Roxana Marachi, a professor at San Jose State University in California, wrote an open letter to the State Board of Education. She warned them that the results of the Smarter Balanced Assessments, which will be released today, are not valid or reliable or fair. “False data are false data. Period. And to compare future results with current 2015 scores as “baseline” would be just as fraudulent as it would be to promote the 2015 scores as somehow valid.”
Students who are English learners will be harmed significantly by these tests, since SBAC itself predicted a failure rate of 90%, she writes.
These tests violate the most basic principles of the the American Psychological Association:
“We know from decades of research that beliefs matter in student learning and motivation. Without an understanding that the scores are meaningless, students will be likely to internalize failing labels with corresponding beliefs about their academic potential. And unless otherwise informed, families will be likely to believe what the State Department of Education communicates about their children’s readiness for college and career based on an assessment that fails to meet basic standards for testing and accountability.
“Jonathan Pelto has written extensively about SmarterBalanced testing in Connecticut:
“Considering that many of the world’s greatest scientists, authors, actors, teachers and leaders were once English Language Learners one would think the public education system in the United States would be designed to promote and support opportunities for those who need extra help learning the English Language. Moreover you would think education policymakers would be working to find ways to take advantage of the opportunities that having a multilingual population present.”
Marachi writes:
“This seems an ethical dilemma for educational leaders. If they are to be honest with students and families and communicate truthfully that the test scores are meaningless, they would have to acknowledge that the public has been misled (whether knowingly or not) by those promoting the assessments. Acknowledging the current situation would also include accepting the fact that hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars have been wasted (and are slated to continue to be wasted) should the assessments continue to fail meeting basic standards for testing and accountability.
“Yet, what appears to be the case is that the invalid tests are being falsely promoted as accurate measures of “college and career readiness.” The LA Times just published a piece entitled, “‘Don’t Panic’ Officials Say as California Braces for Lower Student Test Results.” It appears state officials are fully aware of the potential harm and motivational fallout yet “Don’t Panic” is the best message being offered as a remedy rather than full disclosure about the lack of validity of the tests.”
Marachi quotes Dr. Doug McRae, a testing expert, who said:
“Including current scores in student academic records without evidence of validity, reliability, and fairness of the assessments would be “immoral, unethical, unprofessional, and to say the least, totally irresponsible.”
Marachi closes with a Million-dollar Challenge, which should be addressed to every state board member in the nation, as well as to Secretary Arne Duncan, who funded these tests, as well as to David Coleman, the architect of the Common Core standards.
“In closing and in the spirit of critical thinking, I respectfully request that the State Board of Education take on the following challenge. The ultimate endorsement of confidence in your release of SBAC scores would be for each Board Member to publicly take the 11th Grade SBAC Math/ELA tests and to publish your scores at the next State Board of Education meeting. If the assessments are confirmed to be functional and can be verified as accurately, securely, and fairly assessing skills necessary for “college and career readiness”, then every State Board Trustee (all of whom are assumed to be college-educated and career-successful) should receive scores that exceed passing performance. At the very least, this process should allow you the opportunity to fully endorse the assessment product that has been bought and administered to children.
“If this request is declined or somehow otherwise considered unfair, then why would you demand the same of youth entrusted to your care?”

She is a voice of truth in education. More should follow.
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“Frauder Balanced”
The jig is up, when public knows
The Emperor has see-through clothes
The fraud we see is plain as day
There’s really nothing more to say
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Wonderful challenge for the individuals in organized groups who are pushing this destructive experiment in standardized public education, an experiment foisted on schools by self-appointed policy-makers,
The spin doctors have been in place to deal with the rolling and changing dates for the release of test scores. Bill Gates has played a prominent role in organizing other foundations and PR firms to keep up the same flawed mantra of Common Core and tests as the best and only path ahead for public education in this nation (while also funding every project to undermine that institution and expand subsidized market-based education).
You can be sure the PR specialists who work for Gates, Walton, Broad, and the companies that pay for ALEC’s legislation will ramp up their PR machinery as well.
This morning I witnessed an image-rich ad, with compelling music, appealing images –amber waves of grain, apple pie, workers climbing the steel beams in skyscrapers (updated WPA imagery from the great depression public works projects). The end credit read “Opportunity Communications LLC.” The voice over said “We are Republicans.”
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It would be kind of cute, wouldn’t it, to give these tests to ALL would-be “education” specialists. Especially the math.
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It’s interesting (and apt) that much of Marachi’s research is about school bullying.
I guess she knows bullies when she sees them.
And, unfortunately for them, she also knows how to deal with them.
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From Elizabeth Stein–General Legal Counsel, CA Dept of Ed; SBAC (CAASPP)
CN150012, 2015–16 CAASPP Test Administration: $86,020,964
CN140236, 2015–16 Smarter Balanced consortium-managed services:
$9,550,000*
BUT GOV. BROWN REFUSED TO FUND THE STAR ACHIEVEMENT TEST.
CA HAS NO PROFICIENCY EXAM UNLIKE NY AND MASS.
IS THAT CRITICAL THINKING?
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“… immoral, unethical, unprofessional and… totally irresponsible.”
Add “arrogant, deceptive and patronizing” and you have a pretty complete description of the so-called reformers.
Oh, and don’t forget to include the vicious, destructive and anti-democratic consequences of all the above.
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Reblogged this on Crazy Normal – the Classroom Exposé.
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And then there is California’s little known Common Core ‘death panel’ – with the power to shut schools or whole districts with bad scores.
“…as a last resort, the agency could take over a district for academic failure. Low test scores will likely be just one of many factors justifying outside intervention. However, the agency is just getting going, and its executive director Carl Cohn was just appointed to the post on Sept. 1”
http://edsource.org/2015/california-smarter-balanced-math-english-results-common-core-faq/86181
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Adding another layer to how the test is not valid or reliable…
We live in California and opted our children out last school year. I just checked our school’s SBAC results. Interestingly, though we had 13 or so opt outs, enough opt outs to drop below 95%, the breakdown in scores shows that we had 98.9% test in English and 99.5% test in Math. It only reports 2 opt outs in English and 1 in Math. I KNOW that we did not meet those numbers. Other high opt out schools are seeing 100% compliancy reported. I know there were glitches in the technical administration, but does this mean I should be expecting test results for my children who did NOT test???? How crazy is this???
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I’m glad this professor wrote this letter. Success on the ELA test depends, in part, on reading comprehension. Supporters of the test seem to think that this is a skill that can be imparted by an ELA teacher. But there is no such thing as all-purpose reading comprehension skill. There is no module that can be implanted and strengthened in the brain that enables a reader to unlock the meaning of any text it encounters. Why will American kids grasp an article on baseball but not on cricket? It’s all background knowledge, not “reading skills”. Comprehension depends –duh — on knowing the meaning of the words that are on the page. The kid must know 90% or more of the words, and somehow kids must have learned these words. But these tests are premised on the false idea that there is a reading comprehension “muscle” or module in the brain that can be implanted and strengthened through exercise. And the tests, in turn, spawn a ton of misguided (and incredibly dreary) teaching meant to develop this chimerical skill In truth, reading comprehension is largely a matter of background knowledge. To teach reading, you must teach broad knowledge. That’s what our schools SHOULD be teaching. Because of Common Core and its tests, schools are increasingly failing to teach this.
These confusing tests will yield confusing results that will be used to draw false conclusions. We will be told the tests mean things that they do not. The tests will be used to judge ELA teachers who cannot possibly impart a broad array of background knowledge on their own. Yet we will be told these teachers are failing to teach “complex text reading skills” –even though such a thing does not exist. Because professionals’ homes impart a lot of background knowledge, and poor homes do not, reading comprehension tests are inescapably family wealth tests. But the CA testing guru, Deb Sigman, does not seem to understand this. It saddens me to see CA schools preoccupied and sidetracked by these ill-conceived tests. Our education leaders are failing us. They ought to educate themselves better by reading Brown University’s Marilyn Jager Adams, and E.D. Hirsch and Dan Willingham from UVA, and other heavy-weight thinkers about education. What our leaders should be doing is encouraging the teaching of core knowledge. This is royal road to intelligence. What we have instead is Lumosity –discredited brain training exercises –as de facto state education policy.
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Makes sense.
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‘Why will American kids grasp an article on baseball but not on cricket? It’s all background knowledge, not “reading skills”… . But these tests are premised on the false idea that there is a reading comprehension “muscle” or module in the brain that can be implanted and strengthened through exercise.’
Succinct & well-worded illustration of the problems inherent in ‘standards’ (what the student must be able to do) which are replaced by lists of skills supposedly needed to be mastered by all students in order to achieve desired standards. Those who claim CCSS are ‘just standards’– teachers free to choose curriculum & pedagogical methods to achieve them– don’t get this.
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Remember the SRA reading program? Those boring articles would turn off even an avid reader. (It was the bane if my existence. I read my acquired allotment, then snuck in a “good” book of my own choice.)
The reading passages in assessments remind me of the SRA. Purposely chosen to bore the participant? On topics which no one would of find of interest? Sorry, I’m not turned on by the details of bee keeping.
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Thank to all for the comments and to Diane for sharing the Open Letter and Critical Questions post. This was the most difficult (and necessary) letter I’ve written. Am hoping it will help to reveal the truths about the flawed tests as well as to promote more critical oversight in what we allow to be considered for use in assessment. If readers are interested in signing on to support the request for the Board challenge to take the 11th grade SBAC, please contact me or sign up for updates on the EduResearcher.com blog. Power on/peace.
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Well said.
It’s hard to believe so many intelligent people (especially those who are making the decisions about education) are fooled by the concept of SBAC. The results in places like NY and California should reinforce their lack of validity.
Parents, however, have “skin in the game” and they are not going to allow their children to be labeled failures.
And the angrier parents get, the more likely they are to vote.
I just hope that the politicians get the message before it’s too late. I cringe every time I hear Jeb Bush brag about his “successful” makeover of the Florida Public School System. And some of the other candidates who held/hold governorships have even worse records.
As a resident of NYS, it will be interesting to see how Cuomo tries to wiggle out from the results of his harsh stands which are decimating education here in my area. He’s ticked off the wrong constituents and once Pandora’s Box has been opened it’s impossible to return to ignorance. Opting Out is here to stay.
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“Political Reality”
I never married reality
So can not be divorced
Reality is not for me
And sure can’t be enforced
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