Test Questions And Detailed Correct
Answers
c. The students progress monitoring data (last four data points) is below the goal line and has been
collected for at least 6 weeks. - Correct Answers When analyzing a student progress monitoring graph,
the teacher could adapt an intensive intervention plan if?
a. The students progress monitoring data (last four data points) is above the goal line and has been
collected for at least two weeks.
b. The students progress monitoring data (last four data points) is below the goal line and has been
collected for at least 15 days.
c. The students progress monitoring data (last four data points) is below the goal line and has been
collected for at least 6 weeks.
a. The measurement is based on the curriculum and grade level for the suspected learning disability. -
Correct Answers When planning for the progress monitoring of a student with a suspected learning
disability teacher should ensure that?
a. The measurement is based on the curriculum and grade level for the suspected learning disability.
b. The learning environment is beneficial to the student.
c. The classroom teachers are highly qualified.
d. The student has been placed in the classroom.
d. Data collected frequently enough to inform instructional and tier placement decisions. - Correct
Answers Effective progress monitoring includes?
a. Data from Tier 3 only.
b. A measure that is difficult to administer and interpret.
c. A single source to inform instructional decision-making for a student.
d. Data collected frequently enough to inform instructional and tier placement decisions.
, d. The data indicates the student has not met the benchmark, the instruction/intervention is not
effective, and an instructional change is needed. - Correct Answers What conclusion can be made from
analyzing the progress monitoring data for the student in the above graph using the four-point method?
(Image reflects last four data points under the benchmark)
a. The data indicates the student has not met the benchmark, the instruction/intervention is effective,
and an instructional change is not needed.
b. The data indicates the student met the benchmark, the instruction/intervention is not effective, and
an instruction change is needed.
c. The data indicates the student has not met the benchmark, the instruction/intervention is not
effective, and an instructional change is not needed.
d. The data indicates the student has not met the benchmark, the instruction/intervention is not
effective, and an instructional change is needed.
b. The data indicates the student has met the benchmark, the instruction/intervention is effective, and
an instructional change is not needed. - Correct Answers What conclusion can be made from analyzing
the progress monitoring data for the student in the above graph using the four-point method? (Image
reflects all data points are above the benchmark)
a. The data indicates the student met the benchmark, the instruction/intervention is not effective, and
an instruction change is needed.
b. The data indicates the student has met the benchmark, the instruction/intervention is effective, and
an instructional change is not needed.
c. The data indicates the student has not met the benchmark, the instruction/intervention is not
effective, and an instructional change is not needed.
d. The data indicates the student has not met the benchmark, the instruction/intervention is not
effective, and an instructional change is needed.
a. The data indicates the student has met the benchmark, the instruction/intervention is effective, an
instructional change is not needed, and the teacher should consider a more challenging goal. - Correct
Answers What conclusion can be made from analyzing the progress monitoring data for the student in
the above graph using the four-point method? (Image reflects last four data points far exceeding the
benchmark)
a. The data indicates the student has met the benchmark, the instruction/intervention is effective, an
instructional change is not needed, and the teacher should consider a more challenging goal.
b. The data indicates the student met the benchmark, the instruction/intervention is not effective, an
instruction change is needed, and the teacher should not consider a more challenging goal.