Student Assessment Inventory for School Districts Context setting, assessment scenarios, and communications Session Goals  Provide an opportunity for district leaders to work together to.

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Transcript Student Assessment Inventory for School Districts Context setting, assessment scenarios, and communications Session Goals  Provide an opportunity for district leaders to work together to.

Student Assessment
Inventory for School Districts
Context setting, assessment scenarios, and
communications
Session Goals

Provide an opportunity for district leaders to work together to reflect on their
local assessment context.

Map stakeholders critical to the success of the assessment inventory
process and how that might influence the makeup of the assessment
inventory team.

Address common “problems of practice” in local assessment systems.
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Identify common and district-specific needs and next steps for support in
assessment inventory planning and use.
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Why is an assessment inventory needed and
what is it designed to do?
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There are legitimate concerns from
parents and the public about the amount
and frequency of testing.

The volume of testing goes well beyond
those required by states, and the layers
of state, district, and school assessment
do not always add up to a cohesive,
aligned, informative whole.
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The Student Assessment Inventory for
School Districts is designed to assist
district leaders in taking stock of their
assessments and assessment strategy.

The assessment inventory is designed to
spur action to address these valid
concerns.
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What is the Student Assessment Inventory for
School Districts?

The objective is to determine the minimum testing necessary to serve
essential diagnostic, instructional and accountability purposes.
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Taking stock and then taking action requires significant district
commitment.

The inventory tool is only one element of a thoughtful longer process that
both engages productively with concerns about testing and leads to real
changes in testing practice.

The inventory is not a one-time event. Districts should regularly re-examine
their assessments in light of changing district needs and improvements in
available assessments.

The inventory and related resources are free to use and adapt.
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District context and stakeholders
District context and goals

What is the district and community context in which the inventory is being
considered (e.g., implementation of new state standards and/or
assessments, implementation of a new teacher evaluation system, parent
or school board concern about testing load, new district or board
leadership)?

What will indicate to the district and the community that the process was a
success?
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Identify and map your stakeholders
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Identifying those stakeholders who are most critical in your district to the
assessment inventory process.

Determining the current level of support and criticality of support for each
stakeholder.
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Stakeholder mapping 2 x 2 matrix
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Stakeholders recommended to be part of a
leadership team and/or consulted during the
process
District leaders should ensure that they have the necessary district and school staff
involved in an inventory leadership team and/or consulted during the process.
Districts should think about the role of the following stakeholders:

District Assessment Director/Coordinator
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Assistant Superintendent for Curriculum and Instruction
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District financial staff
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School board members
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Data Coaches or other role that works with school-based staff around data
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School leaders including principals, instructional coaches, and lead teachers
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Teachers
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School counselors
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Parents

Students
Given that assessment
decisions have often been made
in silos, it is particularly
important that the team crosses
offices and responsibilities to
ensure a holistic approach
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Assessment scenarios
Scenario 1: Two assessments used for
similar purposes
For the past five years, schools in Harbor School District have been
administering two different vendor-developed reading assessments to all
students in grades 3-5. Each assessment yields similar information on
student performance. Harbor School District’s leadership team for its
assessment inventory process has identified these as redundant, and is
trying to determine which assessment will be continued and which will be
eliminated. What criteria might you use to determine which assessment
will be continued or eliminated?
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Scenario 2: Teacher-developed, districtwide assessments not aligned to current
standards
Ten years ago, teachers in City School District developed common
district-wide benchmark assessments in English language arts and
mathematics for grades 3-8. These assessments are given three times a
year to all students, and internal studies showed that they helped predict
later performance on statewide summative assessments. Three years ago
the state adopted new content standards and a new statewide summative
assessment, and the benchmark assessments are no longer aligned to
current standards. How would you approach the process of developing
options to address this situation? Who would be involved and what role
would they play?
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Scenario 3: Vendor-developed assessments
for teacher evaluation not aligned to current
standards and use for instruction is unclear
To measure student growth required for the state’s new teacher evaluation
system, Western School District agreed to a two-year contract with a
testing vendor. The assessment is given to all students twice a year in
four subject areas. However, initial feedback in teacher focus groups
through the assessment inventory process suggests that teachers may
not be confident that the assessments have strong alignment to the
content standards. In addition, teachers are unclear how to use the results
to inform instruction or even if that is part of the intended use of the
assessment. You learn that several neighboring districts are getting
similar feedback from teachers. What steps might your leadership team
take to address this feedback?
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Scenario 4: No assessments identified for
elimination or adjustment
The Forest School District launched a process to analyze the array of
assessments administered. The team’s initial feedback signals that
despite the outcry from parents about the volume of testing, there aren’t
any assessments they would recommend eliminating or changing. The
group provides a rationale for each assessment. What would you
recommend the superintendent consider as a next step?
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Assessment scenarios debrief
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Was this exercise helpful in thinking through potential assessment
scenarios that might arise in your district?
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What other types of assessment scenarios might you have to address in
your district?
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Next steps and remaining questions
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Beginning with the end in mind, when would you like to have a new system
of assessments in place?
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Working backwards from that point, when would recommendations or
policy changes have to be made?
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Continue working backwards to identify key milestones required to
complete the inventory process. Some of these key milestones might
include completion of basic assessment information, completion of user
feedback (e.g., from surveys, interviews, focus groups, forums, etc.),
analysis of the inventory information and feedback, and recommendations.

What will be your immediate next step?
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Are there any questions that have not been addressed?
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Additional related resources
For more information and resources: www.achieve.org/assessmentinventory
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Student Assessment Inventory for School Districts

Student Assessment Inventory overview
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Sample teacher, parent, and student focus group and survey materials

Student Achievement Partners assessment evaluation tools
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