Eighth Grade District Assessments  

Grade

Subject

Assessment

Section

Skills

NPS/NJDOE

Date

Eighth

LAL

Writing Tasks

Persuasive Writing

Writing in response to prompt read by teacher

NPS

Fall & Spring

Eighth

LAL

Novels

Reading Comprehension

Reading Comprehension of a novel

NPS

November & May

Eighth

Math

Fall Problem Solving Tasks

Math Problem Solving

Math problem solving

NPS

 

Eighth

Math

Unit Assessments for Connected Math Text

Standards-based Assessments

CCCS & CPIs for Eighth grade

Textbook

Unit assessments

Eighth

Math

Midyear & final assessments

Same content & format as state assessments

CCCS & CPIs for first grade

NPS

January & June

Eighth

Science

Foss & FTC Modules

Foss & FTC Modules

Science

NPS

 

Eighth

Math

Practice GEPA

Mathematics

Mathematics

NPS

Fall

Eighth

LAL, Math, & Science

GEPA

Reading, writing, math, & science

Reading, writing, math, & science

NJDOE

Spring


Language Arts Literacy Assessments

1. Writing Assessment - Persuasive writing – Fall & Spring

Format & Tasks

Student writes for 45 minutes in response to a written prompt also read by the teacher. The teacher scores this writing using the New Jersey Registered Holistic Scoring Rubric. A rubric score of 4 out of a possible 6 is expected in the 8th grade. Review class data sheet for all students to see if selected student scores above/below benchmark and how they perform compared to classmates.

Instructional Implications

In addition to the overall rubric score we should note the criteria skills that were and were not exhibited from NJDOE’s rubric. This analysis can guide instruction, including setting goals and addressing weaknesses. In this endeavor, note the following skills from NJDOE’s rubric:

1.   Content / Organization - communicates intended message to intended audience; relates to topic; opening and closing; focused; logical progression of ideas; transitions; & appropriate details and information

2.   Usage - tense formation; subject-verb agreement; pronouns usage/ agreement; word choice/meaning; & proper modifiers)

3.   Sentence Construction - variety of type, structures, and length; & correct construction

4.   Mechanics – spelling, punctuation, & capitalization

In addition, NJDOE’s Editing & Revising Rubric, Author’s Self Reporting Form, as well as Cumulative Progress Indicators can be utilized to identify strengths and weaknesses to be addressed in lesson plans, school-based interventions, special education evaluations/reports, &/or IEP programs & services, based on a student’s needs.

The following research-based instructional strategies can address identified weaknesses and may be included in lesson plans, school-based interventions, &/or noted as supplemental aids and services to address IEP goals and objectives, based on a student’s needs:

1.     Model the writing we want student to produce independently.

2.     Provide coaching and scaffolding where necessary.

3.     Have student articulate and reflect on compositional strengths and needs.

4.     Provide student with frequent writing experiences in all content areas to build confidence and competence.

5.     Student should generate topics, plan, write, revise, and edit writing.

 


Reading Assessments

1. Novels Assessment – Fall & Spring

Format & Tasks

All students in the 8th grade read the same novel in the fall and another novel in the Spring. There are classroom activities where the text is discussed, multiple perspectives are shared, & insights are gained. In December & May all 8th grade students are given the same assessment on these two books. The assessments are given on the same day throughout the district and take place during a 40-minute period. The assessments also follow the same format as the State's standards-based assessments. There are 10 multiple-choice questions worth 5 points each and 2 open-ended questions worth 25 points each. Each open-ended question utilizes the NJDOE scoring reading rubric with the following point allocations: rubric score of 4 = 25 points; rubric score of 3 = 15 points; rubric score of 2 = 10 points; rubric score of 1 = 5 points; & rubric score of 0 = 0 points.

Knowledge/skills being assessed

Reading Comprehension –

1.     Recognition of theme or central idea

2.     Recognition of details that develop or support the main idea

3.     Extrapolation of information &/or following directions

4.     Paraphrasing, retelling, or interpreting words, phrases, or sentences from the text

5.     Recognition of the organizational structure of a text

6.     Recognition of a purpose for reading

7.     Questioning

8.     Prediction of tentative meanings

9.     Making judgments &/or forming opinions

10.   Drawing conclusions from the text

11.   Drawing conclusions or drawing inferences

12.   Interpretation of textual conventions & literacy elements or devices

Instructional Implications

The student’s performance on the above skills can assist in identifying strengths and weakness, which can be addressed in lesson plans, school-based interventions, special education evaluations/reports, &/or IEP programs & services, based on a student’s needs. The district’s curriculum and the Harcourt textbook resources can be utilized to enrich skills where strengths are noted and address weaknesses. In addition, NJDOE’s cumulative progress indicators, framework activities, as well as vignettes can be utilized to enrich identified strengths and address areas of weakness. These reading strengths & weaknesses can be addressed in lesson plans, school-based interventions, special education evaluations/reports, &/or IEP programs & services, based on a student’s needs.


Mathematics Assessments

1. Fall Problem Solving Tasks

The district distributes a group of problem-solving tasks in early Fall, which are aligned with the state's standards and district curriculum for the corresponding grades, and are designed to help students develop critical thinking strategies and problem solving skills.  These tasks can prepare the students for the types of open-ended and multiple-step questions they encounter on the state’s standards-based assessments. Consequently, they can be used in the classroom as an informal evaluation tool to identify each student’s strengths and weaknesses on the content and format of the state’s assessments. However, the teacher, school, and district do not formally document the students’ performance on the Fall Problem Solving Tasks. 

Teachers pose the problem solving tasks to the class then facilitate student discussion to ensure that students understand the task. Students break into groups to work on the problem. While students work, the teacher moves from group to group, listening, questioning, facilitating, and assessing. Students should be encouraged to explore, take risks, and question one another. Students record their solutions using diagrams, charts, symbols, and explaining their ideas in writing. The problem solving tasks should be used to facilitate the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics Process standards. 


2. Math Midterm and Final Assessments:

These assessments are designed by the district and are similar in format to the New Jersey Standardized assessments. On the mid-term and finals, there are both multiple-choice and open-ended questions. Most of the questions are multiple-choice, where the student chooses the best answer from among 4 choices and darkens in the circle of the correct choice. For the open-ended questions, the student provides solutions using a combination of diagrams, charts, symbols, and verbal explanation of how he/she solved the problem on a blank piece of paper or in the test booklet.

The open-ended questions are scored with generic New Jersey Registered Holistic Scoring Rubric for math that gives 0 to 3 points for each answer. The generic rubric helps ensure that students are scored in the same way for the same demonstration of knowledge and skills regardless of the test question. The open-ended questions require students to construct and explain their own written or graphic responses. Since partial credit can be earned, it’s critical that students show their work and explain their answers.


3. Unit Assessments:

The unit tests are part of the standards-based, Connected Mathematics series published by Prentice Hall. These assessments measure student progress in the Connected Math curriculum and are administered to students as they finish each unit.  The questions on these assessments measure mathematical competency at multiple levels of Bloom’s Taxonomy.


GEPA Practice Assessment – Math only – Administered in the early Fall to provide practice for the GEPA and identify weaknesses that require interventions. An item analysis is performed by the Office of Mathematics to identify student weaknesses by NJ-CCCS Cumulative Progress Indicators.  

Instructional Implications

The above math assessments identify student’s strengths & weaknesses,  which can be addressed in lesson plans, school-based interventions, special education evaluations/reports, &/or IEP programs & services, based on a student’s needs. The district’s curriculum and the textbook resources can be utilized to enrich skills where strengths are noted and address weaknesses. In addition, NJDOE’s cumulative progress indicators, framework activities, as well as vignettes can be utilized to enrich identified strengths and address areas of weakness. 

 


Science:

Foss & STC Modules

-FOSS assessment takes the form of informal teacher observation and teacher questioning. The teacher guide suggests behavior to watch for during investigations and questions to ask about the content. Assessments fall into two categories: formative and summative. Formative assessments are integrated into instruction. Based on these two means of assessment, teachers will know how to adjust their teaching for individual students or for the whole class. A recording system is included.

-In STC modules, assessment is based on recorded observations, student’s work products and oral communication. All these documentation methods combine to give a comprehensive picture of each student’s growth. Throughout a module, assessments are incorporated, or embedded, into lessons. The first lesson of each module is designed to be a pre-assessment and is revisited at the end of each module in the form of a post assessment.

  New Jersey's Core Curriculum Content Standards (CCCS) -

The above district wide and statewide assessments are aligned with New Jersey's Core Curriculum Content Standards. Therefore, teachers, parents, administrators, school-based intervention teams and/or IEP teams can utilize the hyperlinked CPI (cumulative progress indicator) checklists developed by the Newark Teachers Union (NTU) for reading, writing, math, and science to identify strengths and weaknesses, in the corresponding grade's knowledge/skills. These strengths and weaknesses can be integrated into teachers' lessons, school-based interventions, special education evaluations/corresponding reports, and IEPs (e.g., PLAAFP statements, goals/objectives, and supplementary aids and services.