Literacy assessment |
This includes basic and higher-level reading, writing, and spelling skills, listed roughly in developmental order.
Reading
- Print awareness—recognizing that books have a front and a back and that the direction of words is from left to right; recognizing where words on the page start and stop; recognizing word boundaries; recognizing environmental signs/logos
- Phonological awareness—including phonemic awareness; rhyming, blending, and segmenting; manipulating syllables and sounds
- Alphabet knowledge—including naming alphabetic letters from A to Z
- Sound—symbol correspondence—knowing that letters have sounds; knowing the sounds for corresponding letters and letter combinations
- Reading decoding—using sound—symbol knowledge to segment and blend sounds in grade-level words; reading decoding may be assessed with tasks that involve nonword or pseudoword reading
- Word recognition —the ability to identify words when reading, either through word decoding or sight word identification; word recognition must be assessed with tasks that involve real words
- Reading automaticity —reading isolated words rapidly and accurately
- Reading fluency—reading connected text smoothly and accurately with appropriate intonation and without frequent or significant pausing
- Knowledge of derivational morphology (prefixes and suffixes that change the part of speech or meaning of a word)
- Knowledge of inflectional morphology (changes in word form that mark tense, number, possession, or comparison)
- Knowledge of orthographic patterns of irregularly spelled words
- Knowledge of variations in text structures and genres (e.g., narratives vs. expository text) and different purposes of text (to persuade, inform, or entertain)
- Reading comprehension
- Retelling or summarizing a passage while maintaining the essential meaning
- Answering questions about a passage to demonstrate the following:
- Knowledge of multiple-meaning words
- Knowledge of age-appropriate vocabulary
- Knowledge of synonyms and antonyms
- Knowledge of figurative language (e.g., idioms, metaphors, proverbs)
- Ability to understand complex sentences
- Ability to make inferences and integrate meaning within text
- Using strategies to facilitate comprehension (e.g., skimming, using end-of-chapter questions to guide reading, rereading, and taking notes)
- Using strategies to demonstrate comprehension of a reading passage
- Using strategies for managing different styles of reading (e.g., reading for overview, critical reading for complete meaning and interpretation, activating background knowledge to facilitate comprehension)
Writing
- Making marks on paper
- Demonstrating intent to communicate meaning in writing
- Printing all letters of the alphabet
- Printing first and last name
- Labeling pictures
- Producing conventional text via copying dictation
- Demonstrating fluency with text production via handwriting and/or keyboarding
- Writing process
- Planning (e.g., brainstorming, story maps, webbing) and organizing, composing, reflection
- Drafting (e.g., refer to planning notes and revise during drafting process)
- Revising and editing content, spelling, and conventions
- Publishing and presenting to meet the needs of specific audiences
- Writing product
- Fluency (number of words produced in a specified time period)
- Vocabulary and lexical diversity
- Word choice
- Word inflection in sentence contexts
- Use of multisyllabic words
- Evidence of morphemic awareness in word choice and spelling
- Sentence formulation (e.g., diversity of sentence types; using end punctuation as evidence of concepts of sentence)
- Grammaticality of sentences (coding for correct versus incorrect sentences)
- Sentence complexity
- Code for simple versus complex sentences
- Calculate clause density ratios
- Calculate mean length of T-unit
- Ability to stay true to assigned genre
- Ability to ensure completeness, organization, and cohesiveness
- Writing conventions (capitalization, punctuation, and paragraph formations)
Spelling
- Using one to three letters to spell words (e.g., P for purple, TN for train, or PTE for pretty)
- Spelling words as they sound (e.g., LETL for little or EGL for eagle)
- Knowing different conventions for encoding the same sound
- Recognizing and correcting spelling errors
- Not avoiding particular words due to uncertainty in how to spell them
- Demonstrating understanding of the phonemic, morphological, and orthographic components of spelling in context (see linguistic analysis of spelling errors)
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