[FamilyLiteracy 855] Re: National Task Force Designs PreschoolAccountability SystemGail Price gprice at famlit.orgMon Nov 26 11:47:46 EST 2007
Hi Eric, Thanks for your thoughts about the article. I would like to ask our list members who are early childhood educators for your thoughts about the study and about Eric's comments. What is the value of standardized assessment of preschoolers? Why do states and child care agencies/organizations feel standardized assessment is necessary for this age group? How do you feel about it? Let's hear from you! Gail J. Price Multimedia Specialist National Center for Family Literacy 325 W. Main Street, Suite 300 Louisville, KY 40202 gprice at famlit.org 502 584-1133, ext. 112 Join us for the 17th Annual National Conference on Family Literacy! "Literacy Grows Families and Communities" March 30, 31, & April 1, 2008-Louisville, KY Register online at www.famlit.org/conference ________________________________ From: familyliteracy-bounces at nifl.gov [mailto:familyliteracy-bounces at nifl.gov] On Behalf Of Eric Bragg Sent: Thursday, November 22, 2007 1:36 PM To: The Family Literacy Discussion List; bragge324 at gmail.com Subject: [FamilyLiteracy 853] Re: National Task Force Designs PreschoolAccountability System Ms. Price, I found this email very interesting. I currently am a middle school educator and worked as a teacher on the elementary level for 5 years. I have discovered that formalized testing is an inevitability that the public school system must use in order to determine a student's comprehension of the required skills. However, I feel that standardized testing is too heavily relied on to assess student achievement. Performance assessments, written assessments, oral evaluations, etc...are just as effective and in many ways are more appropriate to evaluate learners. These types of evaluations can be more subjective (rubric bases) and certainly more expensive/time consuming to administer. That being said, I understand why states must use standardized testing, However, why do they need to evaluate pre-school learners in a similar matter? These children are 3-5 years old in many cases. These pre-schools are teaching them basic skills that they would probably see in kindergarten. Pre-schools are an excellent environment for children to learn socialization skills early and become adjusted to a formalized educational setting. Why does this task force feel the need to evaluate skills that they will have to master before moving on to 1st grade? Thanks so much and I hope everyone has a great turkey day =) Eric Bragg On 11/16/07, Gail Price <gprice at famlit.org> wrote: The PEN Weekly NewsBlast had a blurb today about a study by the National Early Childhood Accountability Task Force. I am including the blurb below, but am also giving you additional links. I could not get the one in the article to work - maybe it will be OK by the time you get this. However, if the link doesn't work and you would like to read the article, try the links I have included. NATIONAL TASK FORCE DESIGNS PRESCHOOL ACCOUNTABILITY SYSTEM Since 2005, the National Early Childhood Accountability Task Force has studied the performance of early education programs in order to come up with the best practices states can employ to ensure early education improves student achievement. In studying preschool initiatives, which states have spent $1.9 billion on over the last four years, the task force found that few states have implemented comprehensive assessment systems that would ensure early education returns the expected results. To address the many challenges states face in implementing this type of accountability system, the task force recommends that states do the following: develop a unified system of early childhood education; align high-quality and comprehensive standards, curriculum, instruction and assessments; and, support the full inclusion of all children in programs and accountability systems; and provide programs with adequate resources. >From this set of core principles, states can then use different approaches to create an accountability system that fits their particular needs. For the next 18 months, the Council of Chief State School Officers will use these findings to help states strengthen their preschool program performance. http://www.fcd-us.org/resources/resources_show.hm-doc_id=579564 This link is to a pdf of the article. http://www.fcd-us.org/usr_doc/Accountability_Task_Force_Final_Report1.pd f This link takes you to the Resource Library of the Foundation for Child Development which gives additional information about the report. http://www.fcd-us.org/resources/resources_show.htm?doc_id=579564 Gail J. Price Multimedia Specialist National Center for Family Literacy 325 W. Main Street, Suite 300 Louisville, KY 40202 gprice at famlit.org 502 584-1133, ext. 112 Join us for the 17th Annual National Conference on Family Literacy! "Literacy Grows Families and Communities" March 30, 31, & April 1, 2008-Louisville, KY Register online at www.famlit.org/conference ---------------------------------------------------- National Institute for Literacy Family Literacy mailing list FamilyLiteracy at nifl.gov To unsubscribe or change your subscription settings, please go to http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/familyliteracy -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://www.nifl.gov/pipermail/familyliteracy/attachments/20071126/cb9e1f9d/attachment.html
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