Fountas and Pinnell Benchmark Asssessment System Shannon Gallaway February 2015.

15
Fountas and Pinnell Benchmark Asssessment System Shannon Gallaway February 2015

Transcript of Fountas and Pinnell Benchmark Asssessment System Shannon Gallaway February 2015.

Page 1: Fountas and Pinnell Benchmark Asssessment System Shannon Gallaway February 2015.

Fountas and PinnellBenchmark Asssessment SystemShannon Gallaway February 2015

Page 2: Fountas and Pinnell Benchmark Asssessment System Shannon Gallaway February 2015.

Why Fountas and Pinnell?

KWL

Page 3: Fountas and Pinnell Benchmark Asssessment System Shannon Gallaway February 2015.

Why Fountas and Pinnell?

• The demands on our students regarding their abilities to comprehend are increasing

• This is internationally recognised and identified by a number of literacy experts

• It is also identified within the Australian Curriculum

Page 4: Fountas and Pinnell Benchmark Asssessment System Shannon Gallaway February 2015.

Why Fountas and Pinnell?• Strands identified within the Australian

Curriculum (English) that DIRECTLY identify student’s need to comprehend at a deeper level:

Text structure and organisationExpressing and developing ideasLiterature and contextCreating literatureTexts in context

Page 5: Fountas and Pinnell Benchmark Asssessment System Shannon Gallaway February 2015.

Why Fountas and Pinnell?

• To be able to differentiate our teaching practice to meet the needs of our students, we must ensure that we are using the best practice assessment tools FOR and OF student learning.

• Fountas and Pinnell Benchmark Assessment is unique as it gives ‘in depth’ information that cannot be gained from other tools.

Page 6: Fountas and Pinnell Benchmark Asssessment System Shannon Gallaway February 2015.

Why Fountas and Pinnell?

Page 7: Fountas and Pinnell Benchmark Asssessment System Shannon Gallaway February 2015.

Why Fountas and Pinnell?

• The components of the Fountas and Pinnell Benchmark assessment system

• http://www.pearson.com.au/educator/primary/browse-resources-online/english/benchmark-assessment-system/

Page 8: Fountas and Pinnell Benchmark Asssessment System Shannon Gallaway February 2015.

Why Fountas and Pinnell?• Using the BAS is not ‘just’ an assessment. It gives

us rich information that we can use to guide and individualize student comprehension abilities.

• Teaching students ‘to read’ is no longer about ‘barking at text’ and it’s no longer about using ‘one method’ to gain further information AS students learn.

• As professional educators we must use this information and review our teaching pedagogy, using this information to guide our teaching approaches once we have analyzed data.

• http://literacyandict.global2.vic.edu.au/reading-and-conferring/

Page 9: Fountas and Pinnell Benchmark Asssessment System Shannon Gallaway February 2015.

Why Fountas and Pinnell?

• Watching the system in action

Page 10: Fountas and Pinnell Benchmark Asssessment System Shannon Gallaway February 2015.

Why Fountas and Pinnell?

• How do we use the information to differentiate our teaching?

• How do we identify the ‘next steps’?

• What strategies do you use in direct teaching instruction?

• What strategies do you use for ‘content reading’?

Page 11: Fountas and Pinnell Benchmark Asssessment System Shannon Gallaway February 2015.

Why Fountas and Pinnell?

• Share our learning• How will you implement the BAS to

assess FOR and OF learning?• How will you use this information to

guide you AS students learn?• How will you align this data with

other assessment tools?• Other questions (KWL review)

Page 12: Fountas and Pinnell Benchmark Asssessment System Shannon Gallaway February 2015.

Expectations at Southern Cross Grammar

• All students under previous PM 30 equivalent MUST be tested using Fountas and Pinnell.

• Evidence of differentiation to meet student’s needs from assessement FOR learning using F&P (and other forms of reading assessment e.g.: Literacy Pro, CARS) MUST be included in planning documentation.

Page 13: Fountas and Pinnell Benchmark Asssessment System Shannon Gallaway February 2015.

Expectations at Southern Cross Grammar

• Above previous PM level 3o – use based on information gathered using “Guide for Observing and Noting Reading Behaviours” form as a minimum expectation.

• Indicated use should also include anecdotal information from reading conferences, guided reading, reciprocal teaching and book clubs (novel studies).

• Please view my blog for professional learning regarding pedagogy and anecdotal recording strategies.

Page 14: Fountas and Pinnell Benchmark Asssessment System Shannon Gallaway February 2015.

Expectations at Southern Cross Grammar

• Individualized anecdotal record keeping of student progress during instruction (AS students learn) must be kept.

• Ongoing changes to planning need to reflect this and keeping anecdotal records for each student is an expectation.

• 33% of a student’s reading assessment is now anecdotal – 3/2/1 scoring system weekly from anecdotal records.

Page 15: Fountas and Pinnell Benchmark Asssessment System Shannon Gallaway February 2015.

Expectations at Southern Cross Grammar

• All data (including Fountas and Pinnell) to be added to assessment spreadsheets on server no later than two weeks post assessment.

• Specialist teachers are required to keep track of this data and to implement strategies such as reciprocal teaching to support content reading. This requires a knowledge of how students operate as readers.