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National Benchmarks
This page is part of the transcript of a presentation given by Glenn Rowley, formerly General Manager Policy Measurement and Research, of the Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority on Monday 15 September, 2003. The presentation was delivered to central and regional personnel with responsibilities in curriculum and school improvement. Government schools, Catholic Education Officers and personnel from the Association of Independent Schools were represented. The full presentation is also available as a PowerPoint file if you wish to download it:
What are National Benchmarks?Benchmarks are a set of indicators or descriptors that represent nationally agreed minimum acceptable standards for literacy and numeracy at a particular year level. 'Minimum acceptable standard' means a critical level of literacy and numeracy without which a student will have difficulty making sufficient progress at school. Benchmarks represent only the essential elements of literacy and numeracy and not the full range of the curriculum at a particular year level. Why have benchmarks?All Education Ministers have agreed that the purpose of the literacy and numeracy benchmarks is to:
Where did benchmarks come from?In March 1997 Education Ministers agreed on a new National Goal:
They also agreed on a sub-goal that:
recognising that a very small percentage of students suffering from severe disabilities may be unable to achieve the minimum standards. National Literacy and Numeracy PlanThe National Literacy and Numeracy Plan consisted of the following key elements:
The plan called for:
How is benchmarking data collected?State and Territory school authorities conduct their own literacy and numeracy tests annually, to monitor student performance against the local curriculum, across the full range of student ability. National benchmark achievement data is later derived from these results. Comparability of results obtained through the different state-based assessment programs is being achieved using an equating process. How is benchmarking data reported?Under the National Literacy and Numeracy Plan, all States and Territories have agreed to report student achievement data against the benchmarks to the Australian community through the Ministerial Council on Education, Employment, Training and Youth Affairs (MCEETYA) Annual National Report on Schooling in Australia. Reporting is in terms of achievement or non-achievement of the benchmark standards. How are benchmarks arrived at?Benchmark descriptions are generated, including:
Benchmarks are not tests. National benchmark data is gained from the tests that are conducted by educational authorities in the States and Territories. Defining BenchmarksWriting Benchmark: Year 3At the benchmark standard, students compose simple pieces of writing that make sense to the reader and show a basic understanding of the writing task. The pieces of writing contain a few ideas related to the task and topic. The ideas are usually briefly expressed. The pieces of writing show evidence of some organisation of the subject matter (for example, a simple beginning, middle and end in a story). They may also include irrelevant details, or ideas not well tied into the writing. Reading Benchmark: Year 5At the benchmark standard, students read and understand a range of texts suitable for this year level, for example chapter books, junior novels, junior reference material, magazines, newspapers and the electronic media. Texts that these students are able to read may have:
When students read and understand texts like these, they can:
Numeracy Benchmarks: Year 3Year 3 students are expected to:
How does each State measure performance against the benchmarks?Victoria administers AIM tests of literacy and numeracy every year.
Margin for ErrorThere was uncertainty in:
There is a margin for error:
Thus judgments about benchmark performance are made with less than 100 per cent confidence. Minister's Statement on improved educational outcomes"Parents/carers have a right to know exactly how their child's progress and learning performance compares with Victorian and national standards. This should be communicated to parents in clear ways and schools need to respond with revised learning strategies, where necessary." The Hon. Lynne Kosky, MP |
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