10 Florida Districts Crowdsource Assessment Tools

A group of 10 rural school districts in Northeastern Florida are joining forces to "crowdsource" their assessment tools. The 10 districts that make up the North East Florida Educational Consortium (NEFEC) have partnered with Performance Matters, a company that provides digital assessment tools, to create an assessment platform that all of the districts can use.

Florida state requirements call for all graded courses to have end-of-course (EOC) tests, a task that is both expensive and time-consuming for small school districts. So the NEFEC is using a new product from Performance Matters, called Unify, as an assessment platform that all its member districts can both create and use.

Last summer, teachers from the 10 NEFEC districts worked together to determine which Florida state standards are best suited to use on summative assessments. The Unify platform was then able to help them develop assessment blueprints that the individual districts, schools and teachers can then use as frameworks for building their own EOC tests.

"This allows teachers from our member districts to pool their resources to author, review, approve and share high-quality assessment content, which is a huge benefit in terms of efficiency and cost savings," said Adam G. Azula, NEFEC program development and training specialist.

So far, the districts have developed assessment tools for 300 courses. The same group that initiated the process last summer will review the content this month and begin using it for the end-of-the-school year tests in May.

"This collaboration makes it affordable to develop EOC tests in all courses, even in a small rural district like ours," said Marcie M. Tucker, a teacher support colleague in the Union County School District. "Everything we need to create an EOC test is there in one place, just a click away."

About the Author

Michael Hart is a Los Angeles-based freelance writer and the former executive editor of THE Journal.

Featured

  •  classroom scene with students gathered around a laptop showing a virtual tour interface

    Discovery Education Announces Spring Lineup of Free Virtual Field Trips

    This Spring, Discovery Education is collaborating with partners such as Warner Bros., DC Comics, National Science Foundation, NBA, and more to present a series of free virtual field trips for K-12 students.

  • glowing padlock shape integrated into a network of interconnected neon-blue lines and digital nodes, set against a soft, blurred geometric background

    3 in 4 Administrators Expect a Security Incident to Impact Their School This Year

    In an annual survey from education identity platform Clever, 74% of administrators admitted that they believe a security incident is likely to impact their school system in the coming year. That's up from 71% who said the same last year.

  • horizontal stack of U.S. dollar bills breaking in half

    ED Abruptly Cancels ESSER Funding Extensions

    The Department of Education has moved to close the door on COVID relief funding for schools, declaring that "extending deadlines for COVID-related grants, which are in fact taxpayer funds, years after the COVID pandemic ended is not consistent with the Department’s priorities and thus not a worthwhile exercise of its discretion."

  • pattern of icons for math and reading, including a pi symbol, calculator, and open book

    HMH Launches Personalized Path Solution

    Adaptive learning company HMH has introduced HMH Personalized Path, a K-8 ELA and math product that combines intervention curriculum, adaptive practice, and assessment for students of all achievement levels.