posts from hell
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Ok, thanks. Some of us are curious to learn more about that. Can anyone provide a link to that information?
What information?
Ok, thanks. Some of us are curious to learn more about that. Can anyone provide a link to that information?
noJust to clarify PFH- you are saying that kids with IEP's in the mainstream don't count for their scores on state testing?
Can you show us something to support your assertion?
Are you certain that includes mainstreamed DHH children, or does it include DHH kids who are in a self contained Sp Ed class?
Not only that - I can imagine many other scenarios where they have to cull the scores of even a normal student.
I was playing devil's advocate. I personally think we have to have a standard curriculum because, well, frankly, we gotta start somewhere.
I personally do think English is an useful thing to learn, but then again I also think that trigonometry is an useful thing to learn, too. I think people who put down English in this thread are trying to make others see that English isn't all that. I think they are trying to show that just because it can be useful, doesn't mean it is important.
I was trying to look at it from another perspective: comparing English to other subjects. I see that learning English is similar to learning math. It's very useful (I'll even go so far to say.. IMPORTANT *gasp*) to have a basic knowledge of both subjects in America. However, at some point, learning more of it (English or Math) will be useless for most people. And learning more of it will be useful for some people.
And one can easily be fine without math at all in life, right? Couldn't the same be said for English?
Berry's idea of an individualized education is great on paper, but I don't really see that happening, especially when there's so many extracurricular activities that can be utilized to encourage and further one's interest.
Plus, isn't that what college is for?
I know I wouldn't allow my theoretical kid to completely focus on the one interest in his life....
Football.
Is that a bad thing to do?
jillio said:Actually, the test are modified given the mandates of the IEP. If they need to have instructions signed....they are signed. If the scale of the font needs to be 24....then it is 24. If the child is blind do you expect them to fill in the blank. No, of course not. They also have what is alternative testing. This is for the child who legitimately can not take the "standard" test, yet their scores are counted and the material required to learn remains the same.
And if I have so much to learn....please teach me.
I live in a community that could give a rats ...... whether or not the Deaf children are educated....and this would include the deaf.
You are confused regarding the standardization of testing. Simply modifying a standardized test for a purpose for which it is not intended lacks just as much validity as using the original test for the purpose for which it is not intended. Just signing instructions does not increase the validity of scores obtained on subtests, the weight of the scoring, or the overall score.
That is the simple explanation. I can give you more details regarding the processses of constructing parallel forms of a test, different weightings according to different populations, and the standards that have to be met in doing that, but I need to know that you can at least understand the basics before I waste time with giving you a graduate level lecture in statistics and psychometrics.
Who said you had so much to learn? I think that was Shel talking to Deafguy. Forget who you were logged on as?
Wirelessly posted
are you really going around accusing everyone who doesn't agree with you of being me?
Wirelessly posted
are you really going around accusing everyone who doesn't agree with you of being me?
jillio said:Wirelessly posted
are you really going around accusing everyone who doesn't agree with you of being me?
Nope. Just the ones that are. Wanna discuss the topic some more?
Wirelessly posted
gma has been posting here since 2009. Why is this your first time deciding it was me?
oh, and for my opinion on the subject, i think no child left behind is complete crap and needs to be scrapped and we need real educational reform.
Wirelessly posted
gma has been posting here since 2009. Why is this your first time deciding it was me?
oh, and for my opinion on the subject, i think no child left behind is complete crap and needs to be scrapped and we need real educational reform.
jillio said:Wirelessly posted
gma has been posting here since 2009. Why is this your first time deciding it was me?
oh, and for my opinion on the subject, i think no child left behind is complete crap and needs to be scrapped and we need real educational reform.
See, the very same pattern starts all over again.
And regarding the use of standardized testing?
Wirelessly posted
on who? For what purpose? And which tests?
for example, my daughter's school may use a particular language test to assess her language. They then repeat the same test a year later to see what kind of language progress she has made, in what areas and where her strengths and weakeness lie. We then use those results to build goals for her IEP.
that would, to me, be an appropriate use of a standardized test.
jillio said:Wirelessly posted
on who? For what purpose? And which tests?
for example, my daughter's school may use a particular language test to assess her language. They then repeat the same test a year later to see what kind of language progress she has made, in what areas and where her strengths and weakeness lie. We then use those results to build goals for her IEP.
that would, to me, be an appropriate use of a standardized test.
Is that a test that has been standardized on the deaf population? What is the population used to norm it? What construct are they testing? What instrument are you referring to? It may not even be a standardized test.
If you can't answer those questions, you don't know whether it is the appropriate use of testing or not.
Wirelessly posted
it is normed on hearing children, because they believe that deaf kids can acheive english language equal to hearing children, so that is the goal. But the test did examine four additional populations including children with language disorders, autism, develpmental delays and hearing loss.
Wirelessly posted
can you give me information on testing that is normed on deaf kids for receptive and expressive spoken english? I have been told that the tests that were used in the past in those areas show very poor language skills.