Thursday, October 26, 2017

What's ELPAC?

Guess who's back?

Hopefully it didn't take you too long to guess :)

I'm back with the freshest info on English Language Development and English Learners for you. It's ELD for You and Me!

Today's topic is California's ELPAC. What is it? What happened to CELDT? Why are they changing it? When are they going to start using it?

ELPAC stands for English Language Proficiency Assessments for California and it is replacing the California English Language Development Test (CELDT) as the new way of assessing English Learners' abilities in the domains of reading, writing, listening, and speaking.

There are a couple of reasons that a change was necessary for this particular assessment.

  • The California English Language Development (ELD) Standards were adopted back in November 2012, but the CELDT wasn't changed to reflect the proficiency level descriptors used in the new standards. Instead of five levels of proficiency  (beginning, early intermediate, intermediate, early advanced, advanced) there are three: Emerging, Expanding, and Bridging. The new test will reflect this.
    • The ELD Standards were changed to provide: fewer standards (those most necessary and essential), clearer standards, and higher standards (more closely alligned with CCSS)
  • The CELDT test was administered at the beginning of the school year. By the time we received scores, they would often be almost half a school year old. This was a problem because at the beginning of the year, for placement purposes, we were using scores from the beginning of the previous school year. Scores would be over a year old and not an accurate reflection of a student's language ability. The ELPAC will be administered as a summative assessment (window from Feb-May) and we will be able to use more recent scores for placement purposes.
Basic administration facts about the ELPAC:
  • Paper-pencil assessment
  • Two separate assessments each year: Initial Assessment (IA) and Summative Assessment (SA)
  • IA shorter than the SA
  • Seven grades/grade spans: kindergarten (K), 1, 2, 3–5, 6–8, 9–10 and 11–12
  • One-on-one administration for students in K and grade 1
  • Four domains: Listening, Speaking, Reading, and Writing
  • Group administration for Listening, Reading and Writing at grades two through twelve (2–12)
  • Read-aloud by test examiner in the Listening domain at K and grades 1 and 2; recorded audio in the Listeningdomain at grades 3–12
  • One-on-one administration of Speaking items to all students; real-time scoring of Speaking items by a trained test examiner
  • All constructed-response items in the Writing domain (no multiple-choice items)
For more information, visit the ELPAC website at http://www.elpac.org.

1 comment:

  1. How does this change affect students with learning disabilities?

    ReplyDelete