Literacy Data is Essential to Supporting Your Students’ Skill Development
This fall has been like no other! You’ve been met with many challenges to provide quality and engaging instruction under less than ideal circumstances. While the challenges have been great, there has been an incredible effort to continue implementing practices and using tools to create high-quality literacy education for students this fall.
Already this school year, there have been over 10,000 PALS-K assessments completed! We know from the over 500 weekly conversations the PALS hotline team has had with educators this fall, educators are bringing positivity, proactive thinking, ingenuity and integrity to their interactions and instruction with students. You have shown a strong commitment to learning all you can about students’ early skills in order to support their growth across the year. Families, teachers, schools, and divisions are showing remarkable fortitude as we all seek to focus on what is most important to support young learners where they are.
One of the most important things you have committed to this fall is gathering data on students’ literacy skills. Many of your students may have had fewer opportunities to engage in early literacy activities and instruction last spring due to disruptions caused by the pandemic. Gathering information at the beginning of the year is critical to help inform decisions about how best to support learning and monitor progress. Effectively and efficiently organizing instructional time will help ensure that young students’ literacy needs are met.
Visibility is Key
Keep in mind these three key points to ensure that the PALS data you collect is used most effectively to support young learners:
- PALS is not a test that students pass or fail. A focus on skills and patterns of performance is critical to effectively supporting students.
- Schools and divisions receive incentive funding to support early intervention for students falling below the PALS Summed Score Benchmark. These are not the only children who may be vulnerable learners.
- All students benefit from intentional, targeted support within the classroom environment. This is one of the most important ways to help all children.
Helpful Tools
As you think about supporting students across the continuum, we have a few tools that could help!
- Using Your PALS Data More Fully across the Year – This learning series supports your effective use of PALS data. Module 2 will be released in mid-November and will focus on interpreting your fall data. Once logged into your PALS account, you can access this module.
- Dr. Anita McGinty and Dr. Emily Solari’s presentations on 2020 Early Literacy Summit, hosted by the UVA School of Education and Human Development, the Office of the Virginia Secretary of Education, the University K-12 Advisory Council, the Virginia Association of School Superintendents, the Virginia Association of Supervision and Curriculum Development, and the Virginia Department of Education. You can access the materials and recordings from October 20th, 2020 on the 2020 Early Literacy Summit webpage.
We recognize that assessing students this fall is difficult, and PALS data collected remotely may be different than data collected in person. The PALS team will continue to analyze the fall data and share our findings with you and your colleagues through our communications and through professional development opportunities during the course of the year.
Please feel free to reach out to the PALS Office by phone, chat or email.
We’re here to support you!
Phone: 888.882.7257
pals@virginia.edu
Website: https://pals.virginia.edu
More questions? VKRP provides support via the online chat feature when you are in the system, via email vkrp@virginia.edu, and via toll free 866-301-8278 ext. 1