Ongoing, Purposeful Assessment in the NAD

The NAD Education Advisory voted to adopt MAP Growth as the recommended assessment tool for NAD Schools as a purposeful, ongoing assessment tool.

Assessment and Evaluation October 8, 2020

This Summer the North American Division (NAD) Testing Committee recommended the adoption of a new purposeful, ongoing assessment. The NAD Education Advisory voted to adopt MAP Growth as the recommended assessment tool for NAD Schools. Teachers and Administrators will have ongoing training beginning this Fall 2020.

WHAT IS MAP GROWTH?

Each student has their own talents, challenges, and ways of learning. Measuring student growth is valuable because it gives teachers information that helps them support learning for every student. MAP Growth is an online assessment for Grades 3-12 in the subject areas of Science, Math, Reading and language usage that is available in both English and Spanish. There is also a K-2 MAP Growth option.

HOW DOES IT WORK?

The Student

  • Takes MAP test three times each year.
  • Reviews MAP data, reflecting on their results and the areas where they need to focus.
  • Sets growth goals for the following MAP test.

The Teacher

  • Reviews class MAP data and modifies instructional focuses based on need.
  • Reviews individual MAP data and provides targeted instruction to small groups with similar knowledge gaps.
  • Modifies individual learning goals for students, providing extra review and support for areas of need, and minimizing exposure to content already mastered.

The Online Tools

  • Provides an online assessment platform to attain benchmark data.
  • Provides easy to read and understandable data for individual students and classes.
  • Provides online content that can help address learning gaps identified with MAP data.

HOW DOES MAP GROWTH MEASURE WHAT STUDENTS KNOW AND WHAT THEY’RE READY TO LEARN?

  1. The test will be based on NAD standards.

NAD Educational standards describe what students should know and be able to do. The NAD curriculum is based on these standards. MAP assessments are particularly useful in standards-based education, as they measure students’ academic growth in gaining the knowledge described in the NAD standards, as well as the level of understanding the student has achieved.

  1. The test will use a scale with equal intervals over time.

MAP Growth will allow teachers to assess “has each student in my class grown, and how much?” MAP Growth has a built-in scale that uses the same equal intervals for every grade, from pre-kindergarten all the way through twelfth grade. By measuring students’ performance multiple times teachers can assess their student’s growth between measurements and details about that growth—is the student growing more slowly now than they were last year? Is she growing faster? About the same? This detail tells you important information about a student’s learning progression and lets you know if you need to intervene.

  1. The test will measure a student’s performance correctly.

Equity in the classroom demands an assessment that accurately measures the growth of every student. MAP Growth will do more than measure whether third graders have mastered third-grade skills. It will also highlight the students who are still struggling with second-or even first-grade skills. In addition, it will provide useful information about the same third graders who are working at a fifth-grade level. It provides immediate information to teachers so they can: understand what students know and need to be taught next, if they’ve missed out on a key concept, or if they’ve met their goals and are ready for more complex challenges.

LouAnn Howard, Education Director (Mid-America Union Conference) and co-chair of the 2019 Summer Testing Committee states, “The committee is excited about the new assessment focus on ongoing, purposeful assessment that provides the teacher with information when making instructional decisions.”

The article draws directly from content provided on www.NWEA.org

Author

Leisa Standish

Dr. Leisa is the Director of Elementary Education at the North American Division. She has taught on the east and west coasts of the U.S, both in and out of the Adventist education system, and in Australia and New Zealand. She has also spent a considerable part of her career teaching at universities, including lecturing in the education departments at the University of Maryland, Washington Adventist University and Macquarie University, a large state university in Sydney, Australia, with over 40,000 students. Leisa holds a PhD in Curriculum and Instruction from the University of Maryland, an MA in Education from California State University and a Diploma in Education from Avondale College.

    3 comments

  • | October 26, 2020 at 7:31 am

    Hi
    How can a South African school become involved in this MAP project?

    or can I enroll a learner in this program?

    Would like to hear from you

    Thanks

  • | November 10, 2020 at 8:08 am

    Thank you so much for this new opportunity for SVA & SVAE STUDENTS.

  • | November 19, 2020 at 6:51 pm

    Buenas tardes, quiero saber si existe una escuela adventista a distancia internacional, bilingüe, vivo en Peru, y deseo y oro mucho para que mis hijos reciban una educación espiritual.

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