Instruction & Curriculum

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Our mission is to maximize the use of resources in support of student achievement.

 

This information is provided to inform parents and students of assessment practices that are used in addition to classroom or unit tests given by individual teachers. Grade level or school-wide assessments are administered throughout the school year to measure progress toward achieving content proficiency and to identify areas of strength and challenge at the student, school, and district level. These measurements allow CMCSS to provide instruction tailored to the needs of the individual student while meeting the standards set by the Tennessee Department of Education.

Assessment information is available on the state’s website please visit
http://tn.gov/education/section/assessment

Tennessee academic standards are accessible on the state’s web site please visit
http://tn.gov/education/topic/academic-standards

CMCSS curriculum navigator is available on the district’s web site please visit
http://curriculum.cmcss.net/public/index.aspx

Assessment Results

CMCSS will communicate to families the receipt of State Assessment results and reports through “Parent Square”  communication platform. The information will include the timeline for reports to be sent home as well as how to access the TN Department of Education TCAP Family Portal for on-demand TCAP results at the following link: https://familyreport.tnedu.gov/login . “Parent Square” provides messaging through email, text, or app notification. For additional information and to update your “Parent Square” account go to the following link: https://www.cmcss.net/parentsquare/ .

Students and parents may access local assessment results on-going through students’ Power School accounts at the following link: https://powerschool.cmcss.net/public/ .

** The Clarksville Montgomery County School System will update this page with 2024-2025 dates prior to school opening in August 2024.

 

Elementary School Assessments

National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP)
Test Window: January 29-March 8, 2025, grade 4

NAEP is the largest national assessment with results representative of what students across the United States know and can do in various subject areas.

The NAEP 2025 will include two main assessment programs. Participating schools and the assessment program for each are selected by NAEP. Students will respond to questions in mathematics, reading, or science, and each student will answer questions in only one subject.

State-Level Assessments and National Indian Education Study
For state-level assessments, NAEP will administer mathematics and reading assessments to students in grade 4. American Indian and Alaska Native students participating in the NAEP mathematics and reading assessments at grade 4 will also be included in the National Indian Education Study (NIES). NIES describes the condition of education for American Indian and Alaska Native students in the United States. To learn more about the NIES, please visit https://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/nies. Results from the state-level assessments will be released as The Nation’s Report Card.

 NAEP will also administer pilot assessments for mathematics and reading in grade 4. Results from pilots will not be released but will inform NAEP assessments.

TCAP Achievement grades 3-5, State Assessment
State Test window, April 14-May 2, 2025, grades 3-5

The TCAP tests are designed to assess true student understanding and not just basic memorization and test-taking skills. TCAP measures student understanding of our state standards.
Each subject-area test is divided into multiple subparts and will be administered during one testing window at the end of the school year.

  • English language arts (4 subparts) will assess the Tennessee Academic Standards through literary and informational texts requiring students to demonstrate the ability to read closely, analyze text, answer text-dependent questions, provide a written response to a prompt, and demonstrate command of the English language.
  • Mathematics (3 subparts) will consist of both calculator permitted and calculator prohibited subparts. It assesses the Tennessee Academic Standards requiring students to demonstrate a deep conceptual understanding of mathematics, number sense, fluency, problem solving and an understanding of the grade-level horizontal coherence embedded within the standards. The mathematics test will focus approximately 70 percent of the assessment items on major work of the grade and approximately 30 percent of the items on supporting work.
  • Science (1 subpart in grades 3-8) will assess the current Tennessee Academic Standards requiring students to demonstrate a deep conceptual understanding of scientific concepts in Life Science, Earth and Space Science and Physical Science. Please note science will be a field test in the 2018-19 school year. There are no score reports available for individual students.
  • Social studies (2 subparts in grades 6-8) will assess the current Tennessee Academic Standards for social studies requiring students to demonstrate historical awareness, geographical understanding and the ability to analyze primary source documents.

The results of these examinations will be factored into the student’s grade at a percentage determined by the State Board of Education in accordance with T.C.A. §49-1-302 (2). The CMCSS District Policy INS-A023, for End of Year Assessments for students in grades 3-5, the end of year assessments in Language Arts, Math, and Science will be calculated as 15% of the second semester grade.

Assessment Results

CMCSS will communicate to families the receipt of State Assessment results and reports through “Parent Square”  communication platform. The information will include the timeline for reports to be sent home as well as how to access the TN Department of Education TCAP Family Portal for on-demand TCAP results at the following link: https://familyreport.tnedu.gov/login . “Parent Square” provides messaging through email, text, or app notification. For additional information and to update your “Parent Square” account go to the following link: https://www.cmcss.net/parentsquare/ .

Students and parents may access local assessment results on-going through students’ Power School accounts at the following link: https://powerschool.cmcss.net/public/ .

For more information on the TCAP ACH, please visit the state assessment website: at https://www.tn.gov/education/assessment/tnready.html

TCAP 2nd Grade (Optional to Districts)
CMCSS will not be participating in the TCAP 2nd Grade during the 2024–2025 school year.

Universal Screener
Grades K-5; Reading/Math — Fall (August 14-25, 2024), Winter (December 4-15, 2024) and Spring Administration (April 10-19, 2025); Social/Emotional SAEBRS – Fall (October 2-6, 2024), Winter (December 4-8, 2024), Spring (April 8-12, 2025); RTI2 Assessment

Universal screenings review the performance and progress of all students through brief assessments in reading, math, and social-emotional behavior. Universal screenings assist schools with identification of students who may need more intensive/strategic support or other types of instruction/intervention. CMCSS has adopted FastBridge (Renaissance) as its universal screening measure. For more information on the Universal Screener and RTI2, please visit the district RTI2 hub at https://sites.google.com/cmcss.net/rti2/home

Common/Benchmark Assessments
Benchmark assessments are used to help identify student mastery and areas of need associated with grade level standards. First through fifth grade students will take three district level benchmark assessments in math. First grade students will take two benchmark assessments in reading. Second through fifth grade students will take three benchmark assessments in reading. Third through fifth grade students also have district level assessments in science and social studies at the end of each content unit throughout the school year. Kindergarten students participate in the state portfolio model and these assessments are used to determine student mastery and growth.

WIDA ACCESS for EL students, State Assessment
Test window for grades K-12: February 5-March 29, 2025

WIDA ACCESS for ELLs (ACCESS), is the collective name for WIDA’s suite of summative English language proficiency assessments. ACCESS is taken annually by English learners in grades K-12 and assesses students in the four language domains: listening, speaking, reading, and writing.  An English Language proficiency assessment, is administered to students identified as NELB [non-English Language Background] upon the arrival in the district.  https://wida.wisc.edu/assess/access

Multi-State Alternate Assessment (MSAA) and TCAP-Alt Science and Social Studies (TCAP-Alt)
Test windows: Sept 9-Dec 20, 2024 and Feb 3-May 16, 2025

The Multi-State Alternate Assessment (MSAA) are assessments in English language arts (ELA) and mathematics designed for students with significant cognitive disabilities in grades 3–8 and grade 11. The MSAA measures student mastery of the Tennessee Academic Standards. While the MSAA covers grade-level content standards at a simplified level, it includes many built-in supports, modified materials, and accommodations. The assessment is designed to be administered online; however, depending on students’ individual needs, some students will interact directly with the computer while others will interact with printed materials prepared by the test administrator. The test includes built-in supports to ensure students can respond as independently as possible.

TCAP Alternate (TCAP-Alt)
Test Window: March 10-April 25, 2025   

Assessments will be given in science and social studies designed for students with the most significant cognitive disabilities in grades 3–8 and grade 10 and measure student mastery of the Tennessee Academic Standards. While the TCAP-Alt covers grade-level standards at a simplified level, it also includes many built-in supports, modified materials, and accommodations.

More information on eligibility requirements for alternate assessments is available here.

Middle School Assessments

National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP)
Students in grade 8

Test Window:  Jan 29-Mar 8, 2025

The National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) is the largest national assessment with results representative of what students across the United States know and can do in various subject areas. The assessments are administered periodically online and in pencil/paper format in math, reading, science, writing, the arts, civics, economics, geography, US History, technology, and engineering literacy. For more information on the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), please visit https://www.tn.gov/education/assessment/naep.html

TCAP Achievement (ACH) grades 6-8, State Assessment
Test window, April 14–May 6, 2025

The Tennessee Comprehensive Assessment Program (TCAP) Achievement (ACH) assessment.  Students who are enrolled in  a grade 6-8 ELA class must take the assessment. The ELA TCAP assessments for grades 6-8 are administered in four subparts, the first of which contains a written response question. The MATH assessments are administered in three subparts, the first of which is without a calculator.  The SCIENCE TCAP assessments for grades 6-8 are administered in two subparts, and calculators are allowed.  The SOCIAL STUDIES assessment is administered in two subparts.  All TCAP assessments for grades 6-8 will be administered using an online testing platform.

The results of these examinations will be factored into the student’s grade at a percentage determined by the State Board of Education in accordance with T.C.A. §49-1-302 (2). The CMCSS District Policy INS-A023, for End of Year Assessments for students in grades 6-8, the end of year assessments in Language Arts, Math, Science and Social Studies will be calculated as 15% of the second semester grade.

Assessment Results

CMCSS will communicate to families the receipt of State Assessment results and reports through “Parent Square”  communication platform. The information will include the timeline for reports to be sent home as well as how to access the TN Department of Education TCAP Family Portal for on-demand TCAP results at the following link: https://familyreport.tnedu.gov/login . “Parent Square” provides messaging through email, text, or app notification. For additional information and to update your “Parent Square” account go to the following link: https://www.cmcss.net/parentsquare/ .

Students and parents may access local assessment results on-going through students’ Power School accounts at the following link: https://powerschool.cmcss.net/public/ .

For more information on the TCAP ACH, please visit the state assessment website at https://www.tn.gov/education/assessment/tnready.html

Universal Screener
Grades 6-8; Reading/Math — Fall (August 14-25, 2024), Winter (December 4-15, 2024) and Spring Administration (April 10-19, 2025); Social/Emotional SAEBRS – Fall (October 2-6, 2024), Winter (December 4-8, 2024), Spring (April 8-12, 2025); RTI2 Assessment

Universal screenings review the performance and progress of all students through brief assessments in reading, math and social-emotional behavior. Universal screenings assist schools with identification of students who may need more intensive/strategic support or other types of instruction/intervention. CMCSS has adopted FastBridge (Illuminate Education) as its universal screening measure. For more information on the Universal Screener and RTI2, please visit the district RTI2 hub at https://sites.google.com/cmcss.net/rti2/home

Benchmark and Common Assessments
Grades 6-8: District common unit assessments are used to help identify student mastery and areas of need associated with grade level content standards. Sixth through eighth grade students will take common unit assessments in math, English language arts, science and social studies at the end of each unit throughout the school year. In addition, students will complete three CASE benchmarks in English language arts and math. All district unit assessments and the CASE benchmarks will be administered online. Common unit assessments will be administered on the Performance Matters testing platform. The CASE benchmarks will be administered on the enCASE assessments platform. 

WIDA ACCESS for EL students, State Assessment
Test window for grades K-12: February 5-March 29, 2025

WIDA ACCESS for ELLs (ACCESS), is the collective name for WIDA’s suite of summative English language proficiency assessments. ACCESS is taken annually by English learners in grades K-12.  An English Language proficiency assessment, is administered to students identified as NELB [non-English Language Background] upon the arrival in the district.  https://wida.wisc.edu/assess/access

 Multi-State Alternate Assessment (MSAA) and TCAP-Alt Science and Social Studies (TCAP-Alt)
Test windows: Sept 9-Dec 20, 2024 and Feb 3-May 16, 2025

The Multi-State Alternate Assessment (MSAA) are assessments in English language arts (ELA) and mathematics designed for students with significant cognitive disabilities in grades 3–8 and grade 11. The MSAA measures student mastery of the Tennessee Academic Standards. While the MSAA covers grade-level content standards at a simplified level, it includes many built-in supports, modified materials, and accommodations. The assessment is designed to be administered online; however, depending on students’ individual needs, some students will interact directly with the computer while others will interact with printed materials prepared by the test administrator. The test includes built-in supports to ensure students can respond as independently as possible.

Most of the items are selected response, but some items are constructed response. The assessment includes two mathematics sessions and four ELA sessions with approximately 35–40 total items.  Visit the Test Administration Window webpage for more information. We estimate it will take 1.5–2 hours total to administer each subject (math and ELA) for a total of 3–4 hours; however, students take the test at their own pace.

TCAP Alternate (TCAP-Alt) are assessments in science and social studies designed for students with the most significant cognitive disabilities in grades 3–8 and grade 10 and measure student mastery of the Tennessee Academic Standards. While the TCAP-Alt covers grade-level standards at a simplified level, it also includes many built-in supports, modified materials, and accommodations.

More information on eligibility requirements for alternate assessments is available here.

High School Assessments

ACT – National Assessment
State Senior Fall Retake Window – Oct 1- Nov 8; Junior Spring ACT – March 11-Apr 11, 2025

The ACT is a comprehensive college readiness assessment and is a curriculum- and standards-based educational and career planning tool. It covers a wide range of subjects that assess students’ mathematical skills, grammar usage, science interpretation, and reading comprehension. Results from college readiness tests like ACT are often used to determine eligibility for scholarships, including the Tennessee HOPE scholarship. Pursuant to T.C.A. § 49-6-6001, Students enrolled in Tennessee public schools during their eleventh grade year must complete the ACT (or SAT) prior to graduation (see High School Policy 2.103).

CMCSS provides students one free ACT assessment as a junior and a second free opportunity as a senior.  For more information on the ACT, please visit https://www.tn.gov/education/assessment/act-sat.html

Advanced Placement (AP), National Assessment
Test window: May 6-10 and 13-17, 2025      

Advance Placement courses and exams provide students the opportunity to complete challenging college level courses while in high school. Colleges and universities grant program placement and course credit for students achieving high scores on advance placement exams. For more information on AP and specific dates, please visit the AP website at: https://apstudents.collegeboard.org/exam-calendar

United States Civics test
Test window, 1st semester: November, 2024 and 2nd semester: April, 2025

All high school students in Tennessee are required to take a United States civics test. In CMCSS, students will take the Unites States Civics test either in US Government & Civics or in JROTC II. (Tennessee State Board of Education, High School Policy, 2.103, revised 10/31/2014.) This is a requirement for graduation.

National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP)
Test window: Jan 29-Mar 8, 2025

The National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) is the largest national assessment with results representative of what students across the United States know and can do in various subject areas. The assessments are administered periodically online and in pencil/paper format in math, reading, science, writing, the arts, civics, economics, geography, US History, technology, and engineering literacy. For more information on the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), please visit https://www.tn.gov/education/assessment/naep.html

TCAP END OF COURSE (EOC), State Assessment
Test window, April 14– May 6, 2025

Students who are enrolled in an EOC class, regardless of grade level, must take the assessment pertinent to that class. The TCAP ENGLISH Language Arts End of Course (EOC) assessments are given in English I and English II. The ELA EOC assessments are administered in three subparts, the first of which contains a written response question.  The TCAP MATHEMATICS End of Course (EOC) assessments are given in Algebra I, Geometry, and Algebra II. The math assessments are administered in three subparts, the first of which is without a calculator. The SCIENCE, Biology End-of-Course (EOC) assessment, is administered in one subpart and calculators are allowed. The U.S. HISTORY assessment is administered in two subparts.

Students enrolled in a substituting course without an End of Course examination explicitly tied to the State Board of Education-approved curriculum content standards of that course shall not take an EOC. This exemption applies to all substituting courses, including, but not limited to, Advanced Placement, International Baccalaureate, dual enrollment, and dual credit courses.

The results of these examinations will be factored into the student’s grade at a percentage determined by the State Board of Education in accordance with T.C.A. §49-1-302 (2).

CMCSS District Policy INS-A023, for High School Courses with an end of course exam, the first semester average is calculated with each 9 weeks 40% and the semester exam 20% • Second semester average is calculated with each 9 week grade 35%, end of course exam 15%, the semester exam 15%

Assessment Results

CMCSS will communicate to families the receipt of State Assessment results and reports through “Parent Square”  communication platform. The information will include the timeline for reports to be sent home as well as how to access the TN Department of Education TCAP Family Portal for on-demand TCAP results at the following link: https://familyreport.tnedu.gov/login . “Parent Square” provides messaging through email, text, or app notification. For additional information and to update your “Parent Square” account go to the following link: https://www.cmcss.net/parentsquare/ .

Students and parents may access local assessment results on-going through students’ Power School accounts at the following link: https://powerschool.cmcss.net/public/ .

For more information on the TCAP EOC, please visit state assessment website at https://www.tn.gov/education/assessment/tnready.html

Universal Screener
High School; Reading/Math — Fall (August 14-25, 2024), Winter (December 4-15, 2024) and Spring Administration (April 10-19, 2025); Social/Emotional SAEBRS – Fall (October 2-6, 2024), Winter (December 4-8, 2024), Spring (April 8-12, 2025); RTI2 Assessment

Universal screenings review the performance and progress of all students through brief assessments in reading, math and social-emotional behavior. Universal screenings assist schools with identification of students who may need more intensive/strategic support or other types of instruction/intervention. CMCSS has adopted FastBridge (Illuminate Education) as its universal screening measure. For more information on the Universal Screener and RTI2, please visit the district RTI2 hub at https://sites.google.com/cmcss.net/rti2/home

Common Benchmarks
Common benchmarks are used to help identify student mastery and areas of need associated with the standard expectations in each course. Students in core content courses (English I, II, Algebra I, II, Geometry, Physical Science, Biology, Chemistry, and U.S. History) will take common benchmark assessments two to three times a year. All common assessments will be administered through paper and pencil administration or online using various platforms including Mastery Connect assessments for ELA, math, science and history.

WIDA ACCESS for EL students, State Assessment
Test window for grades K-12: February 5-March 29, 2025

WIDA ACCESS for ELLs (ACCESS), is the collective name for WIDA’s suite of summative English language proficiency assessments. ACCESS is taken annually by English learners in grades K-12.  An English Language proficiency assessment, is administered to students identified as NELB [non-English Language Background] upon the arrival in the district.  https://wida.wisc.edu/assess/access

Multi-State Alternate Assessment (MSAA) and TCAP-Alt Science and Social Studies (TCAP-Alt)
Test windows: Sept 9-Dec 20, 2024 and Feb 3-May 16, 2025

The Multi-State Alternate Assessment (MSAA) are assessments in English language arts (ELA) and mathematics designed for students with significant cognitive disabilities in grades 3–8 and grade 11. The MSAA measures student mastery of the Tennessee Academic Standards. While the MSAA covers grade-level content standards at a simplified level, it includes many built-in supports, modified materials, and accommodations. The assessment is designed to be administered online; however, depending on students’ individual needs, some students will interact directly with the computer while others will interact with printed materials prepared by the test administrator. The test includes built-in supports to ensure students can respond as independently as possible.

Most of the items are selected response, but some items are constructed response. The assessment includes two mathematics sessions and four ELA sessions with approximately 35–40 total items.  Visit the Test Administration Window webpage for more information. We estimate it will take 1.5–2 hours total to administer each subject (math and ELA) for a total of 3–4 hours; however, students take the test at their own pace.

TCAP Alternate (TCAP-Alt) are assessments in science and social studies designed for students with the most significant cognitive disabilities in grades 3–8 and grade 10 and measure student mastery of the Tennessee Academic Standards. While the TCAP-Alt covers grade-level standards at a simplified level, it also includes many built-in supports, modified materials, and accommodations.

 More information on eligibility requirements for alternate assessments is available here.