NAEP 2011 Wave II (Writing and Math Multi-Stage Computer-based, KASA Math and PR, NIES, NAEP-TIMSS Alignment, SD and ELL worksheets)

National Assessment of Education Progress (NAEP) 2011-13 System Clearance

Part 1d - Teacher Grade 4 NIES

NAEP 2011 Wave II (Writing and Math Multi-Stage Computer-based, KASA Math and PR, NIES, NAEP-TIMSS Alignment, SD and ELL worksheets)

OMB: 1850-0790

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NATIONAL ASSESSMENT OF
EDUCATIONAL PROGRESS

Wave 2 Submittal for 2011
VOLUME II
Part 1d
BACKGROUND QUESTIONS
FOR 2011 ASSESSMENT

Teacher Grade 4 NIES Questions

Part 1d contains:
Teacher Grade 4 NIES Questions
The amount of time estimated to complete this form is 20 minutes.

June 2, 2010

2011 OMB Wave 2
Grade 4 -Part 1 of 4

TEACHER QUESTIONNAIRE
OMB Information on Student Questionnaire Cover Page

Paperwork Burden Statement
According to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, no persons are required to
respond to a collection of information unless such collection displays a valid
OMB control number. The valid OMB control number for this information
collection is 1850-0790. The time required to complete this information collection
is estimated to average 20 minutes including the time to review instructions,
search existing data resources, gather the data needed, and complete and review
the information collection. If you have any comments concerning the accuracy
of the time estimate(s) or suggestions for improving this form, please write
to: U.S. Department of Education, Washington, D.C. 20202-4537. If you have
comments or concerns regarding the status of your individual submission of
this form, write directly to: NAEP/NCES, U.S. Department of Education, 1990
K Street N.W., Washington, D.C. 20006-5651.
A project of the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES, Institute of Education
Sciences sponsored by the Office of Indian Education, Office of Elementary
and Secondary Education, U.S. Department of Education.
The information you provide will be used for statistical purposes only. In
accordance with the Confidential Information Protection provisions of
Title V, Subtitle A, Public Law 107-347 and other applicable Federal
laws, your responses will be kept confidential and will not be disclosed in
identifiable form to anyone other than employees or agents. By law, every
NCES employee as well as every agent, such as contractors and NAEP
coordinators, has taken an oath and is subject to a jail term of up to 5 years,
a fine of up to $250,000, or both, if he or she willfully discloses ANY
identifiable information about you.
OMB NO. 1850-0790 APPROVAL EXPIRES 04/30/2013

2011 OMB Wave 2
Grade 4 -Part 1 of 4

3

National Indian Education Study
Grade 4 Teacher Questionnaire
The questions in this survey are designed to gather information about the classroom
experiences of American Indian or Alaska Native (AI/AN) students. In particular, we ask
about the inclusion of native languages and cultural perspectives in the curriculum and
about interactions between the school and the AI/AN community. Teachers who have only
a few AI/AN students in their classes may adopt different teaching strategies than teachers
who have many such students. There are no wrong answers to these questions.
Use only a No. 2 pencil to answer all questions in this booklet. Some questions require
you to answer by filling in the ovals completely. For other questions, you are asked to fill in
numbers. For these questions, please print the appropriate number LEGIBLY in each of the
boxes provided. Keep all printing in boxes.

Example:

5 Should be written as

0 5
Other questions require you to PRINT ANSWERS LEGIBLY on the lines indicated. For all
questions, do not make any stray marks.

VC190809

1. Counting this year, how many years have you taught at this school? If less than 1 year
total at this school, enter “01”.

Years

F1AITQ

Page 3

VE012623

2. How many of the students in your class are American Indian or Alaska Native? (Include
both enrolled tribal members and descendents in your calculations.)

A Few (less than 5)
B Several, but less than half the class
C At least half the class, but not every student
D The whole class
E I don’t know.

VB592443

3. To what extent have you acquired knowledge, skills, and information specific to teaching
American Indian or Alaska Native students from each of the following sources? Fill in
one oval on each line.
Not
at all

Small
extent

Moderate
extent

Large
extent

a. Independent reading and study

A

B

C

D

VB592446

b. Your own personal or family
background and experiences

A

B

C

D

VB592448

c. Locally sponsored American Indian
or Alaska Native cultural orientation
program

A

B

C

D

VC202922

d. Living and working in an American
Indian or Alaska Native community

A

B

C

D

VC202915

F1AITQ

Page 4

VE012624

4. To what extent have you acquired knowledge, skills, and information specific to teaching
American Indian or Alaska Native students from each of the following types of classes?
Fill in one oval on each line.
Not
at all

Small
extent

Moderate
extent

Large
extent

a. College courses, or other classes or
workshops with a focus on teaching
American Indian or Alaska Native
students

A

B

C

D

VE012626

b. College courses, or other classes
or workshops with a general focus
on various cultures or diversity

A

B

C

D

VE012628

VE012630

5. Below is a list of resources that may be consulted by teachers to help them improve the
academic performance of their students. During the last two years, how many times
have you consulted each of the following resources to help you improve the academic
performance of your American Indian or Alaska Native students? Fill in one oval on
each line.
Never

1 or 2
times

3 or 4
times

5 or more
times

a. Online websites or databases

A

B

C

D

VE012633

b. Articles in professional journals

A

B

C

D

VE012634

c. Local libraries or cultural centers

A

B

C

D

VE012637

d. Other teachers in your school

A

B

C

D

VE012639

e. Elders or other experts

A

B

C

D

VE012641

F1AITQ

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VE012650

6. During the last two years, how many times have you attended in-service classes and
workshops to help you improve the academic performance of your American Indian or
Alaska Native students?

A Never ➔ Skip to Question 8.
B 1 or 2 times
C 3 or 4 times
D 5 or more times

VE012652

7. Who sponsored the in-service classes and workshops you attended in the last two years?
Fill in all ovals that apply.

A State
B District
C Tribal education department
D Indian education professional associations
E College or university
F Other

VE012654

8. To what extent do you speak any of the native languages spoken by American Indian
or Alaska Native students who attend this school? If you know more than one of these
languages, answer for the one you know best.

A No knowledge or skill; nonspeaker
B Minimal functional or communicative ability; ability to use some words or phrases
C Moderate communicative ability; can express some ideas and communicate in some
situations, but limited and cannot always express ideas

D Fluent nonnative speaker
E Fluent native speaker

F1AITQ

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VE012658

9. To what extent do you use your students’ American Indian or Alaska Native language(s)
when you teach any core subject (reading, mathematics, science, and social studies)?

A Instruction is entirely in English.
B Instruction is primarily in English, but words or phrases from the students’ American
Indian or Alaska Native language(s) are included occasionally.

C Instruction is primarily in English, but words or phrases from the students’ American
Indian or Alaska Native language(s) are included frequently.

D Instruction is primarily in the students’ American Indian or Alaska Native
language(s).

VE012660

10. Have you received any of the following forms of preparation for teaching students
whose first language is not English (sometimes called Limited English Proficiency [LEP]
students or English Language Learners [ELL])? Fill in one oval on each line.
Yes

No

a. At least one college-level course on how to teach
students whose first language is not English (but
not a major, minor, or special emphasis)

A

B

VE012662

b. An undergraduate or graduate major, minor, or
special emphasis in teaching English as a Second
Language (ESL), English Language Development
(ELD), or Bilingual Education

A

B

VE012665

c. Any other training or professional development on
how to teach students whose first language is not
English

A

B

VE012666

F1AITQ

Page 7

VE012668

11. To what extent do you use the following to assess student progress? Fill in one oval on
each line.
Not
at all

Small
extent

Moderate
extent

Large
extent

a. State assessments

A

B

C

D

VE012670

b. District assessments

A

B

C

D

VE012672

c. Assessments developed by
American Indian or Alaska Native
organizations

A

B

C

D

VE012673

d. Tests supplied by textbook
publishers (for example, end of unit
or chapter tests)

A

B

C

D

VE012674

e. Teacher-made tests or quizzes

A

B

C

D

VE012675

f. Performance-based assessments

A

B

C

D

VE012676

g. Group projects

A

B

C

D

VE012678

h. Oral responses of students during
class discussions

A

B

C

D

VE012681

F1AITQ

Page 8

VE012683

12. To what extent do you integrate lessons and materials about American Indian or Alaska
Native culture and history into your reading/language arts curriculum? If you do not
teach reading/language arts, skip to question 16.

A Never
B At least once a year
C At least once a month
D At least once a week
E Every day or almost every day

VE012685

13. To what extent do you integrate lessons and materials about current issues affecting
American Indian or Alaska Native people and communities into your reading/language
arts curriculum?

A Never
B At least once a year
C At least once a month
D At least once a week
E Every day or almost every day

F1AITQ

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VE012686

14. How often do you have your students do each of the following reading/language arts
activities? Fill in one oval on each line.

Never

At least
once a
year

At least
once a
month

At least
once a
week

Every day
or almost
every day

a. Read literature with
American Indian or
Alaska Native themes

A

B

C

D

E

VE012689

b. Read literature by
American Indian or
Alaska Native authors

A

B

C

D

E

VE012690

c. Read about, or discuss,
current issues of concern
to the American Indian
or Alaska Native
community

A

B

C

D

E

VE012691

d. Write about experiences
or issues affecting
American Indian or
Alaska Native people

A

B

C

D

E

VE012692

e. Write about their own
experiences as an
American Indian or
Alaska Native person

A

B

C

D

E

VE012693

VE012696

15. How much do you rely on each of the following documents in planning reading/language
arts lessons? Fill in one oval on each line.
Not
at all

A little

Some

A lot

Not aware
of any

a. Standards developed by
national professional
organizations

A

B

C

D

E

VE012698

b. State content standards

A

B

C

D

E

VE012700

c. District content standards

A

B

C

D

E

VE012701

d. American Indian or
Alaska Native content or
cultural standards

A

B

C

D

E

VE012703

F1AITQ

Page 10

VE012705

16. To what extent do you integrate lessons and materials about American Indian or Alaska
Native culture and history into your mathematics curriculum? If you do not teach
mathematics, skip to question 20.

A Never
B At least once a year
C At least once a month
D At least once a week
E Every day or almost every day

VE012707

17. To what extent do you integrate lessons and materials about current issues affecting
American Indian or Alaska Native people and communities into your mathematics
curriculum?

A Never
B At least once a year
C At least once a month
D At least once a week
E Every day or almost every day

F1AITQ

Page 11

VE012730

18. How often do you have your students do each of the following mathematics activities?
Fill in one oval on each line.

Never

At least
once a
year

At least
once a
month

At least
once a
week

Every day
or almost
every day

a. Solve mathematics
problems that reflect
situations found in
American Indian
or Alaska Native
communities

A

B

C

D

E

VE012733

b. Participate in activities
that integrate
mathematics with
American Indian or
Alaska Native themes (for
example, use traditional
symbols and designs to
teach geometric concepts)

A

B

C

D

E

VE012735

c. Study traditional
American Indian
or Alaska Native
mathematics (for
example, American Indian
or Alaska Native systems
of counting, estimating,
and recording quantities)

A

B

C

D

E

VE012737

d. Study mathematics
within traditional
American Indian or
Alaska Native contexts
(for example, American
Indian or Alaska Native
systems of astronomy and
physics)

A

B

C

D

E

VE012739

F1AITQ

Page 12

VE012740

19. How much do you rely on each of the following documents in planning mathematics
lessons? Fill in one oval on each line.
Not
at all

A little

Some

A lot

Not aware
of any

a. Standards developed by
national professional
organizations

A

B

C

D

E

VE012743

b. State content standards

A

B

C

D

E

VE012746

c. District content standards

A

B

C

D

E

VE012747

d. American Indian or
Alaska Native content or
cultural standards

A

B

C

D

E

VE012749

VB331330

20. Are you Hispanic or Latino? Fill in one or more ovals.

A No, I am not Hispanic or Latino.
B Yes, I am Mexican, Mexican American, or Chicano.
C Yes, I am Puerto Rican or Puerto Rican American.
D Yes, I am Cuban or Cuban American.
E Yes, I am from some other Hispanic or Latino background.

F1AITQ

Page 13

VE021069

21. Which of the following best describes you? Fill in one or more ovals.

A White
B Black or African American
C Asian
D American Indian or Alaska Native (Print the name of your American Indian tribe or
Alaska Native group below. You may indicate more than one tribe or group.)

E Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander

VE012750

22. What have you found to be the most effective teaching and learning strategies for
increasing the achievement of your American Indian or Alaska Native students?

VE012752

23. In the space below, please share with us your thoughts about any other important
issue(s) about your students, school, or community that are related to student academic
performance, student aspirations, or other educational matters.

F1AITQ

Page 14


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