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When a “sloppy copy” is good enough: Results of a state writing assessment
Authors:Lindy   Keith   
Affiliation:aUniversity of Colorado at Colorado Springs, College of Education, COH6, 1420 Austin Bluffs Parkway, P.O. Box 7150, Colorado Springs, CO 80933-7150, United States;bOregon Research Institute, 1715 Franklin Blvd, Eugene, OR 97403-1983, United States
Abstract:Students in grades 5 and 8 completed a state writing assessment, and their first and final drafts on the extended writing portion of the test were copied and scored using the state writing rubric. The rubric consisted of three primary traits: Content and Organization, Style and Fluency, and Language Use. Scorers were blind to the study purpose and scored either a student's first or final draft. No significant difference was found between the first and final drafts written by students in special education at both grade levels. Likewise, no significant difference was found for the writing of general education students in grade 8. A significant difference was found, however, between first and final drafts written by fifth-grade students in general education. Cross tabulations conducted at grades 5 and 8 revealed that over 50% of the first drafts received the same score or a better score than what was earned on the final draft.
Keywords:Writing assessment   Statewide assessment   Special education   On-demand writing   Writing draft
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