F&P Benchmark Assessment System: Doesn’t look right, sound right, or make sense (2024)

My district, like so many others, uses Fountas and Pinnell’s Benchmark Assessment System (BAS) as the primary measure of student reading progress. But if you’ve had doubts about the assessment and the ways BAS data is often used, you’re on to something…

Limited Materials

An F&P Benchmark Assessment System kit provides us with only two books (one fiction and one nonfiction) for each reading level, so we end up using the books over and over again. We see the problem with these limited materials when struggling readers memorize the predictable texts or get stuck because they lack the background knowledge required by the two books at a particular level.

Heinemann has issued three editions of the assessment but has yet to produce any additional texts. Providing more assessment books is challenging because the texts are not authentic, but rather purpose-written assessment materials. Making more books available at a given level would call attention to leveling inconsistencies in the existing materials.

Leveling Inconsistencies

Most of us instinctively know the books in BAS are not consistent at a given level and not progressively difficult across levels. In fact, we select strategically from the book choices. I’ve heard colleagues say, “I use the Loose Tooth book because it’s a lot easier than the one about the zoo.” (both Level E) or “I skip G and go straight to H.”

The Common Core recommends that we use objective measures (Lexile, Dale-Chall, and Flesch-Kincaid are cited in CCSS Appendix A) to evaluate text complexity. Due to lack of transparency about its formula, the F&P leveling system is notably absent in CCSS recommendations. Lexile, cited repeatedly in CCSS appendices, analyzes written text and the features that make it objectively complex, such as decodability, sentence length, word choice. According to Lexile, the BAS Level E book At the Zoo is more similar to the Level H book Trucks than to the companion Level E book provided in the assessment kit. An objective leveling system confirms our own hunches about the books.

F&P Benchmark Assessment System: Doesn’t look right, sound right, or make sense (1)

Selecting the BAS book The Zoo may lead us to believe that a student reads at Level E, but a closer look reveals that the same child might do just as well reading the Level H book, Trucks. These designations can mean the difference between a student being “at grade level” or “below grade level” and can impact the perception of a student’s ability, both for the student and for the teacher.

Time Spent on the Wrong Things

While assessing using BAS, we listen to a student read and take ”Reading Records” that we’re later expected to analyze in order to determine which of three sources of information – meaning, syntax, visual – the child used for word identification. This attention to the disproven three-cueing theory diverts our attention from the fact that an error is simply evidence that the child was unable to apply phonics to accurately read the word.

“Although oral-passage reading rate and accuracy are good measures of overall reading ability because they measure word-recognition speed and accuracy, the classification of ’miscues’ is unreliable, invalid, and a waste of the teacher’s time.”

Whole Language Lives On

Assessing students with BAS takes approximately 20 minutes per student, but more reliable oral reading fluency assessments take just 1 minute.

While there are other issues to consider in terms of establishing instructional reading levels, in terms of reliability, it may make more sense to focus on more technically sound procedures available. It may be surprising to many teachers that some of the most valid and reliable measures of a student’s overall reading level include simple measures of word-recognition accuracy and speed, in and out of context (Rasinski, 2000; Torgesen, Wagner, Rashotte, Burgess, & Hecht, 1997).

Toward the Peaceful Coexistence of Test Developers, Policy Makers, and Teachers

Listening to students read is important for many reasons, but the books and scoring sheets provided in the BAS are not worthy of the time we’re asked to devote to them.

“Typical” Students?

According to Heinemann, the Benchmark Assessment System was field-tested on “typical students,” but they included in their study only proficient English students who were already reading at grade level (and very few of them at that!) By excluding diverse learners from their study, Heinemann ignored the demographics of our classrooms and missed important factors in determining text difficulty.

The books in the assessment represent experiences typical of middle class children (eg. sleepovers and trips to the farm). Pictures in the books allow some students to cue for words (eg. climbing and snow plow), while students without that background knowledge and vocabulary must sound the words out.

F&P Benchmark Assessment System: Doesn’t look right, sound right, or make sense (2)

The book Trucks is not a good indicator of whether an English-learner will be able to read other books labeled H by Fountas and Pinnell because it is written in present tense and is more decodable (despite snow plow!), even when compared to the other BAS Level H book, which includes tricky-to-decode irregular past-tense verbs.

“Educators are on shaky ground when a test is used in a way or for a purpose other than that for which it was intended. If a test has been developed specifically for a certain population (eg. preschool students, native English speakers) then it is imperative that the test be used solely for those it was designed to assess.”

Toward the Peaceful Coexistence of Test Developers, Policy Makers, and Teachers

Contradictions Between the Authors and their Product

Say we were to use the assessment only on proficient English speakers who are reading at grade level and we ignored the miscue analysis, could BAS work then?

Well, work to do what?

Attempting to use the data collected from BAS has led many of us to make instructional decisions Irene Fountas and Gay Su Pinnell have spoken against:

What BAS Data Tells Us:What Fountas and Pinnell Say:
“He reads at level H.”“The truth is that children can read books on a wide variety of levels, and in fact, they experience many different levels of books across the day.”
A child who reads a Level G book about bubbles during the assessment will be able to read Level G books about polar bears, friendship, and transportation.“… we have decades of research that demonstrates the extent to which students’ vocabulary knowledge relates to their reading comprehension.”
If a child does well on one level, she should be assessed on the next.“A gradient is not a precise sequence through which all students move. […] You may want to skip a level if you feel the students need even more challenge.”
It’s important that a student moves up levels over time.“The point is not simply to ‘move up’ levels but to increase their breadth of reading by applying their strategies to many different kinds of texts.”
After each student’s reading level has been determined, students of like levels should be grouped together.“A gradient is not and was never intended to be a way to categorize or label students, whose background experiences and rate of progress will vary widely. We have never written about leveling students.”
A student’s reading level should be communicated to the child so she can select “just right books.”“We certainly never intended that children focus on a label for themselves in choosing books in classroom libraries. Classroom libraries need to be inviting places where children are drawn to topics and genres and authors and illustrators that they love. And while students are choosing books that interest them, the teacher is there to help them learn how to make good choices so the books they select are ones that they can read and enjoy. If a child chooses a book that is too hard for them to read, they may stretch themselves and enjoy that book for a period of time.”
The data from the assessment should be used to determine what leveled books are needed in the classroom library and which students should read which books.“Organizing books by level does not help students engage with books and pursue their own interests.”

Fountas and Pinnell have stated, repeatedly, that a leveling system is simply a tool for a teacher to use to match students with books. But district administrators love the assessment because it generates data that seems easy to understand (“a Level H reader is more skilled than a Level E reader”) and appears actionable (“Label and level your library and have students pick from the right bins.”)

Irene Fountas and Gay Su Pinnell knew that reading one Level E book does not mean that the child will be able to read other books at the level equally well, and yet their names are on an assessment that sells that myth.

As teachers, we are required to spend valuable time administering this poorly constructed assessment on students for whom it was not designed, and to use the data in ways that limit student choice and even limit their access to grade-level content. It’s time for us to insist on being provided more reliable assessments and being given the flexibility to use more authentic methods for matching our diverse learners with texts they can read.

For More from Fountas and Pinnell:

Fountas and Pinnell Say Librarians Should Guide Readers by Interest, Not Level

Leveled Books K-8: Matching Texts to Readers for Effective Teaching– Irene C. Fountas and Gay Su Pinnell, 2006

(Click for Downloadable PDF of this blog)

assessment leveled books

  1. F&P Benchmark Assessment System: Doesn’t look right, sound right, or make sense (3)Kelly says:

    September 26, 2019 at 12:45 am

    Lexile levels are problematic because they don’t take content into account. For example, Of Mice and Men is lexile 630, which is end of first grade into second grade. Certainly, that book is inappropriate for that age level and professional judgement comes into play. There is no one perfect leveling system.

    • F&P Benchmark Assessment System: Doesn’t look right, sound right, or make sense (4)righttoreadproject_5dose6 says:

      September 26, 2019 at 5:28 am

      Absolutely agree that there is no perfect leveling system… that’s why the three-part model for determining text-complexity is described in the CCSS Appendix A. Lexile can do the “quantitative” part of text selection, but a teacher who knows the child and intended purpose of activity is necessary for the “qualitative” and “reader-and-task” parts. F&P claims to factor in both quantitative and qualitative features to level books but they can’t do that without knowing our students, their background knowledge, vocabulary, and the lessons we have planned.

Comments are closed.

F&P Benchmark Assessment System: Doesn’t look right, sound right, or make sense (2024)

FAQs

What are the problems with Fountas and Pinnell assessment? ›

Fountas and Pinnell have released only one study to back up the Benchmark Assessment System's accuracy. But even their own study casts doubt on the reliability of the test. The study showed that a student reading two books rated at the same level would often get different results on the assessment.

Why shouldn't we use fountas and pinnell? ›

F&P is Subjective! The Fountas & Pinnell Benchmark Assessment System is a subjective measure. This is because there is no right or wrong answer, and a teacher's beliefs, assumptions, emotions, and opinions can influence the outcome of the score. Objective assessments have a single correct answer.

What does the Fountas and Pinnell benchmark assessment measure? ›

The Fountas & Pinnell Benchmark Assessment Systems (BAS) evaluate student reading and comprehension ability with reliable and robust universal screening that is aligned to the Leveled Literacy Intervention System, and determine each child's instructional level for guided reading according to the Fountas & Pinnell Text ...

How do you do a benchmark reading assessment? ›

Students read aloud from three passages, each one followed immediately by a short comprehension quiz. Students complete tasks within an adaptive range that assesses them on Phonological Awareness, and Phonics and Word Recognition, and Language Comprehension (vocabulary and listening comprehension skills).

What counts as an error in Fountas and Pinnell? ›

If the child reads the word incorrectly or you have to give a TOLD, it is one error. Self-corrections are not and error. Multiple attempts at a word that end up as incorrect is only scored as one error. Insertions and omissions are counted as an error, even if it makes sense.

What happened to Fountas and Pinnell? ›

EdReports—a nonprofit organization that reviews K-12 instructional materials in English/language arts, math, and science—published its evaluation of Fountas and Pinnell Classroom Tuesday, finding that the program didn't meet expectations for text quality or alignment to standards.

Are schools still using Fountas and Pinnell? ›

In 2021-22, every school district in the state that was still using the Units of Study or Fountas & Pinnell Classroom, two Heinemann-published curricula rejected by state reviewers, dropped them as core reading programs.

Do Fountas and Pinnell teach phonics? ›

The Fountas & Pinnell Phonics, Spelling, and Word Study System is for the classroom teacher who wants to expand and refine children's reading and writing powers. These lessons enable teachers to help children attend to, learn about, and efficiently use information about sounds, letters, and words.

What is the controversy with the Amplify reading program? ›

Problems Surrounding Amplify's Core Knowledge Language Arts to Teach Reading. Many teachers and parents raise concerns that instruction is age-inappropriate. Many school districts have signed on to Amplify to teach subjects including language arts and reading. Teachers must teach virtual, scripted, commercial programs.

What is the primary purpose of benchmark assessment? ›

The purpose of a benchmark assessment is to measure student progress towards mastering a certain grade-based learning goal or goals over time. Teachers can use test results to identify student strengths and weaknesses, then plan future lessons accordingly to address any student learning deficits.

Is Fountas and Pinnell a summative or formative assessment? ›

The Fountas & Pinnell Benchmark Assessment System are accurate and reliable tools to identify the instructional and independent reading levels of all students and document students progress through one-on-one formative and summative assessments.

Is Fountas and Pinnell research based? ›

The Research Base for Fountas & Pinnell Classroom™

Like other effective comprehensive systems, Fountas & Pinnell Classroom™ rests on a thorough and thoughtful examination of existing research.

How do you properly benchmark? ›

By following these eight simple steps, you can use benchmarking to make continuous improvements to your workflows and processes.
  1. Decide what you're benchmarking. ...
  2. Decide your benchmarking type. ...
  3. Review and record. ...
  4. Collect data. ...
  5. Analyze data. ...
  6. Make a plan. ...
  7. Implement changes. ...
  8. Rinse and repeat.
Mar 8, 2024

How do you evaluate a benchmark? ›

8 steps in the benchmarking process
  1. Select a subject to benchmark. ...
  2. Decide which organizations or companies you want to benchmark. ...
  3. Document your current processes. ...
  4. Collect and analyze data. ...
  5. Measure your performance against the data you've collected. ...
  6. Create a plan. ...
  7. Implement the changes. ...
  8. Repeat the process.

What are examples of assessment benchmarks? ›

Examples of benchmark online assessments could include online quizzes used to check understanding of a specific topic, end-of-unit tests administered through a learning management system, or adaptive assessments that adjust the difficulty of questions based on student responses.

Why are F and P bad? ›

Thus: Fountas and Pinnell's approach to reading creates learning difficulties for which their curriculum then offers solutions. The rationale for the approach collapses if children are given sufficient opportunities to gain basic skills.

What are the disadvantages of guided reading? ›

The problem is that guided reading is flawed from the beginning. Guided reading levels are arbitrary, they are not normed, and they cannot be relied upon for accuracy. The role of background knowledge and vocabulary isn't really considered.

What are the problems with e assessment? ›

Technical– Technical problems can hinder the smooth conduct of online assessments. Issues such as internet connectivity, software compatibility, and device malfunction can disrupt the assessment process and affect the test-takers experience.

Top Articles
14 Best Ways to Say ‘I’m Sorry’ And Really Mean It | Cake Blog
How to Apologize: 8 Tips to Effectiveness & Sincerity
Mtlsd.schoology
Serialwale
What Shoes Does Baylen Levine Wear
Dr Abiose Land O Lakes
About Us! - Boys & Girls Clubs of Southcentral Alaska
Onlinewagestatements Lifepoint
Stranded Alien Dawn Cave Dweller
دانلود فیلم سرزمین باکره ها دیجی موویز
El Croquis 111 - MVRDV 1997-2002.pdf - PDFCOFFEE.COM
Why Is There No Bottled Water In Supermarkets 2022
Why are we ticklish? Here’s what we know about our silliest defense mechanism.
Crime | Denver Daily Voice
N-Vu Login
Caldwell Idaho Craigslist
Elsenpeter Auctions Monticello Mn
Craigslist Yard Sale Sebring Fl
McCarran International Airport Guide
Inchiriaza Ford Mustang GT | THECAR - Inchirieri auto Bucuresti
Fatal Car Accident Indiana 2022
Www.patientnotebook.com/Matrix
Greythr Hexaware Bps
R Nba Fantasy
082900432
Nana Shirts Svg
Frequently Asked Questions | Pay Your Bill Online | Cape Fear Valley Health
House Party 2023 Showtimes Near Cinemark Oakley Station And Xd
0Gomovies To To
Paperlesspay Talx Ingram
Wright State Human Resources
Via Benefits Caterpillar
Ffxiv Icetrap Leaf
Aes Salt Lake City Showdown
Fanduel Stardust Charge On Debit Card
Ambulance Stretcher tenders in Andhra Pradesh
Cerro Gordo Property Search Beacon
Craigslist Snowblower
7 On 7 Flag Football Misdirection Plays
Lady Eloise Cordelia Gordon-Lennox
Baptist Medical Center Yazoo Photos
Robot or human?
Jeff Danker Net Worth
2024 Harley-Davidson Street Bob® 114 in Scott, Louisiana
Dr. Rolando Lozano Md Elizabeth Nj
Go Upstate Mugshots Gaffney Sc
238 Grams Equals How Many Cups
Bound Weapons Mod Skyrim
Cbx Promo Codes 2023
Admin - Space Station 13 Wiki
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Mrs. Angelic Larkin

Last Updated:

Views: 6236

Rating: 4.7 / 5 (47 voted)

Reviews: 94% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Mrs. Angelic Larkin

Birthday: 1992-06-28

Address: Apt. 413 8275 Mueller Overpass, South Magnolia, IA 99527-6023

Phone: +6824704719725

Job: District Real-Estate Facilitator

Hobby: Letterboxing, Vacation, Poi, Homebrewing, Mountain biking, Slacklining, Cabaret

Introduction: My name is Mrs. Angelic Larkin, I am a cute, charming, funny, determined, inexpensive, joyous, cheerful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.