The Relation Between a Mathematics Curriculum-based Measure and Mathematics Performance on EXPLORE

Educators need clear, actionable data to help them understand students' current levels of performance and students' probable trajectory toward college- and career-readiness in math if they are to make informed programmatic decisions to shape that trajectory. This study explored the relatio...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Killen, Carey
Other Authors: Tindal, Gerald
Language:en_US
Published: University of Oregon 2013
Subjects:
CBM
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1794/13301
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spelling ndltd-uoregon.edu-oai-scholarsbank.uoregon.edu-1794-133012018-12-20T05:48:09Z The Relation Between a Mathematics Curriculum-based Measure and Mathematics Performance on EXPLORE Killen, Carey Tindal, Gerald CBM College and career readiness Curriculum-based measures EXPLORE test mathematics assessment middle school mathematics Educators need clear, actionable data to help them understand students' current levels of performance and students' probable trajectory toward college- and career-readiness in math if they are to make informed programmatic decisions to shape that trajectory. This study explored the relation between CBM-math in Grade 7 as a one-point, teacher accessible measure of student math skill and the students' performance on the Grade 8 EXPLORE-math test, a large-scale achievement test linked to one set of college- and career-readiness benchmarks. Results indicated that a moderate positive correlation and predictive relation exist between CBM-math and EXPLORE-math. Information was disaggregated by gender and for subgroups, including students eligible for special education, free or reduced meals, and English language development services. No difference in means for male and female students on either measure was identified, but eligibility for special education or for free or reduced lunch was associated with lower performance on both measures. Insufficient numbers of ELD students hindered detailed analysis, but none of the ELD students included in the study achieved the EXPLORE benchmark or the CBM normalized cut score based on the 40th percentile. An ROC analysis showed that easyCBM consistently predicted students who did not meet the EXPLORE benchmark, although results indicated that a higher cut score on easyCBM may be a more consistent predictor. The study adds to validity research on CBM and may be useful for educators seeking to identify students at risk of missing achievement benchmarks and make programmatic decisions to ensure students are on track to be college- and career-ready in math. 2013-10-03T23:35:23Z 2013-10-03T23:35:23Z 2013-10-03 Electronic Thesis or Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/1794/13301 en_US All Rights Reserved. University of Oregon
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic CBM
College and career readiness
Curriculum-based measures
EXPLORE test
mathematics assessment
middle school mathematics
spellingShingle CBM
College and career readiness
Curriculum-based measures
EXPLORE test
mathematics assessment
middle school mathematics
Killen, Carey
The Relation Between a Mathematics Curriculum-based Measure and Mathematics Performance on EXPLORE
description Educators need clear, actionable data to help them understand students' current levels of performance and students' probable trajectory toward college- and career-readiness in math if they are to make informed programmatic decisions to shape that trajectory. This study explored the relation between CBM-math in Grade 7 as a one-point, teacher accessible measure of student math skill and the students' performance on the Grade 8 EXPLORE-math test, a large-scale achievement test linked to one set of college- and career-readiness benchmarks. Results indicated that a moderate positive correlation and predictive relation exist between CBM-math and EXPLORE-math. Information was disaggregated by gender and for subgroups, including students eligible for special education, free or reduced meals, and English language development services. No difference in means for male and female students on either measure was identified, but eligibility for special education or for free or reduced lunch was associated with lower performance on both measures. Insufficient numbers of ELD students hindered detailed analysis, but none of the ELD students included in the study achieved the EXPLORE benchmark or the CBM normalized cut score based on the 40th percentile. An ROC analysis showed that easyCBM consistently predicted students who did not meet the EXPLORE benchmark, although results indicated that a higher cut score on easyCBM may be a more consistent predictor. The study adds to validity research on CBM and may be useful for educators seeking to identify students at risk of missing achievement benchmarks and make programmatic decisions to ensure students are on track to be college- and career-ready in math.
author2 Tindal, Gerald
author_facet Tindal, Gerald
Killen, Carey
author Killen, Carey
author_sort Killen, Carey
title The Relation Between a Mathematics Curriculum-based Measure and Mathematics Performance on EXPLORE
title_short The Relation Between a Mathematics Curriculum-based Measure and Mathematics Performance on EXPLORE
title_full The Relation Between a Mathematics Curriculum-based Measure and Mathematics Performance on EXPLORE
title_fullStr The Relation Between a Mathematics Curriculum-based Measure and Mathematics Performance on EXPLORE
title_full_unstemmed The Relation Between a Mathematics Curriculum-based Measure and Mathematics Performance on EXPLORE
title_sort relation between a mathematics curriculum-based measure and mathematics performance on explore
publisher University of Oregon
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/1794/13301
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