Newsletter #364: Achievement Tests - Archived Online.

For 32 years The Teaching Home has provided families information,
inspiration, and encouragement from a distinctively Christian perspective.

Co-Editors: Veteran Home-School Sisters, Sue Welch and Cindy Short

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 Past Issues 
 

Newsletter #363
10 Ways To Get the Most from Homeschool Events with Links to 2013 State Conventions

Newsletter #362
Character Development with Links to Freebies (Unit Studies, e-Books, and Activities)



St. Patrick's Day
& Irish-American Heritage Month

St. Patrick's Day presents an opportunity to teach your children the true story of Patrick of Ireland, who at the age of 16, was kidnapped by pirates and taken to Ireland as a slave. After he found God while herding pigs and escaping, he returned to his home in Roman Brittan, and later returned to Ireland as a humble and brave missionary!

We have included many excellent resources, a free unit study, and free e-books below.

 •  Free 5-day St. Patrick Unit Study from Knowledge Quest. Includes: biography about St. Patrick, research, and report; science, nature, and craft activities; timeline, mapping, and lapbook activities; and an Irish dinner.

 •  Free 23-Page E-book from Living Books Curriculum, St. Patrick's Day Holiday Helper. Includes: a biography, rare illustrations for picture study, a recipe for soda bread, and an essay you and your children won't want to miss, "The Real St. Patrick," which begins:

    "Most American Christians are unaware of the true story of St. Patrick. He was one of the greatest missionaries of all time, evangelizing all of Ireland, and then training up leaders who went to a Europe that had fallen into the Dark Ages after the collapse of the Roman Empire. Patrick's disciples re-evangelized all of Europe."

 •  Free British Isles Song from Audio Memory.

 •  Read more about Patrick in the online article from Joyful Heart, "Will the Real St. Patrick Please Stand Up?," the story of St. Patrick's life taken from his Confession, which concludes:

    "By the time of his death, Patrick had baptized tens of thousands and established hundreds of churches throughout Ireland.

    Within a century, this once pagan land became predominately Christian, possessing such a vigorous faith that Ireland in turn sent out missionaries to Scotland, England, France, Germany, and Belgium.

    "As an old man, Patrick looked back in awe. 'Those who never had a knowledge of God but worshipped idols and things impure, have now become a people of the Lord, sons of God.'"

 •  Read a shorter account (on AnniesHomepage.com) for children of Patrick's life and how he used the shamrock to explain the Trinity.

 •  St. Patrick's Breastplate: Read this poetic prayer, listen to and see it sung in an Irish setting, and study vocabulary, geography, and comprehension questions.

 •  Free eBook: Confession of St. Patrick. Read this brief story of St. Patrick's life, told through his own eyes.

 •  Find More information at Love To Learn Place.


March Is Irish-American
Heritage Month

In March we acknowledge the contributions of Irish-Americans to our nation.

You may want to celebrate with an Irish meal:

 •  Bake Irish soda bread.

 •  Make Dublin Coddle (an easy and hearty stove-top casserole).

 •  More St. Patrick's Day recipes.

 •  Book: How the Irish Saved Civilization by Thomas Cahill. Shows how great an influence St. Patrick was on the subsequent history of civilization.

    "Not only did he bring Christianity to Ireland, he instilled a sense of literacy and learning that would create the conditions that allowed Ireland to become "the isle of saints and scholars" – and thus preserve Western culture while Europe was being overrun by barbarians."



Common Standardized
Achievement Tests

"Standardized test publishers regulate the use of their tests closely in order to protect the reliability of their norms.  Thus, they do not sell tests directly to the public, including homeschool parents.

"Christian textbook publishers, curriculum suppliers, and correspondence schools make standardized tests available to homeschools in a variety of ways.  In order to be able to buy the tests, these groups must guarantee the test publishers that certain conditions are met in administering the tests." – from Home Educators Association of Virginia's very informative website.

Following are the most commonly used standardized achievement tests.  For more information about each test, follow the links below.

Check with your state or local homeschool organization for local sources of tests and testing services.

1.  California Achievement Test
This test contains more traditional values and can be administered by parents.

    The CAT/5 Survey and the California Achievement Test, 5th Edition - Complete Battery are available from Family Learning Organization

    The 1970 Edition (more demanding than recent editions) is available from Christian Liberty Academy School System.

2.  Iowa Test of Basic Skills (ITBS)
Available from Bob Jones University Press Testing and Evaluation.

3.  Stanford Achievement Tests (SAT)
(Not to be confused with the SAT college entrance exam.)  Available from Bob Jones University Press Testing and Evaluation.

4.  Personalized Achievement Summary System (PASS)  This test for grades 3-8 was developed specifically for homeschoolers.  Parents may administer this untimed test in their own home.  A pretest places your child in the correct test level.  Available from Hewitt Homeschooling Resources.

5.  Comprehensive Test of Basic Skills Terra Nova  Available from Seton Testing Services.

6.  Basic Achievement Skills Inventory (BASI)  Available from Family Learning Organization.



Checklist for
the Day of the Test

  Plan ahead for a peaceful, unhurried evening and morning before the test.

  Check directions to the testing site and plan to leave and arrive early to avoid stress before the test.

  Make sure your child sleeps well, eats a healthy breakfast, and gets enough water to drink.

  Be prepared with necessary tools such as extra pencils or calculators if allowed.

  If this is your child's first test, you may want to be present in the back of the room for at least part of the time to relieve his anxiety.

  Be sure your child understands what to do if he needs to go to the bathroom during the test.  (also have him go right before the test.)

  Avoid conversations between other students and your child before a test; anxiety is contagious.

  Pray with your child that he will remember what he has learned and do his best.  Thank the Lord that He promised to always be with your child.

The spiritual lessons and experiences of trusting the Lord in everyday circumstances and working under pressure can be a much greater life-long benefit than the actual test itself.





In the News

Homeschooling and Evolution

Excerpted from a post by Ken Ham, president/CEO and founder of Answers in Genesis–U.S. and the Creation Museum.

Recently an article appeared in the Atlantic about certain Homeschoolers wanting what they called more 'science' in their textbooks. But sadly, by 'science,' they don't mean observational science, they mean historical or origins science – and they mean the historical or origins science of the evolutionists and old earth beliefs.

In other words, there are those in the homeschool movement who want textbooks to promote the pagan religion of evolution and millions of years as true – which will ultimately lead kids away from the truth.

And the point I want to make again that we've made many times is that Christians accepting millions of years or evolution and millions of years is not a salvation issue, but it is a gospel issue and it is an authority issue.

A gospel issue because millions of years means sin is not the cause of death, disease, suffering or bloodshed. It means sin is not the cause of the groaning world in Romans 8:22. It means God is responsible for death, disease and suffering, not man’s sin!

An authority issue because one does not get millions of years or evolution from God’s Word – such beliefs come from outside God's Word and then are used by compromising Christians to undermine the truth of God's Word and thus undermine its authority.

We are losing the coming generations from the church, and the major reason is that these coming generations have been led to doubt and eventually not believe the Word of God. The devil has used the same method of Genesis 3:1– "Did God Really Say."

Homeschoolers certainly need to convey different views about origins and other issues in their teaching – but to do so in the context of teaching God's Word as truth and compromising views as error!



The Standardized Tests Connection: Science and the Christian Worldview

Steve Deckard, Ed.D., Assistant Professor, Institute for Creation Research states, "One aspect of education where evolutionary theory has had a stranglehold is standardized testing. This is especially true for standardized science achievement tests.

"These tests have been written from a secular, humanistic, and evolutionary world view. Because of this inherent bias, young people educated in evangelical Christian private or home schools which teach creation science are at a distinct disadvantage."

Inge Cannon, of HomeSchool Transcripts, observes, "As the culture moves in the direction of secularism and away from any demonstration of Biblical values, Christians will find the gap between what they are teaching and what the tests measure to grow increasingly wider."

Inge goes on to recommend that homeschoolers:

1. Take only the basic battery (reading, math, language arts) and avoid the additional tests that make up the complete battery (science, social studies, and at lower levels, the environment) if they must take a standardized achievement test.

2. Strive to change state homeschool laws to reflect this option or to allow for other forms of evaluation.




Save $20 on Your HSLDA Membership




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Use this link and discount group number 299142 for $20 off your membership fee.  (Be sure to enter the discount group number 299142 in the "Discount Group Code" area, not the "Coupon Code" area.)



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Sunnyside Up




Logical Error

Recently while Dad was cutting our 6-year-old's hair, he had a perfect opportunity to see what Mark was learning in home school.

Dad and Mark began discussing that week's science lesson. Mark had learned that mammals are vertebrates and that they have hair.

"If you shave off all my hair, I'll be an invertebrate," he concluded.

Submitted by Nanette S., Washington.

Send your humorous anecdote to publisher@teachinghome.com.



Peace with God

1.  God loves you.

For God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish, but have eternal life. (John 3:16)

2.  Man is separated from God by sin.

For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God. (Rom. 3:23)  For the wages of sin is death. (Rom. 6:23)

3.  The death of Jesus Christ in our place is God's only provision for man's sin.

He (Jesus Christ) was delivered over to death for our sins and was raised to life for our justification. (Romans 4:25)

4.  We must personally receive Jesus Christ as Savior and Lord.

But as many as received Him, to them He gave the right to become children of God, even to those who believe in His name. (John 1:12)

For by grace you have been saved through faith; and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of God; not as a result of works, that no one should boast. (Eph. 2:8, 9)



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Listen to beautiful traditional, sacred, and inspirational conservative Christian music (commercial free!) when you tune in to these online stations:

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 •  Old Christian Radio



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 In This Issue 

Achievement Tests:
Help Your Child Get
His Best Score!


   •  Why Have Your Child Take an Achievement Test?
   •  What Achievement Tests Can and Cannot Do
   •  3 Ways To Prepare Your Child for a Test
   •  7 Test-Taking Skills To Teach Your Child
   •  Interpreting Test Scores
   •  Applying the Results


 Sidebar 

   •  St. Patrick's Day & Irish-American Heritage Month
       Includes Resources and Freebies (Unit Study, eBooks)
   •  Common Standardized Achievement Tests
   •  Checklist for the Day of the Test
   •  In the News: Homeschooling and Evolution
       Includes Excerpts from a Post by Ken Ham
       and the Standardized Tests Connection

 Upcoming Topics 

   •  5-Day Easter Unit Study

 Recommended Resources 

   •  Hewitt Homeschooling: PASS Test for Home Schoolers
   •  Sing 'n Learn: Information Review & Test-Taking Skills


Greetings,

It's time to prepare for your children's yearly achievement tests.

We trust that the information in this newsletter will be helpful to you in this area of your child's education.


Why Have Your Child Take an Achievement Test?

Homeschool parents who work closely with their children every day usually know quite accurately where their children are academically and in many other areas.

Standardized achievement tests, however, can affirm both your child's learning progress and your teaching ability.  This objective evaluation can encourage both of you, as well as provide confirmation of your success to other family members, friends, and the state, where required.

Contact your state homeschool organization or Home School Legal Defense Association to check your own state's laws and confirm:

 1.  If your child is required to be tested and at what ages or grade levels.

 2.  What tests are acceptable and who can administer the test.

 3.  If and when you need to report your child's test scores.

 4.  If there is another method of evaluation permitted, such as a portfolio of your child's work or an educator's appraisal.


What Achievement Tests Can and Cannot Do

Remember that a standardized achievement test cannot measure the sum total of your child's progress.  It is only one assessment tool with limited value.


What Achievement Tests Can Do

1.  Measure your child's ability to recall certain facts, basic skills, and concepts common to the grade tested.

2.  Compare your child's scores with other students' scores.

3.  Assess your child's year-to-year development of learning, if the same test is used for several years.

4.  Help you determine your child's academic strengths and weaknesses, as well as the effectiveness of your curriculum, teaching methods, or emphasis, when results are combined with your own observations.


What Achievement Tests Can't Do

1.  Tell you if your child has achieved academically to the level of his ability.

2.  Measure your child's intelligence or the many other skills and abilities not on the test.

3.  Replace your own informed evaluation of your child's knowledge and skills, gained from your daily observation of his work and more thorough and frequent review questions.

May the Lord richly bless your family for His glory.


Cordially,
The Pat Welch Family, Publishers
Pat, Sue, Heather, Holly, and Brian

The Teaching Home is a homeschool, family-run business operated in our home since 1980.


• Untimed   • Low Stress
• Parent Administrated   • In Home

? Hewitt Homeschooling Offers
The PASS Test for Grades 3-8

The PASS Test (Personalized
Achievement Summary System)
was developed for home
schoolers.  It includes many great features in addition to being parent- administrated, low-stress,
and untimed.  Only $36

PASS is officially accepted in AK, GA, HI, NY, NC, and WA.
Some states have no specific testing requirements.  Also check
with your independent school district.


Get complete information & order on our website
or call 1-800-348-1750, M-Th, 8:00-4:00 Pacific time


www.hewitthomeschooling.com



3 Ways To Prepare Your Child for a Test

It is wise to prepare your child for a test and teach him some basic test-taking skills.


1.  Teach Subject Matter

The desire to do well on a year-end test can provide added accountability and motivation for learning throughout your school year.

You will choose the material you teach your child based on more important criteria than passing a test.  In fact, much of the most vital information you want your child to learn will not appear on a standardized achievement test.

(See Newsletter #313 about setting spiritual, academic, social, and life skills goals and objectives.)

However, be sure to include all information the test will cover in your curriculum.

•  Create or buy study aids for teaching and reviewing key facts and information that needs to be memorized such as multiplication/division flashcards, checklists, outlines, and summaries.

•  Check out the audio resources carried by Sing 'n Learn that help your children learn and review basic information.


2.  Provide Perspective

•  Don't overplay the test's importance.

•  Help your child approach his test with confidence and a positive attitude of doing his best.

•  Explain that this test is to show how much he knows and that he is not expected to know everything on the test, although he might know most of it.


3.  Administer Practice Tests

A practice test will increase your child's self-confidence and reduce his test anxiety.

•  Use a practice test to familiarize your child with testing formats, directions, strategies, and sample questions (not exact questions) similar to those found in the test.


Benefits of Practice Tests

A reader writes, "I have found it not only helpful, but almost essential to go through practice tests with our children well in advance of the test itself.

"We always find something just a little different from what we studied, and this gives us time to prepare.

"Two different tests are even better, for the same reason, and help children become more at home with different wording and formats."


Sources for Practice Tests

Practice tests are available for various standardized tests at different grade levels from the following suppliers.

•  "Achieving Peak Performance" by Curt and Jenny Bumcrot.

•  "Test for Success" and "Better Test Scores" Bob Jones University Press Testing & Evaluation

•  "Spectrum Test Prep" from Timberdoodle Company

•  Online State Practice Tests or sample questions


Selecting a Testing Administer

A reader writes, "Our children do very well in a private testing situation in the administrator's home.

"Ask your local Christian homeschool support group leaders who is qualified to administer standardized tests in your area.

"Arrange a brief get-acquainted interview in the test-giver's home.  Look for someone who is patient and kind with young children and who believes in home education.  Then make an appointment for the test.

"Have your child take his test early enough to retake it if necessary after you see the results."



Help Your Child Review Information,
Boost Test-Taking Skills, and Get His Best Score

 Click on links for descriptions, samples, and to order. 

  7 Test-Taking Strategies DVDs that Really Work!  

Rock 'n Learn Educational DVDs have won 100+ awards.  With great visuals and music, they are excellent for both auditory and visual learners, grades 4-5 and up. No evolution. About one hour each. Some DVDs include a practice test and/or free download- able study materials.
Life Science   • Earth Science   • Physical ScienceHuman Body
Reading ComprehensionMath Word ProblemsWriting Strategies


  ACT & SAT Prep – Save 21%!  

ACT & College Preparation Course for the Christian Student.
50 devotion-based lessons include content and test-taking skills.

SAT & College Preparation Course for the Christian Student.  Emphasizes critical thinking and essay writing. Includes spiritual disciplines of Bible reading, study, meditation, memory, and prayer.


Sing ’n Learn
700+ Audio Products Covering Every Subject Area!
www.singnlearn.com / 1-800-460-1973


7 Test-Taking Skills To Teach Your Child

There are specific skills and strategies involved in taking tests that can help your child do his best.


1.  Directions

•  Always listen to and read the directions carefully; don't assume that you already know them.  Sometimes they change only slightly, but significantly, from one section to the next.

•  Ask the instructor to explain any directions that you do not understand.

•  Be sure you know how and where to mark the answers, especially if they are on a separate sheet.  Keep checking to make sure you are marking the numbered answer space that matches the numbered question and for the correct test section (e.g., spelling, math computations).

•  Mark answers carefully and neatly, filling in the blanks completely so that it will be graded correctly.

•  Erase a wrong answer thoroughly when changing your answer.


2.  Wording

•  Watch out for wording such as "Which of the following is not true?" or for answers that sound or look similar.

•  On a true or false question, watch for the words "never," "always," "only," and "best."


3.  Morale

•  Relax by taking several slow, deep breaths and changing your position from time to time.

•  Remember that you know a lot of information and that you are doing your best to show what you know.

•  Ask the Lord to help you remember what you learned and do your best.


4.  Pacing

•  Since most tests are timed, don't get bogged down on a question that you can't answer or are unsure about.

•  Answer the items you are sure of first.  This builds confidence, and you won't miss points on easy questions by running out of time.

•  Skip difficult questions and place an "x" by the number of the question in the margin on the answer sheet.

•  If you are not sure of a question, answer the best you can and mark them with a "?" in the margin.

•  When you have answered all the other questions, answer the questions with an "x" in the margin and recheck questions you marked with a "?".


5.  Choosing Answers

•  If you need to, look back at the reading selection to check facts and ideas.

•  Try each answer in the blank to help you decide which one sounds right.

•  Sometimes on questions where you are to find mistakes, none are to be found.

•  On some questions, two answers can be correct and you must choose the answer that includes them both.

•  When you are not sure, eliminate answers you know are incorrect and take your best guess among the rest.  Some of your guesses will be right.


6.  Math

•  On arithmetic test items, do a quick estimate with rounded-off numbers.  This will help you avoid "silly" mistakes and may even help you locate the only possible answer.

•  When you copy a math problem onto scratch paper, line up the numbers carefully and double check your copying.

•  Always check subtraction problems by reversing operations.

•  If you have time, check equations by substituting your solution for the unknown and check other math problems by reversing operations.


7.  Timing

•  Use all the time allotted for the test; review your test if you finish early.

•  Recheck the directions, questions, and your answers.

•  Do not change answers unless they are obviously wrong.

•  Don't panic when students start handing in their papers. There's no reward for being the first.


Additional Online Resource

See many more test taking tips at testtakingtips.com including:

 •  General Test Taking Tips (test preparation, at the test, and post test), and Specific Test Taking Tips (multiple choice, essay, true/false, oral, short answer, quantitative/math, and open book).

 •  Reducing Test Taking Anxiety

 •  Test Taking Tips for Parents, provide suggestions for parents to help their kids improve their test taking skills.



Interpreting Test Scores

Glossary of Terms

These basic terms will help you understand your child's test results.  For definitions of additional terms see Pearson's Glossary of Measurement Terms.


Types of Tests

•  Criterion-referenced tests compare a student's performance to set criteria, such as state standards, rather than to the performance of other students.

•  Norm-referenced tests compare a student's performance to a national reference group of students at the same grade.

•  Standards-based tests assess students' knowledge and skills in relation to the state content standards.


National Percentile Rank

Percentile does not refer to the percent of questions that were answered correctly.

Percentile ranks individuals within a group on a scale of 1 to 99 with 50 being average.  A percentile rank of 60 means the student scored better than 60 percent of the other students in his comparison (norm) group, and 40 percent scored as well as, or better than, he did.


Stanine

This score shows a comparison of student scores, from a low of 1 to a high of 9.  It may be thought of as groupings of percentile ranks.


Grade Equivalent

This is the most commonly misunderstood term in interpreting test scores.

The first digit represents the year of the grade level and the digit after the decimal represents the month of that grade level.

The grade equivalent is not an estimate of the grade in which your child should be placed! Rather it shows that the score your child achieved was the same as the average score made by students at that grade level who took the same test.

For example a 2nd grade student scoring 4.7 on a math subtest, scored the same as the average 4th grade, 7th month student did who took the 2nd grade test.  It does not mean that the 2nd grade student can do 4th grade math work.

Read online article by BJU Press, "What do Tests Really Tell?," for more information and examples.



Applying the Results

Bob Jones University Press presents the following suggestions.

If your child receives a low score, always compare that information with your own observations.  If the low score is consistent with your personal observation and evaluation of your child's skill, develop a plan to strengthen this skill.

Your plan could include:

 •  Checking to see if the skill was taught

 •  Re-teaching the skill from a different approach

 •  Checking curriculum content and methodology

 •  Evaluating the effectiveness of your teaching methods.


Reading Comprehension

If reading comprehension (inferences, analyses, interpretations) scores are low, but mental ability and facts scores are higher, make sure your teaching and curriculum include questions that require interpretation, thought, inference, and other higher levels of thinking as well as literal-recall questions.

See Newsletters #23, 25-26, 28-30 for ways to teach higher-level reading comprehension skills.


Math Problem Solving

If math problem-solving scores appear low, make sure your teaching and curriculum include visualization, meaning, and understanding in addition to facts and drills.  Your curriculum should provide adequate opportunities for practice in solving story problems.

See Newsletter #38 for many ideas to use in teaching math and how to solve story problems.


Math Computation

If math computation scores are low, check for your child's command of the basic facts and his understanding of mathematic procedures.

Also, check for student carelessness while working problems and note how many questions were not answered at all, indicating your child may need to increase his speed as well as his accuracy.

 •  Use "Holey Cards" (cards with holes through which to write the answers onto paper under the cards) for timed speed drills of addition, subtraction, division, and multiplication facts.

 •  Drill facts in related combinations of addition/subtraction or multiplication/division.  Use triangular Three-Way Math Cards for addition/subtraction and multiplication/division or use ordinary flashcards.

 •  Use the power of music to teach addition, subtraction, division, and multiplication facts with Math Facts to Classical Music from Sing 'n Learn.


Spelling

If spelling scores are low, check for evidence that your child is convinced that spelling is important.  (This conviction is developed by emphasizing correct spelling in all subject areas.)

Your methodology should teach your child how to spell using spelling principles, rather than just memorizing word lists.  Employ a variety of ways to use each lesson's words over the whole week of study.

See Newsletter #32 for information and ideas in teaching spelling, as well as Sing 'n Learn's Spelling to Classical Music.


Maps, Diagrams, References, and Study Skills

If these skills are low, check for whether you are taking time to read and interpret maps, graphs, and tables in texts and other sources.

Check that you are teaching library, reference, and dictionary skills.


Language Usage and Expression

If aspects of language usage and expression are low, make sure you are teaching writing skills and requiring frequent written work.  The proofing of writing assignments is excellent preparation for these tests.

See Newsletters #36-37 for tips on how to teach writing.