Monitoring Student Progress in Reading
While there is no form of national testing in New Zealand, system level monitoring is used to provide an overview of achievement at two points of schooling: Year 4 and Year 8. The National Monitoring Study of Student Achievement (NMSSA), a national monitoring project aligned to the New Zealand Curriculum, was implemented in 2012 to replace the National Education Monitoring Project, which ran from 1995 to 2009. As part of its program of assessment, reading comprehension in English was assessed at Years 4 and 8 in 2014.
In the school sector, state and state integrated schools are required to have assessment policies in accordance with the National Administration Guidelines, a set of expectations published by the Ministry of Education for boards of trustees through school principals and teachers.57 One of these guidelines states that schools should gather information that is sufficiently comprehensive to enable the progress and achievement of students to be evaluated.
Specifically, the guidelines require schools to monitor student progress and achievement using a range of assessment practices giving priority to literacy and numeracy. Schools also are required to report to students in Years 1 to 8 and their parents on their progress and achievement in relation to national standards.58
National Standards (for English medium settings) and Ngā Whanaketanga Rumaki Māori (for Māori medium settings) are underpinned by assessment for learning principles and practice and rely on teachers making overall professional judgments about their students in relation to the standards, using multiple sources of formal and informal information.59 Furthermore, the Ministry of Education does not mandate the use of any particular assessment tool, although a number of assessment tools—including norm referenced tools—are available to teachers. Additionally, in 2015, the Ministry of Education released the Progress and Consistency Tool to support (English medium) teachers in English medium settings in making judgments (referred to as Overall Teacher Judgments) of student progress and achievement against the National Standards.60,61 Exhibit 5 summarizes the range of assessment tools and tasks that are available to teachers as part of their assessment practice.
Exhibit 5: Examples of Assessment Tools for Monitoring Individual Student Progress in Reading
Assessment Tool | Year Level | Description |
Running Records and Pūkete/Pānui Haere62 |
Years 1 to 3 |
|
Burt Word Reading Test (New Zealand Revision)63 | Years 2 to 9 |
|
The Supplementary Test of Achievement in Reading (STAR) Test64 | Years 3 to 9 |
|
Progressive Achievement Tests (PATs)65 in Reading | Years 4 to 10 |
|
e-Assessment Tools for Teaching and Learning (e-AsTTLe)66 | Years 4 to 12 |
|
The announcement of Mātaiako (the Māori Medium Assessment Tools and Items Programme) in 2011 is addressing the need for quality assessment resources in Māori medium settings to report on progress as articulated by Ngā Whanaketanga Rumaki Māori. One example is the development of Kaiaka Reo: Reo-ā-Waha Ki Te Motu Māori Oral Language Proficiency Progressions.67