Using Estimated Mastery for Progress Monitoring:
Progress Monitoring will be keyed to:
a. Accurate calculation of the Progress Line (the blue growth line shown in the Progress Monitoring report).
b. Capturing estimated student mastery bi-weekly as a function of that line.
c. Reporting on that estimated mastery in both teacher and admin reporting.
Key Terms:
Progress Line (aka Growth Line): The dotted blue line designating a student’s trajectory of reading mastery over the year.
Predicted Ability: The current best estimate for a student’s mastery level at the end of the school year.
Estimated Mastery: The current best estimate for a student’s ability today.
Improvements:
This year, Reading Assistant’s Progress Monitoring will feature the following new benefits:
a. Single Measure: The Progress Line in the Progress Report will become the focal point for each student’s current and predicted progress.
b. Calculated Holistically: This Progress Line will be calculated from all the data available. Screening data, Benchmark Assessment, bi-weekly Progress Monitors, Practice and Skills Scaffold sessions will all be used in concert to calculate a student’s current and EOY mastery.
c. Advanced & Accurate Algorithm: The Progress Line will utilize a sophisticated algorithm leveraging Reading Assistant’s experience with hundreds of thousands of students to estimate the trajectory of growth.
d. Progress Monitor Pre-Readers: Progress Lines will now work better for students in the Early Reader Skills Scaffold. This enables a huge stride forward. Previously, with the traditional Progress Monitoring assignment function, reporting was limited for students not yet reading connected text.
e. Equivalent For Spanish & English: With Spanish ARM scores now calculated in the same way and to the same scale as English, you can employ the same progress monitoring protocol to track
Recommended Protocol:
Administer a full-fledged Assessment in the Fall, Winter, Spring.
Have all students practice with Reading Assistant, working in Practice sessions up to 5 times per week. Note that Progress Monitoring will still work well even if many students use far below the recommended dosage level.
The Metric to employ is ARM.
Teachers will track progress in the Progress Monitoring Report by hovering over the Progress Line on a specific date to view “Estimated Mastery.”
Note: The screenshot above shows that the blue line value is available to teachers via hover.
For administrators, an “Estimated Mastery” column will be in the Weekly Extract that corresponds to each student’s most recent Estimated Mastery ARM.
Administrators should designate Progress Monitoring “moments” employing the desired cadence. We recommend monthly or biweekly. At these PM Moments, Estimated Mastery data should be pulled from the extract into the District’s system of record for tracking student growth.
English and Spanish Progress Monitoring can both be done using this precise protocol, with no variation.
FAQ
Q: What is the recommendation protocol for Progress Monitoring?
A: The Reading Assistant Team recommends administering the benchmarks three times per year (BOY, MOY, EOY), and requiring students to practice with Reading Assistant multiple times weekly. To monitor progress, teachers and administrators should schedule a handful of moments throughout the year (for example, at the end of each month) to view progress measured by each student’s “Estimated Mastery” ARM Score. This new method has four major benefits:
More data is at Reading Assistant’s disposal to estimate each student’s mastery.
Scores for Early Readers are more comprehensive.
Less teacher time is expended assigning Progress Monitoring tasks.
Process is invisible to students– it does not feel like a “test.”
Key Differences Explained | |
Previous Method | Recommended Method |
Generated solely on a single PM text. | Generated through practice sessions. |
Provides limited data for “Early Readers.” | Provides Estimated ARM score for “Early Readers” on the same scale as all other readers. |
Assigned by teachers manually. | Teachers don’t need to assign anything. |
Requires students to “take a test.” | Is invisible to students– they’re just on Reading Assistant practice. |
Q: Do we need to continue assigning formal Progress Monitoring tests?
A: No. While doing so will provide additional useful data, updating both Estimated Mastery and Predicted Ability, we recommend simply having students practice. Practice is a “formative assessment” that builds skills while measuring mastery. There is no need to assign Progress Monitors.
Q: Can Reading Assistant accurately monitor progress if she is simultaneously stopping the student to deliver interventions?
A: Yes. At this point, Reading Assistant’s psychometrics are based on millions of practice sessions across the country. This provides ample data for Reading Assistant to produce reliable, normed ARM scores, regardless of the passage difficulty or how often a child is being paused for micro-intervention delivery. Reading Assistant is self-aware around the time spent on micro-interventions and the time the student is reading, so measures like WCPM are accurate.
Q:Are there any differences between the English and Spanish progress monitoring protocols?
A: No, you can utilize the ARM-based approach identically. Both English and Spanish ARM are now on the same scale.
Should you opt to assign a Progress Monitoring Assessment the cadence by grade level is below:
K | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | 4th | 5th |
Snow Falls | Bud Gets the Ball | How to Make a Telephone | Spiders are Really Arachnids | Osprey | The London Eye |
Tree House | Fun in the Sand | Bird's Nest | Animals | Lobsters | Pizza History |
Tom's Pet's | Running | Bucking Horse | Lakes and Streams | Ballet | Handball |
Sunny Day | Big Dog | Are Bats Birds? | Robins | New Olympic Sport | The Blue Horse |
The Clouds | Playing House | Tree Homes | All about elephants | Chess Master | Seals in the Bay |
Duffy the Puppy | The Goat | Fire Truckd | Michelangelo | Lost Egg | White Water Rafting |
Pete the Pony | Chirp | Little Hawk | American Legend | Spirit Bears | Dragons |
| Surprise | Tricky Tom | Lightning | Miracle Worker | The Perfect Breakfast |
| Sheep Dog | Playing Outside | Derby | Dancing Bird | Playing Cricket |
| What Pet Will I Get | Going on a Trip | All About Sharks | Dark Drive | Lightning |
| The Fort | Two Homes | Dog Race | Snorkeling |
|
| The Bug in The Jar | Finding Gold | Spruce Goose | Skyscrapers |
|
| Sammy and Bud | Teacher's Surprise | Man Misses the Moon | Cross Country |
|
| Camp Champs | Rotten Backpack | Romeo the Wolf | New Olympic Sport |
|
|
| The Lake | Dinosaurs | Derby |
|
|
| Life Mates | American Legend | Handball |
|
|
| Modoc | Chess Master |
|
|
|
| Faker |
|
|
|
|
| The Gorilla in the Mall |
|
|
|
|
| Dude Ranch |
|
|
|
Spanish Progress Monitoring Passages | |||||
Kinder | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | 4th | 5th |
Rufián | Mis mejores amigos | El collar de mis sueños | Mi hermanito menor | Mi pijamada | Mi deporte favorito |
Pepe el pingüino | Un paseo con mi papá | Las flores del campo | Las ranas | La bicicleta roja | Ballenas |
La perrita de Nora | La tarea de Andy | Mi día favorito | Insectos amargos | Gabriel García Márquez | Zorrillos peligrosos |
El bebé | El nido de las palomas | La fiesta sorpresa | El huerto de mi abuelo | Un ayudante muy especial | El campo y la ciudad |
El perro de María |
| El monedero | El payaso tino | La fiesta de cumpleaños | Rescate |
The Ready Module ("Wake up, Spot!") will be shown at the beginning of every Progress Monitoring assessment.
When a student has completed all available Progress Monitors for their grade level (as listed above), the next time a Progress Monitoring assessment is assigned, the student will encounter the following message:
You can navigate to the Tracking Report and remove the current assignment to address this situation. This action will resolve the issue, allowing the student to proceed with practice stories.
Support
Email: Submit a Case
Phone: 800-225-5750, Option 3 (Technical Support)