated science assessment of high school
students and a standards test for fifth-graders.
For the first year, the integrated science test will assess
fundamental concepts and skills within the content standards across
all four disciplines of science -- biology, chemistry, Earth science
and physics.
In subsequent years, mastery will be gauged using three different
tests -- biology, chemistry and physics.
The fifth-grade science test will focus on fourth and fifth-grade
standards. A pilot test will be given next spring and the final
format the following year.
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