Current Publishing

Testing tool

CIN COVER 0721 1

Supt. Beth Niedermeyer (left) and curriculum director Annetta Petty discuss what’s new at Noblesville Schools. (Photo by Mark Ambrogi)

Noblesville Schools curriculum leader embraces new student assessments

By Mark Ambrogi

Among the many changes and additions in Noblesville Schools in 2015-16 school year, one change clearly stands out for Annetta Petty, the district’s executive director of learning.

The district is adding a new student assessment tool with Northwest Evaluation Association testing for kindergarten through eighth grade to provide more accurate, timely and thorough student progress data so teachers can better tailor individual instruction.

Petty said ISTEP will continue, but those spring results aren’t returning until October.

“It’s useful information but more programmatic and not for individual students,” she said.

The NWEA testing is adaptive, starting out with the students getting a question on their grade level.

“If you answer that right, you get a slightly harder one, and that goes on,” Petty said. “ISTEP measures if the student makes the baseline. This one doesn’t have a ceiling, so it is much more tailored to the individual student. It also will be more frequent. The feedback is immediate and there are associated tutorial units and other kinds of interventions when there are certain areas that are identified as needing attention on the student’s part.

“We’re really looking forward to having that kind of data and having some consistent data over time so we can see how students are developing and compare them. It’s individual by student so it provides the information that we need to intervene with individual students, whereas with ISTEP, we’ll get the real broad-brush results. That might tell me something as a curriculum director that (for example) geometry scores are consistently low among elementary students so we need to look at that. But that NWEA data is more precise.”

Petty also is excited about the enhanced elementary literacy curriculum.

“They have focused on writing units specifically,” she said. “There are implications for reading as well. It’s the latest phase of understanding of how students learn and … learn to write and therefore how teachers need to approach the teaching of literacy through the writing.”

OTHER CHANGES

These parameters were developed in the interest of balancing the safety needs of children versus cost and convenience for school visitors. The most cost effective and adequately thorough options were selected, according to Marnie Cooke, the district’s director of marketing and communications.

“They teachers talk about why they are effective and why they are valuable,” Petty said.

The habits are: 1. Be proactive; 2. Begin with the end in mind; 3. Put first things first; 4. Think win-win; 5. Seek first to understand; 6. Synergize; 7. Sharpen the saw; 8. Find your voice.

WHAT ELSE IS NEW?

Exit mobile version