For Educators

Available Assessments

Single Word
Recognition

ROAR-SWR

WORD

ROAR-SWR measures a student’s ability to quickly recognize words. Word recognition is at the foundation of reading ability and is important for reading fluency and comprehension.

Phonological
Awareness

ROAR-PA

ROAR-PA measures elision and sound matching to assess a student’s phonological awareness. This subtest is under active development and validation.

Sentence Reading Efficiency

ROAR-SRE

ROAR-SRE measures students’ ability to silently read and understand sentences quickly and accurately. This subtest is under active development and validation.

Vocabulary


ROAR-Vocab

ROAR-Vocab measures receptive vocabulary, or the words that a student can recognize and correctly match to an image. This subtest is under active development and validation.

Are you interested in piloting the ROAR in your school or district? Check out our ROAR Partnerships Summary and fill out our ROAR Partner Interest Form!

Administering ROAR

Timeline for In-Class Administration

On ROAR Day, every student will need:

  • A Chromebook or laptop

  • Chrome or Firefox browser & wifi

  • Headphones

  • Registration Card

Budgeting time for the ROAR

  • ROAR-SWR requires 5-10 minutes.
  • ROAR-PA requires 10-15 minutes.
  • ROAR-SRE requires 7 minutes.
  • ROAR-Vocab requires 5 minutes. 
  • Consider budgeting extra time for Grades 1-2.

Administration Guide & Score Reports

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ROAR Professional Development/Educator Resources

ROAR Executive Summary — High level overview of ROAR, how it’s used, and the administration process 

Teacher’s Administration Guide — In depth guide to administering ROAR assessments

Guidance for Students Receiving Special Education Services and 504 Accommodations — Guidance on administering ROAR to students who receive special education and 504 accommodations

Quick-Start Guide for Paraprofessionals and Classroom Assistants — Guidance for paraprofessionals/classroom assistants on how to assist with administering ROAR

Guidance for English Language Learners — Guidance on administering ROAR to students who are English language learners

Next Steps Guide — Information about our four key assessments, the literacy skills that they assess, and ways in which educators can support these skills

Family Guide — An overview or ROAR assessments for students’ families to gain context and understanding as well as resources on ways they can support literacy skills at home

An Educator’s Guide to Strategic Decision-Making for Students who Need Extra Support — A structured method for making informed decisions about next steps for students needing extra support with foundational reading skills. This guide emphasizes the importance of thoughtful consideration at the individual and group levels within a classroom and systemically across a district.

Resources for Parents and Teachers — Where we link information on reading and dyslexia such as articles, books, websites, programs, and curriculums designed to support literacy 

Video Guides

Introduction to ROAR — A look at ROAR is being used in schools

ROAR: Breaking Barriers for Older Struggling Readers — How ROAR addresses barriers for older struggling readers

Guide to the Student Dashboard — An overview of a student’s view when logging into ROAR and starting assessments

Guide to Logging In to Your Educator Account — Steps to log in to ROAR as an educator or administrator

Guide to the Group Score Report — How to navigate and interpret score reports from a classroom, grade, or district level

Guide to the Individual Score Report — How to navigate and interpret a single student’s score report

Dr. Carrie Townley-Flores

ctflores@stanford.edu

If your organization is interested in a collaborative research partnership, please fill out our ROAR Partner Interest Form or email our Director of Research & Partnerships, Carrie Townley-Flores. (ctflores@stanford.edu)

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