Student Achievement Goal Setting
Student Achievement Goal Setting:
Honoring Progress and Getting Results
Division Leadership Support Teams Williamsburg, VA
September 24, 2012
Leslie W. Grant, Ph.D. The College of William and Mary
lwgran@wm.edu
1|Goal Setting
Student Achievement Goal Setting:
Honoring Progress and Getting Results
Division Leadership Support Teams Williamsburg, VA
September 24, 2012
Leslie W. Grant, Ph.D. The College of William and Mary
lwgran@wm.edu
Why Consider Student Achievement Goals Setting?
The Uniform Performance Standards and Evaluation Criteria incorporate student academic progress as a significant component of the evaluation
For about 30 percent of teachers, student growth percentiles will be available.
For about 70 percent of teachers, other measures of academic progress will need to be identified.
2|Goal-Setting
Standard 7: Student Academic Progress
The work of the teacher results in acceptable, measurable, and appropriate student academic progress.
What are the purposes of Student Achievement Goal Setting?
Focus on student results Explicitly connect teaching and
learning Improve instructional practices
and teacher performance Tool for school improvement
3|Goal-Setting
Goal-Setting Process
Step 1:
Determine needs
Step 2:
Create specific learning Goals based on preassessment
Step 3: Create and implement teaching and
learning strategies
Step 4: Monitor student progress through ongoing formative assessment
Step 5:
Determine whether the
students achieved the
Goal
Step 1: Determining Needs
Step 1:
Determine needs
Step 2:
Create specific learning Goals based on preassessment
Step 3: Create and implement teaching and
learning strategies
Step 4: Monitor student progress through ongoing formative assessment
Step 5:
Determine whether the
students achieved the
Goal
4|Goal-Setting
Who Determines Areas of Focus?
District? Principals? Teacher groups? Individual teachers?
How Do We Determine Areas of Focus?
What sources of data are available?
How broad/narrow will our focus be?
Example: Grade 4 math OR Grade 4 math in the areas of
number sense and computation & estimation.
5|Goal-Setting
Sunshine Elementary Grade 4
Percent of Students Passing End-of-Year Assessments
Reading Writing
Math Virginia Studies
20092010 92% 87% 64% 71%
20102011 95% 89% 58% 73%
20112012 91% 91% 62% 70%
The Pre-Assessment: A Necessity
You might know where you're going...but if you don't know where you're starting, how can you make a plan to get there?
6|Goal-Setting
How Do We Determine What Pre-Assessments to Use?
Emphasis on tests with higher validity and reliability
Must be able to show progress in skills or content
What is already in place?
7|Goal-Setting
Goal Setting for Student Academic Progress Form
Teacher: Samantha Darren
Subject/Grade: 4th School Year: 2012-2013
Grade Mathematics
Evaluator: Lucy Mertz
Initial Goal Submission Due:
10/15
A. Setting
I teach in a rural school district. Sixty-four percent of the students in the
Describe the population and school receive free or reduced lunch. Of my 25 students (10 boys, 15 girls),
special learning circumstances.
eight receive special education services for learning disabilities.
B. Content/Subject/Field Our fourth grade SOL passing scores for mathematics have been as follows
Area
for the past 5 years:
The area/topic addressed
based on learner achievement, data analysis, or observational data
2011-2012: 64% 2010-2011: 58% 2009-2010: 62%
C. Baseline Data
What does the current data show?
Therefore, our grade level has decided to focus on mathematics. Furthermore, our students generally do well with computation and estimation, but a strand analysis shows that they have difficulty with other subject areas that use more problem-solving. Data attached.
I administered a grade-level appropriate word problem with prompts and then graded student responses using the Mathematics Problem Solving rubric. The following 5 criteria were considered: conceptual understanding, strategies & reasoning, computation & estimation; communication, and insights. Scores for each area range from 0-3; a score of 2 is considered proficient.
The score bands are as follows:
0-5= Intensive 6-12 = Benchmark 13-15= Advanced
My scores were as follows:
Advanced 1/25 (4%)
Benchmark 11/25 (44%)
Intensive 13/25 (52%)
In addition, the averages for each area were as follows:
Conceptual Understanding
1.16
Strategies & Reasoning
1.16
Computation & Estimation
1.52
Communication
0.88
Insights
0.88
8|Goal-Setting
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