SAVE THE DATE: Upcoming NCEO Teleconference
NCEO’s next Teleconference is set for Monday, February 6 at
11:30 a.m. Pacific, 12:30 p.m. Mountain, 1:30 p.m. Central, 2:30 p.m. Eastern
(your formal invitation will be e-mailed in early January).
NCEO is continuing our telephone conferences on hot topics of
inclusive assessment and accountability systems. As the Department of Education
announces new options and flexibility in implementation of NCLB provisions, it
will be increasingly important to ensure that options selected have the intended
positive consequences. In February we will begin the series with a focus on what
state staff can do now to work with policy leaders and stakeholders to support
flexibility in assessing all students, identify areas of improvement for the
existing system, and "drill down" into existing achievement data to understand
how students currently are performing, and why.
In the February 6 call, we will provide an annotated
bibliography of studies that have analyzed what occurs in schools where all of
the subgroups are achieving at high levels based on NCLB assessments. Our
research partners will report on current strategies for analyzing NCLB and IDEA
required reporting to better understand who the lowest performing students are,
and what options are available to address their needs. In this call and
throughout the series, we will have state partners discuss what they are doing
to understand the reality of schooling "behind the numbers" of student
performance and participation in order to design effective options for
instruction and for assessment. This may include data analyses, monitoring
functions, awards programs, mini-studies, and partnerships with university based
researchers. The second call in the series is tentatively set for April.
NCEO Funding Continues
The University of Minnesota’s National Center on Educational
Outcomes (NCEO) and its collaborators, the National Association of State
Directors of Special Education (NASDSE) and the Council of Chief State School
Officers (CCSSO), received funding to support another five years of technical
assistance to States on improving results for students with disabilities in the
context of NCLB and IDEA. We are pleased to continue offering assistance on
issues such as increasing participation of students with disabilities in
assessment and accountability systems, improving the quality of assessment and
accountability systems, improving the capacity of States to meet data collection
and reporting requirements, and strengthening accountability for results.
The technical assistance role will continue to be central to our
NCEO mission, and as before, we will continue to host various other related
research projects, including the Partnership for Accessible Reading Assessment
Project, the Development Techniques for Universally Designed Assessments
Project, and the Instructional Strategies for English Language Learners with
Disabilities Project. Many of NCEO’s technical assistance activities will remain
the same as in the past five year period. We will continue to produce
StateLinks to provide quarterly updates on our activities, products, and
events. NCEO will benefit from the advice of its newly formed Research to
Practice Panel, which will ensure that technical assistance is based on
empirical research and best practices, a National Advisory Committee of diverse
stakeholders, and a Technical Work Group to review the scientific rigor of
information included in materials produced by NCEO.
CCSSO Offers Accommodations Professional Development Guide
The Council of Chief State School Officers (CCSSO) recently
released two new documents to provide support for accommodation decision making.
The first is: Accommodations Manual: How to Select, Administer, and Evaluate
Use of Accommodations for Instruction and Assessment of Students with
Disabilities. The second is a related Professional Development Guide. A
PowerPoint presentation is also available to accompany the Professional
Development Guide.
The Accommodations Manual is geared for individualized
educational program (IEP) teams, 504 plan committees, special education
teachers, general education teachers, administrators, and district level
assessment staff. It recommends a five-step process to use in the selection,
administration, and evaluation of the effectiveness of the use of instructional
and assessment accommodations by students with disabilities. The focus is on
students with disabilities who participate in large-scale assessments and the
instruction they receive.
The five steps include the following:
1. Expect students with disabilities to achieve grade-level
academic content standards.
2. Learn about accommodations for instruction and
assessment.
3. Select accommodations for instruction and assessment for
individual students.
4. Administer accommodations during instruction and
assessment.
5. Evaluate and improve accommodation use.
The Accommodations Manual can be "personalized" by inserting
state-specific information and policies related to content standards,
assessments, and accommodations. In this way, states can assure the information
in this manual is consistent with their most current state policies. This
training module was developed to establish guidelines for states to use in the
selection, administration, and evaluation of accommodations for instruction and
assessment of students with disabilities, but there is some variability among
states with implementation practices.
There are several small-group and large-group training
activities, teacher checklists, and templates of possible forms that can be
adapted for use by particular states or districts. Accommodations Manual: How
to Select, Administer, and Evaluate Use of Accommodations for Instruction and
Assessment of Students with Disabilities authored by Sandra J. Thompson,
Amanda B. Morse, Michael Sharpe, and Sharon Hall (August 2005) was developed by
the CCSSO State Collaborative on Assessment and Student Standards (SCASS),
Assessing Special Education Students (ASES).
The manual is available at the CCSSO Web site, on the ASES SCASS page, in
both Word and PDF format. The direct link is: http://
www.ccsso.org/Projects/SCASS/Projects/Assessing_Special_Education_Students/.
ATTENTION: Notice of Proposed Rule Making on 2% Flexibility
Available for Review and Comment
On December 14, 2005, USDOE Secretary Margaret Spellings
announced the release of a Notice of Proposed Rule Making (NPRM) on the 2%
flexibility. The official NPRM was posted in the Federal Register on December
15, 2005, and is available at
http://a257.g.akamaitech.net/7/257/2422/01jan20051800/edocket.access .gpo.gov/2005/pdf/05-24083.pdf.