Using the TPRI - Killeen Independent School District

Download Report

Transcript Using the TPRI - Killeen Independent School District

Using the TPRI

Kindergarten To Third Grade 1

Copyright Notification

The contents of this presentation are to be used only to facilitate TPRI Training-of-Trainers and teacher training.

2

The materials are copyrighted by the University of Texas System and the Texas Education Agency. Without the express written permission of the University of Texas System and the Texas Education Agency the materials may not be reproduced in any form for any purpose other than delivering TPRI training. You may not sell or use the materials in any other capacity.

INTRODUCTION

3

What is the TPRI?

4

instructional assessment diagnose screening TPRI at-risk

The Main Ideas

The training will be divided into four sections. What Why How What Next For What, Why, and How there is a Main Idea for the section.

5

Goals for This Training

What

Learn what is included in the TPRI and what it assesses.

Why

Clarify the purpose of the TPRI.

How

Discover when and how to administer the TPRI and practice giving parts of the assessment.

What Next

Plan to learn the steps for using TPRI scores to inform your teaching.

6

Training Logistics and Reminders

7

• Length of Training • Participate!

• • Ask questions or write to save for later

8 Goal: Learn what is included in the TPRI and what it assesses.

What is the TPRI?

• K-3 Reading Assessment • Given by the classroom teacher • Screening Section and an Inventory Section • Monitors progress at beginning, middle and end of the year.

9

What are the Screening and the Inventory?

• Screening: – Brief assessment to identify students who are most at risk.

10

• Inventory: – Lengthier assessment of skills in key reading domains. – Designed to match reading instruction with individual student needs.

What’s in the TPRI Kit?

• • • • • • • Teacher’s Guide Task cards for giving the assessment Story Booklet Magnetic board, magnetic letters and a plastic pouch

Intervention Activities Guide

Student Record Sheets Class Summary Sheet

11

What’s new in the 2010 TPRI?

• Task items • Listening and reading comprehension stories • Revalidated Screening Sections • Decodable word reading task

12

What’s new in the 2010 TPRI? (continued)

• “From Assessment to Instruction” section of the Teacher’s Guide

13

• Tools for grouping students and planning instruction • Updated

Intervention Activities Guide

WHAT Main Idea

Screening Section Inventory Section at-risk students diagnose helps target instruction identify lengthier briefer The TPRI is an early reading assessment with two sections: a Screening Section to identify at-risk students and an Inventory Section to diagnose specific instructional needs.

14

Goal: Clarify the purpose of the TPRI. 15

The Purpose of TPRI

Provide information that helps teachers teach!

• • • TPRI does this with three tools:

Screening Section Inventory Section

Intervention Activities Guide

16

Screening, Inventory & Other Types of Assessments

• The TPRI includes three types of assessments: screening, inventory and progress monitoring.

17

• For more information, review: –

Assessment Types Handout

Early Identification Is Important

• Poor readers in 1 st grade remain poor readers later without intervention.

18

• Early intervention is more effective than later intervention.

• TPRI can reliably identify children likely to have early reading failure.

• Response to Intervention (RTI) - a framework for effectively addressing the instructional needs of all students in a school.

WHY Main Idea

• The purpose of TPRI is to provide information that helps teachers teach! students who are at-risk of struggling as readers.

• about the specific instruction that will help students move forward.

• The Teacher’s Guide and IAG provide lesson planning tools and intervention activities to address student needs.

19

Goal: Discover when and how to administer the

kindergarten TPRI and practice giving parts of the assessment.

20

When Do I Give TPRI?

Beginning-of-Year (BOY) 6 weeks after the start of the school year Screening & Inventory Middle-of-Year (MOY) Mid-January Inventory End-of-Year (EOY) Mid-April Screening & Inventory 21

Importance of Accurate and Reliable Administration

Accurate information is important because TPRI…

22

• Identifies at-risk students.

• Determines instructional needs.

• Communicates to parents.

– Texas Education Code 28.006 requires that schools report scores to their local school board, the Commissioner of Education, and to the parent/ guardian

.

HOW Main Idea - 1

1.

Use the Teacher’s Guide to administer all tasks, and follow the scripts and procedures carefully to ensure consistent and accurate administration for all students.

23

Giving the Assessment: Overview

24

Getting Started at Beginning-of-Year (BOY)

• • • TO START: Administer Screening Section to all students Start with Screening 1 – Letter Sound Follow Branching Rules

25

Administering Screening 1

26

Practice Screening 1

1. Find a partner. 2.

Read the teacher’s part and the other person answer as the student. Switch roles and repeat.

27

3. Read directions from the Teacher's Guide and read items from the Student Record Sheet.

4. Mark your scores on the Student Record Sheet.

Practice Quick Check

• • • • • • • • When you were the teacher on Screening 1 did you: Give both Practice Items?

Give feedback if the student gave a letter sound when you asked for a letter name?

Give feedback if the student gave you a long vowel sound instead of short vowel sound?

Give feedback at the end of the task that was encouraging and positive (i.e. “good job,” or “nice work”)?

Mark a 1 for correct answers and a 0 for incorrect answers?

Mark your answers in the BOY column?

Mark the total number correct box at the bottom of the column?

Review the Branching Rules to see where you would go next?

28

Following the Branching Rules

29

Student Record Sheet Error

These are the correct Branching Rules

Some kindergarten Student Record Sheets have an error on the Branching Rules for SCR-2 and SCR-4.

30

• Score sheets with an error will have a sticker on the shrink wrap of the score sheets to notify you.

• Errors appear only on Student Record Sheets for use during 2011-2012.

HOW Main Idea - 2

1. Use the Teacher's Guide to administer all tasks, and follow the scripts and procedures carefully to ensure consistent and accurate administration for all students. 2. Follow the Branching Rules provided.

31

Moving from the Screening Section to

32

the Inventory Section

The Optional Warm-Up Activity: Book

33

and Print Awareness

The PA Portion of the Inventory Section: Overview

5 tasks of increasing difficulty: PA-1 Rhyming PA-2 Blending Word Parts PA-3 Blending Phonemes PA-4 Deleting Initial Sounds PA-5 Deleting Final Sounds

34

The PA Portion of the Inventory Section: Branching Rules

• Each PA task: – – – consists of 5 items scored as incorrect or correct 4 or more correct is Developed (D); 3 or fewer is Still Developing (SD)

35

• NEW BRANCHING RULE: All students who take PA-1 Rhyming, move on to PA-2 Blending Word Parts, even if SD on Rhyming.

• PA-2 through PA-5, move to next PA task only if D. • Once a student scores D, do not administer task again at MOY or EOY.

PA-1 Rhyming

36

PA-2 and PA-3: Blending

37

Important Information about PA Tasks

38

• Do not add vowel sound after consonant sounds.

/p/ not /puh/ /f/ not /feh/ • For some consonant sounds, continue only slightly.

• Keep the vowel sound clipped for consonants such as /g/ and /b/.

/mm/ not /mmmm/ /b/ not /beh/ • Pronounce

letter sounds

during Deleting Initial and Final Sounds tasks.

“Say bus without the /b/”

not

“Say bus without the /bee/”

HOW Main Idea - 3

1. Use the Teacher's Guide to administer all tasks, and follow the scripts and procedures carefully to ensure consistent and accurate administration for all students. 2. Follow the Branching Rules provided.

3. Practice all Phonemic Awareness tasks before giving TPRI.

39

Practice PA-3 Blending Phonemes

1. Work with a partner.

2. Practice PA-3, Blending Phonemes.

3. Mark your scores on the Student Record Sheet box as you give the task.

4. Notice where the Branching Rules would send you next.

5. Change roles and practice again.

40

PA-4 & PA-5: Deleting Sounds

41

The GK Portion of the Inventory Section: Overview

The Graphophonemic Knowledge (GK) Portion consists of 2 different tasks:

42 GK-1 Letter Name Identification GK-2 Letter to Sound Linking

Branching Rules: If students score D on GK-1, they move on to GK-2, the harder GK task.

GK-2 Letter to Sound Linking:

• •

Practice

• Practice GK-2 with your partner.

Mark your answers on the Student Record Sheet Read the Branching Rules Switch roles and practice again

43

The Listening Comprehension Task

44

• Given at BOY, MOY and EOY.

• Students listen to a story and answer questions.

• All students hear the same story, & there is a different story for BOY, MOY & EOY.

• • • Ask the questions listed on the student record sheet.

Score 1 for correct and 0 for incorrect; do not give ½ points.

Sample answers are provided but rely on professional judgment.

Comprehension Question Types

46

3 new types of comprehension questions:

• •

Recalling Details

Information is stated directly in the text.

Do students understand important story details?

• •

Linking Details

Require connecting information in multiple sentences.

Do students understand important story details & make connections from one part of the text to another?

• •

Inferring Word Meaning

Students give the meaning of a word from the story.

Can students understand text with less familiar words?

Word Reading: Optional EOY Task

47

• The End-of-Year assessment includes an optional Word Reading task.

• Use with those students for whom it might provide useful information.

• Two sets of 5 words.

• Set 1 is easier than Set 2.

SECTION 3:

HOW?

Goal: Discover when and how to administer the first

grade TPRI and practice giving parts of the assessment.

48

When Do I Give TPRI?

Beginning-of-Year (BOY)

2 weeks after the start of the school year

Screening &Inventory Mid-January Inventory End-of-Year (EOY) Mid-April

Screening & Inventory 49

Giving the Assessment: Overview

50

The PA Portion of the Inventory Section: Overview

The phonemic awareness portion consists of 4 different tasks, each of which gets increasingly difficult. The tasks are:

51

PA-1 Blending Word Parts PA-2 Blending Phonemes PA-3 Deleting Initial Sounds PA-4 Deleting Final Sounds

The GK Portion of the Inventory Section: Overview

The Graphophonemic Knowledge (GK) portion consists of 5 different tasks:

52

GK-1 Initial Consonant Substitution GK-2 Final Consonant Substitution GK-3 Middle Vowel Substitution GK-4 Initial Blending Substitution GK-5 Blends in Final Position • Branching Rules: Since the GK tasks get harder and harder, students move to the next GK task only if they score D.

• • • •

Administering GK-1 Initial Consonant Substitution

If needed, tear off the letters in your packet. Mark your answers on the Student Record Sheet.

Read the Branching Rules.

Switch roles and practice again.

53

GK-1 Initial Consonant Substitution: Practice

Practice GK-1 with your partner.

54

• If needed, tear off the letters in your packet. • Mark your answers on the Student Record Sheet.

• Read the Branching Rules.

• Switch roles and practice again.

Word Reading Portion

• • • • • • The Word Reading Portion – after the GK Portion.

Students read a list of words.

4 sets of 5 words each.

If students can’t read any of the words in Set 1 correctly, they stop the task.

If students move on to Set 2, read Sets 3 and 4, regardless of their scores on these sets.

If correct on 4 or 5 words in a set, then score D for the set.

55

Scoring the Word Reading Task

56

• All words are decodable.

• Score words as correct (1) or incorrect (0).

• For instructional planning, write incorrect responses. – Use phonetic spelling that will later allow you to recall the answer the student provided. • Error Analysis Chart helps understand specific word decoding confusion. – Do not complete the Error Analysis Chart while you are with the student.

• • •

The Reading Accuracy, Fluency and 57 Comprehension Portion

Given at BOY, MOY and EOY.

Students read 2 stories while you mark errors and time their reading.

They then answer comprehension questions about the story.

Story Difficulty

BOY

Story 1 (fiction) Story 2 (fiction) Easier Harder

MOY

Story 3 (fiction) Story 4 (fiction)

EOY

Story 5 (non-fiction) Story 6 (fiction) Easier Harder Harder Hardest

58

Administering a Story & Marking Errors 59 Teacher’s Guide error. Cross out these sentences for each story.

Determining Accuracy

If the student reaches the frustrational level, the teacher should read the story to the student.

60

Fru = Frustrational = 0-89% of words correct Inst = Instructional = 90-94% of words correct Ind = Independent = 95-100% of words correct

Accuracy = Frustrational What Next?

If the student reaches the frustrational level

then

the teacher reads the story to the student.

61

• • • • Write FRU by the story on the Student Record Sheet.

Read the story to the student.

Ask the comprehension questions to assess student’s Listening Comprehension of the story.

If the student is FRU on the 1 st to read the 2 nd story.

story, s/he still attempts • Do not back-up to a previous story.

Determining Fluency

62 / / / 4 1 50 110 / 4 72 110 39

Scoring the Comprehension Questions

• Ask the comprehension questions listed on the Student Record Sheet.

• Score 1 for correct and 0 for incorrect. There are no ½ points given.

• Sample answers are provided. Rely on your professional judgment in scoring responses.

63

Comprehension Question Types

4 new types of comprehension questions:

• •

Recalling Details

Information is stated directly in the text.

Do students understand important story details?

• •

Linking Details

Require connecting information in multiple sentences.

Do students understand important story details & make connections from one part of the text to another?

• •

Inferring Meaning

Students make connections beyond the text.

Can students gain deeper understanding of a text?

• •

Inferring Word Meaning

Students give the meaning of a word from the story.

Can students understand text with less familiar words?

64

Practice Story Reading

1. Work with a partner, taking turns as teacher and student.

2.

Use the Teacher’s Guide for administration instructions, and the scoring sheet for marking errors.

3. Remember to time the student from when s/he starts reading.

4. When you are the student, be sure to make some errors.

5. Calculate the accuracy and fluency scores for your student.

6. Ask the first 2 comprehension questions and determine what you would do next.

65

Goal: Discover when and how to administer the second

and third grade TPRI.

66

When Do I Give TPRI?

Beginning-of-Year (BOY) 2 weeks after the start of the school year Screening & Inventory Middle-of-Year (MOY) Mid-January Inventory End-of-Year (EOY) Mid-April Inventory 67

Moving from the Screening Section to 68 the Inventory Section

The GK Portion of the Inventory Section: Spelling

• The Graphophonemic Knowledge (GK) Portion a 20 word spelling test.

• Administered to the whole class at once or individually.

• Score words as correct (1) or incorrect (0).

69

• Error Analysis Chart helps understand specific spelling confusion.

• • • •

Procedures for MOY and EOY: Jumping-In

No Screening Section at MOY. At EOY begin with Screening 3.

At MOY and EOY, do not redo PA/GK tasks if Developed.

If Still Developing on a task, re-administer every item and follow the Branching Rules.

Administer Listening Comprehension task to all students at BOY, MOY and EOY.

70

HOW Main Idea - 4

1. Use the Teacher's Guide to administer all tasks, and follow the scripts and procedures carefully to ensure consistent and accurate administration for all students. 2. Follow the Branching Rules provided.

3. Practice all Phonemic Awareness tasks before giving TPRI.

4. Complete Student Record Sheet and Summary Pages.

71

The Student Summary Sheet

Each Individual Student Record Sheet includes a perforated Student Summary Sheet.

72

50

Information Gained - Overview

73 Screening Summary

D or SD score tells whether student is likely at-risk.

PA, GK, & Word Reading Summary

PA, GK, and Word Reading scores demonstrate student understanding of sounds and of sound/spelling relationships.

Listening Comprehension Summary

Provides information about student’s ability to listen to a story and comprehend it.

Information Gained – Overview

74 Screening Summary

D or SD score tells whether student is likely at-risk for difficulty.

PA, GK & Word Reading Summary

PA, GK and Word Reading scores demonstrate student understanding of sounds and of sound/spelling relationships.

Reading Summary

Provides information about student’s ability to read fluently and comprehend.

The kit includes 3 Class Summary Sheets for use at BOY, MOY and EOY.

The Class Summary Sheet

75

HOW Main Idea Review

1. Use the Teacher's Guide to administer all tasks, and follow the scripts and procedures carefully to ensure consistent and accurate administration for all students. 2. Follow the Branching Rules provided.

3. Practice all Phonemic Awareness tasks before giving TPRI.

4. Complete the Individual Student Record Sheet and summary pages.

76

The “Quick Review” Sheet

At the back of your packet there’s a

Quick Review Sheet

.

Tear off this sheet, fold it in half and stick it in your

Teacher’s Guide

for reference while administering the assessment.

77

TPRI Website and Contact Information

78

• For more information, IAG blackline masters and updates or news go to http://tpri.org

.

• All TPRI questions can be emailed to [email protected]

.

Questions

79

80 Goal: Plan to learn the steps for using TPRI scores to inform

your teaching.

Additional Training Modules

The purpose of TPRI is to provide information that helps teachers teach!

81

TEA recommends that all professionals administering or using TPRI should complete, at a minimum:  Administration Module  Grouping Students  Using the Intervention Guide There are also training modules for:   Analyzing word reading and spelling results Progress Monitoring kits

Additional Training Modules

TEA recommends that all professionals administering or using TPRI should complete, at a minimum: Administration Module Date:  Grouping Students  Using the Intervention Guide

82

Summary of Main Ideas

WHAT

The TPRI is an early reading assessment with two sections: a Screening Section to identify at-risk students and an Inventory Section to diagnose specific instructional needs.

83 WHY

The purpose of TPRI is to provide information that helps teachers teach! • The Screening Section quickly identifies students who are at-risk of struggling as readers. • The Inventory Section provides information about the specific instruction that will help students move forward.

• The Teacher’s Guide and IAG provides lesson planning tools and Intervention Activities to address student needs.

HOW

1.

Use the Teacher’s Guide to administer all tasks, and follow the scripts and procedures carefully to ensure consistent and accurate administration for all students. 2.Follow the Branching Rules provided.

3.Practice all phonemic awareness tasks before giving TPRI.

4.Complete Student Record Sheet and summary pages.