25 Sep Assessment data can be used to make decisions at many levels: district, school, grade, content/subject area, classroom, small group, and individual learner. Knowing that ELL/bili
Assessment data can be used to make decisions at many levels: district, school, grade, content/subject area, classroom, small group, and individual learner. Knowing that ELL/bilingual learners are not all the same, but have individual strengths and areas for growth, assessment data can provide teachers with the information needed to make instructional decisions specific to the individual learner.
TSL-565 ELL Assessment Case Studies
Part 1: Case Studies
Since states use different ELP assessments, ELP data is provided generally. “Benchmark” refers to the student achieving a level of English language proficiency that would be approaching grade level, native English-speaking peers.
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Case Study 1: Kimberly |
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Personal Data |
Age: 5 Grade: Kindergarten First year in a U.S. school Hispanic female; born in the U.S.; parents and older sister speak only Spanish |
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ELP Assessment Data |
· Listening: Mid-level skills · Speaking: Low-level skills · Reading: Low-level skills · Writing: Low-level skills |
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Classroom Assessment Data |
· Anecdotal Observation Notes: Student follows simple oral directions in English and demonstrates comprehension by pointing and gesturing. Student does not orally name familiar objects used in classroom routines and activities. Student communicates needs and wants nonverbally. |
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Instructional Strategy 1 |
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Instructional Strategy 2 |
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Instructional Strategy 3 |
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Case Study 2: Arnoldo |
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Personal Data |
Age: 7 Grade: 1 Second year in a U.S. school Hispanic male; born in Guatemala; has an older sister who is a long-term English learner who is orally proficient in English but has not tested out; parents speak Spanish and some English |
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ELP Assessment Data |
· Listening: Achieved benchmark · Speaking: Achieved benchmark · Reading: High-level skills · Writing: Mid-level skills |
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Classroom Assessment Data |
· Sight Word Formative Assessment: Student met grade level expectations. · Writing Samples: Student uses simple complete sentences but uses inappropriate personal pronouns, prepositional phrases, and subject-verb agreement. |
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Instructional Strategy 1 |
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Instructional Strategy 2 |
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Instructional Strategy 3 |
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Case Study 3: Yuuto |
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Personal Data |
Age: 11 Grade: 5 Third year in a U.S. school Japanese male; born in Japan and studied English as a foreign language; has an older sister who is bilingual in Japanese and English; mother speaks mostly Japanese with limited English; stepfather is American who is a native English speaker with limited Japanese |
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ELP Assessment Data |
Student has moved in the middle of the school year and ELP data has not arrived from the previous school. |
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Classroom Assessment Data |
· Literacy, Math, and Science Assessments: Student met grade level expectations on various content area assessments. Student communicated clearly in written responses, but did not always use technical or specific content vocabulary and language. |
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Instructional Strategy 1 |
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Instructional Strategy 2 |
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Instructional Strategy 3 |
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Case Study 4: Angel |
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Personal Data |
Age: 13 Grade: 7 Seventh year in a U.S. school Hispanic male; born in the U.S.; has a younger brother born in Mexico who speaks some English; parents speak Spanish with minimal English; transferred from a school where he was in bilingual content classes |
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ELP Assessment Data |
· Listening: Achieved benchmark · Speaking: Achieved benchmark · Reading: Achieved benchmark · Writing: High-level skills |
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Classroom Assessment Data |
· Math Summative Assessment: Student demonstrates proficiency on items requiring computational skills and consisting of numbers, symbols, graphs, charts. Student did not achieve proficiency on word problems requiring explanation of mathematical knowledge and thinking. |
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Instructional Strategy 1 |
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Instructional Strategy 2 |
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Instructional Strategy 3 |
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Case Study 5: Thao |
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Personal Data |
Age: 17 Grade: 12 Fourth year in a U.S. school Vietnamese female; born in Vietnam; lives with multiple families; has older cousins who are fluent in English; has younger cousins who are limited in English; parents are limited in English; made Honor Society and Beta Club |
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ELP Assessment Data |
· Listening: High-level skills · Speaking: Mid-level skills · Reading: High-level skills · Writing: Mid-level skills |
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Classroom Assessment Data |
· Formal District Reading Assessment: Student achieved grade level proficiency in all areas of the assessment. · Informal Classroom Assessment in English Class: Student was unable to answer reading comprehension questions for a Shakespeare unit where they are reading Macbeth. |
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Instructional Strategy 1 |
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Instructional Strategy 2 |
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Instructional Strategy 3 |
Part 2: Reflection
References
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Complete the “TSL-565 ELL Assessment Case Studies ” template to analyze personal, ELP, and classroom assessment data for five ELL/bilingual case studies. Describe three instructional strategies appropriate for supporting the language needs of each student based on the various data provided.
In 250-350 words, reflect on how you interpreted student data using a variety of assessments and used results appropriately to make informed instructional decisions that support language learning.
Support your template with 3-5 scholarly resources.
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