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Parent University Preparing for End-of-Grade Tests

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Parent University. Preparing for End-of-Grade Tests. …Standardized tests help educators determine which skills students have mastered and which ones they still need to be taught. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Parent University

Parent UniversityParent UniversityPreparing for End-of-Grade Tests

Page 2: Parent University

……Standardized tests help educators Standardized tests help educators determine which skills students determine which skills students have mastered and which ones have mastered and which ones they still need to be taught.they still need to be taught.

Page 3: Parent University

……At the schoolhouse, testing provides At the schoolhouse, testing provides information on the progress students information on the progress students are making according to the are making according to the academic standards of the stateacademic standards of the state

Page 4: Parent University

• Overview of North Carolina EOG testing program– Reading EOG (Grades 3-8)– Math EOG (Grades 3-8)– Science EOG (Grades 5 and 8)

• Academic Preparation

• Test-taking Strategies

• Practice Tests

Preparing for EOGs Overview

Page 5: Parent University

• May 18 – 21 EOG Regular Administration (Grades 3 – 8)

• May 21 – June 1 EOG Make-Up Administration (Grades 3 – 8)

• June 1 – 4EOG Retest for Reading & Math (Grades 3, 5, & 8)

Testing Window - 2009

*Only one subject can be given on a regular school day (math and reading must be scheduled on consecutive days, science can be scheduled the same week or on a consecutive week).

Page 6: Parent University

End-of-GradeEnd-of-GradeReadingReading

Page 7: Parent University

• Measures reading comprehension and knowledge of vocabulary

• Based on the North Carolina English Language Arts Standard Course of Study (NCSCOS)

• Students read selections and answer questions related to those selections

• There are eight (8) selections for grades 3 -5 and nine (9) for grades 6 – 8

Reading EOG

Page 8: Parent University

Reading EOG Test Breakdown

Grade Span # of items Time limit

(minutes)*virtually untimed

3 - 5 50 115

6 - 8 56 115

Page 9: Parent University

End-of-GradeEnd-of-GradeMathMath

Page 10: Parent University

Math EOG

• Measures student understanding and knowledge of five strands or goals:

1. Number and operations

2. Measurement

3. Geometry

4. Data analysis and probability

5. Algebra

• Based on the North Carolina Standard Course of Study (NCSCOS) for mathematics

• There is a calculator active and a calculator inactive section

Page 11: Parent University

Calculator Grade Span # of items Time limit(minutes)

Active 3 - 7 54 *135

Inactive 3 - 7 28 *60

Calculator Grade Span # of items Time limit(minutes)

All Active 8 80 *150

Math EOG Test Breakdown

* The Math EOG is virtually untimed

Page 12: Parent University

End-of-GradeEnd-of-GradeScienceScience

Page 13: Parent University

Science EOG

• Administered at grades 5 and 8

• Measures student understanding of principles and concepts; requires interpretation of laboratory activities and relation of scientific information to everyday situations

• Students may use calculators on the test and students at grade 8 will also use The Periodic Table during administration of the test

Page 14: Parent University

Calculator Grade Span # of items Time limit(minutes)

All Active 5 and 8 92 *130

*The Science EOG is virtually untimed

Science EOG Test Breakdown

Page 15: Parent University

Question Question StemsStems

Page 16: Parent University

Knowledge• Tell, list, describe, relate, locate, fine,

state, name

Organizing• Explain, interpret, outline, discuss,

distinguish, predict, restate, translate, compare, describe

Applying• Solve, show, use, illustrate, construct,

complete, examine, classify

Question Stems and Thinking Skills

Page 17: Parent University

Analyzing• Analyze, distinguish, examine, compare,

contrast, investigate, categorize, identify, explain, separate, advertise

Generating & Integrating• Create, invent, compose, predict, plan,

construct, design, imagine, propose, devise, formulate

Evaluation• Judge, select, choose, decide, justify,

debate, verify, argue, recommend, assess, discuss, rate, prioritize, determine

Question Stems

Page 18: Parent University

Assessment Flow Chart

Page 19: Parent University

Academic Academic PreparationPreparation

Page 20: Parent University

• Discuss your child’s academic performance with him or her – how he or she is doing in school

• Encourage your child to ask questions about things he or she doesn’t understand

• Work with your child on his or her homework

• Communicate with your child’s teacher(s)• Encourage your child to make a

commitment to do well in school and set goals

Academic Preparation

Page 21: Parent University

• Make sure your child eats and rests well the night before the test

• Make sure your child is on-time the day of the test

• Use flash cards to review concepts and vocabulary before the test

• Reduce anxiety by reminding your child to do his or her best, but not with daily reminders about expected performance

Academic Preparation

Page 22: Parent University

Test-taking Test-taking StrategiesStrategies

Page 23: Parent University

• Read all directions carefully

• Skim selections to attempt at identifying the main idea

• Skim questions so that you know what to look for when reading the passage

• Use the process of elimination on multiple choice questions

Test-Taking Strategies

Page 24: Parent University

• Use confident answers to previous questions to assist on difficult questions

• If you are stuck on a question, move on and return to it later

• Take time to answer all questions. A blank response is the same as an incorrect response

Test-Taking Strategies

Page 25: Parent University

Practice Test

Page 26: Parent University

How Did You Do?

Page 27: Parent University

GatewayGateway

Page 28: Parent University

Grade 3 – Gateway 1

Students must:

• Meet local promotion requirements

• Demonstrate grade-level proficiency by scoring at or above Achievement Level III on state end-of-grade tests in reading and mathematics

Page 29: Parent University

Grade 5 – Gateway 2

Students must:

• Meet local promotion requirements

• Demonstrate grade-level proficiency by scoring at or above Achievement Level III on state end-of-grade tests in reading and mathematics

Page 30: Parent University

Grade 8 – Gateway 3

Students must:

• Meet local promotion requirements

• Demonstrate grade-level proficiency by scoring at or above Achievement Level III on state end-of-grade tests in reading and mathematics

Page 32: Parent University

Questions?Questions?