Eduphoria - TAKS Data
1. You can only see the students and corresponding TAKS data for students that are on your roster. You can see current student’s results, but not last year’s students.
2. If a student moves in from another school, we will see their TAKS data if the school they came from had Eduphoria.
3. Pull down menu
A. Overall Raw Score
B. Objective
C. Student Expectations
D. Student Answers on individual questions
b. Icons on the right hand side.
A. Student View
B. Teacher Summary
C. Section Summary
D. School Summary
E. District Summary
5. Can drill down to get more information by clicking on students name or a category such as, Economically Disadvantaged.
6. Change view by:
A. Color Coding
1. 90-100 – Green
2. 80-89- Yellow
3. 76-79 – Orange
4. <76 – Red
B. Changing vertical and horizontal view
C. Sort a column by clicking at top of column.
7. Find individual student information by
A. Clicking on Student’s Name
B. Using Search feature under Student Tab.
8. Under Student Information
A. Find class schedule
B. Journal - Document good and bad things the student’s done with Journal
1. Administrators can pull this up as well. – Teachers can only see their own remarks. Principals can see all remarks.
2. Teachers can not delete comment, only principals can delete a comment.
C. Forms – Put in by administrators – Good for 504 Oral Admin Supp.
9. Monitor Lists – Good for Special Ed Teachers – A way to see students who are not in your class or roster. You can make one, but it needs to be approved by Admin.
10. Create a New Data View – Best for creating a view or chart showing multiple tests at the same time.
11. The basic score on any test is the raw score, which is simply the number of questions correct. A raw score can be interpreted only in terms of a particular set of test questions.
12. Unlike raw scores, scale scores can be interpreted across different sets of test questions. Scale scores allow direct comparisons of student performance between specific sets of test questions from different test administrations. A scale score is a conversion of the raw score onto a scale that is common to all test forms for that assessment. The scale score takes into account the difficulty level of the specific set of questions on which it is based. It quantifies a student’s performance relative to the passing standards or proficiency levels.
2. If a student moves in from another school, we will see their TAKS data if the school they came from had Eduphoria.
3. Pull down menu
A. Overall Raw Score
B. Objective
C. Student Expectations
D. Student Answers on individual questions
b. Icons on the right hand side.
A. Student View
B. Teacher Summary
C. Section Summary
D. School Summary
E. District Summary
5. Can drill down to get more information by clicking on students name or a category such as, Economically Disadvantaged.
6. Change view by:
A. Color Coding
1. 90-100 – Green
2. 80-89- Yellow
3. 76-79 – Orange
4. <76 – Red
B. Changing vertical and horizontal view
C. Sort a column by clicking at top of column.
7. Find individual student information by
A. Clicking on Student’s Name
B. Using Search feature under Student Tab.
8. Under Student Information
A. Find class schedule
B. Journal - Document good and bad things the student’s done with Journal
1. Administrators can pull this up as well. – Teachers can only see their own remarks. Principals can see all remarks.
2. Teachers can not delete comment, only principals can delete a comment.
C. Forms – Put in by administrators – Good for 504 Oral Admin Supp.
9. Monitor Lists – Good for Special Ed Teachers – A way to see students who are not in your class or roster. You can make one, but it needs to be approved by Admin.
10. Create a New Data View – Best for creating a view or chart showing multiple tests at the same time.
11. The basic score on any test is the raw score, which is simply the number of questions correct. A raw score can be interpreted only in terms of a particular set of test questions.
12. Unlike raw scores, scale scores can be interpreted across different sets of test questions. Scale scores allow direct comparisons of student performance between specific sets of test questions from different test administrations. A scale score is a conversion of the raw score onto a scale that is common to all test forms for that assessment. The scale score takes into account the difficulty level of the specific set of questions on which it is based. It quantifies a student’s performance relative to the passing standards or proficiency levels.