Jan Resseger combines the meticulousness of a researcher and the heart of a social justice warrior. She is dismayed that the debate about federally mandated testing seems to have dropped out of sight since the Biden administration broke its promise to change the practice.
She writes:
It is worth remembering that until 2002, our society did not test all children in grades 3-8 and once in high school and compare the aggregate scores from school to school as a way to rate and rank public schools. School districts could choose to test students with standardized tests to measure what they had been learning, but until the No Child Left Behind Act was signed by President George W. Bush, there was no mandated high stakes testing across the states. We also ought to remember that NCLB did not, as promised, cause every child to make Adequate Yearly Progress until 2014, when all American students were to have become proficient. Because, as research has demonstrated, out-of-school challenges affect students’ test scores, the whole high stakes testing regime didn’t improve school achievement and it didn’t close achievement gaps.
Sadly, it did, however, shift the blame for unequal test scores onto the public schools themselves.
A lot of damage has followed as we have branded the schools serving concentrations of very poor children as failures and punished them through state takeovers, forced privatization, and even school closures. We have condemned the teachers in these schools as failures. We have published the comparative ratings of schools and thereby redlined particular communities, and accelerated white flight and segregation.
Standardized testing for purposes of school accountability is now mandated by the Every Student Succeeds Act, No Child Left Behind’s 2015 replacement. Last school year as COVID-19 struck, Education Secretary Betsy DeVos cancelled the testing, but early this spring, the U.S. Department of Education released guidance mandating that the states would be required to administer standardized tests despite that COVID-19 had upended the school year with a mixture of in-person, hybrid, and online education.
In a letter, dated February 22, 2021, then acting assistant secretary of education, Ian Rosenblum informed states they must test students this year, but Rosenblum offered school districts some flexibility if they submitted applications for waivers. He also said that this year the federal government would not require states to use the tests for holding schools accountable through penalties for the lowest scoring schools. His letter explains what is permissible but it has spawned considerable confusion: “It is urgent to understand the impact of COVID-19 on learning. We know, however, that some schools and school districts may face circumstances in which they are not able to safely administer statewide summative assessments this spring using their standard practices… We emphasize the importance of flexibility in the administration of statewide assessments. A state should use that flexibility to consider: administering a shortened version of its statewide assessments; offering remote administration, where feasible; and/or extending the testing window to the greatest extent practicable. This could include offering multiple testing windows and/or extending the testing window into the summer or even the beginning of the 2021 school year.”
In March, 548 researchers from the nation’s colleges of education sent a joint letter protesting Cardona’s failure to cancel standardized testing in this 2020-2021 school year but at the same time affirming the Cardona plan not to use the tests for high-stakes accountability. The researchers emphasize the danger of the past 20 years of test-and-punish: “We applaud USED’s recent decision to emphasize the importance of data for informational purposes, rather than high-stakes accountability. In light of research evidence, we wish to underscore the importance of continuing this practice in the future. For decades, experts have warned that the high-stakes use of any metric will distort results. Analyzing the impact of NCLB/ESSA, scholars have documented consequences like curriculum narrowing, teaching-to-the-test, the ‘triaging’ of resources, and cheating… The damage inflicted by racialized poverty on children, communities, and schools is devastating and daunting… Whatever their flaws, test-based accountability systems are intended to spotlight those inequalities and demand that they be addressed. But standardized tests also have a long history of causing harm and denying opportunity to low-income students and students of color, and without immediate action they threaten to cause more harm now than ever.”
This summer, press coverage of the issue of standardized testing has largely disappeared. But suddenly there is some reporting, because McKinsey & Company, and a test publisher, NWEA have just released reports on tests conducted at the end of the school year. What’s troubling is that while Secretary Cardona has defined the need for widespread testing for the purpose of gathering information, the new reporting is simply being used to document so-called “learning loss,” which many fear will stigmatize and discourage the children in America’s poorest communities.
Trying to explore both sides of the for-or-against standardized testing issue, Chalkbeat Chicago’s Mila Koumpilova simply assumes that school districts will want to “quantify the academic fallout” from the pandemic and worries that if testing is cut back this year, Chicago will lose (according to the old NCLB argument) the chance to hold schools accountable: “The change also raises questions about what tests, if any, the district might use to rate its schools and evaluate its teachers and principals going forward. The MAP math and reading tests factored into the district’s controversial school ratings program, known as SQRP, as well as employee evaluations, admissions to selective enrollment and other competitive programs, and student promotion to the next grade.”
Koumpilova also assumes that our society needs something test makers brag their products will produce: the chance to prove with data that the poorest children were affected most seriously by the school closures and disruption of COVID-19. “New national data from NWEA shows the pandemic widened pre-pandemic test score gaps by race and economic status, and that those disparities were most pronounced for the country’s youngest students and those attending high-poverty schools. The results are considered among the most comprehensive national accounting so far of academic setbacks.
Without a benchmark to compare pre-pandemic growth, it’s not clear how Chicago would measure its own students’ academic progress.”Without reminding readers that national testing companies have a vested interest in promoting their expensive products, the NY Times’ Sarah Mervosh simply quotes Karyn Lewis of NWEA, and one of the authors of new report on the importance of NWEA’s recent test results: “How much did the pandemic affect students? The latest research is out, and the answer is clear: dramatically. In math and reading, students are behind where they would be after a normal year, with the most vulnerable students showing the steepest drops… ‘It’s a bitter pill to swallow,’ said Karyn Lewis, a senior researcher at NWEA and the lead author of the organization’s report… ‘It just keeps you up at night.’ For example, in math, Latino third graders performed 17 percentile points lower in spring 2021 compared with the typical achievement of Latino third graders in the spring of 2019. The decline was 15 percentile points for Black students, compared with similar students in the past, and 14 for Native students…. The report used data from about 5.5 million public school students in third through eighth grade who took the NWEA’s tests during the 2021 school year….”
What a great description of Jan!
Someone high up in Biden’s Department of Education, when pressed about testing and cornered by truth about how harmful and widely despised testing is, said something I cannot get out of my head, “There are powerful people controlling—“ and stopped herself before finishing the sentence, turned off her Zoom camera, and did not return to the meeting for a few minutes. It’s terrifying to think that our democratic government can be sold to the highest bidder.
Agreed LCT. And same for our “free” media. Bought and paid for by the plutocracy.
Interesting. I would love to be a fly on the wall at the DOE to see what is going on.
It was painful.
The testing industrial complex has done exactly what the military version did. It has made the vested private interests richer while feeding off of the government teat with little or no evidence of improvement.
Public schools have been educating young people for over a hundred years without mandated standardized testing. In fact, the emphasis on testing detracts from education’s mission.
100% – especially in the lower grades.
and often no actual intention for improvement: the only goal is personal profit
When testing is mandated for 3rd graders….. guess what? It trickles down to K-2. Some districts have K and 1st students taking computerized, standardized tests 3 times a year – in a addition to a battery of other assessments throughout the year.
Because, the logic goes…… if we want to increase 3rd grade data, the best way to do that is to catch the deficits early and reteach… test…. reteach…. test. And spend most of our time focusing specifically skills that the test measures. Right?
Wrong. There is too much wrong with this, in addition to narrowing the curriculum, that has been discussed multiple times by many on this blog.
And the situations I described are high performing districts. As I’ve expressed before, I can’t imagine the pressure of the lower performing schools when this is the thinking.
segregation — not just by race and culture but by ability to afford tech product
Exactly. The best way to get good scores on the test is to purchase the software and programs that improve scores.
What if, instead (K-3) – we forget the tests and invest in more, well trained responsive educators, quality (non-tech) materials and rich curriculum. We could lower class sizes so all teachers in all schools can build a community of learners and be better able to respond to individual needs. Part of the day would involve targeted small, whole and individual instruction. Another part of the day would be anchored by engaging content and allow children time to explore concepts and have opportunities for free and structured play. Of course…. lots of time for independent reading, language building and social learning opportunities.
Teacher notes and some appropriate, non-stressful formative assessments would guide instruction. No need for data walls, data bases….. tracking.
No pressure environments and no worry about scores – just individual children and the health of the learning community.
“Without a benchmark to compare pre-pandemic growth, it’s not clear how Chicago would measure its own students’ academic progress.”
Since measurement of academic progress is a logical problem, it is sufficient to suggest that the idea of a “benchmark” is also problematic from a logical perspective. Language matters.
I hated tests as a K-12 child.
I had no respect for tests as a college student.
As a teacher for thirty years (1975 – 2005), I despised rank-and-punish tests that judge children, and teachers then bully and torture those that didn’t boost their test scores from previous years.
As a retired teacher, I still hate, have no respect for, and despise high-stakes rank-and-punish tests and everyone involved with creating them and forcing them on teachers and children.
Tests should be created by teachers to be used to determine what works and doesn’t work so teachers can adjust and improve how they teach and what they use to teach.
The results of those tests should never leave the classroom.
Lloyd,
You do not mention anything about using teacher written tests to assign students grades, the grades that are used to stack and rank students and determine their status as a high school graduate. Are you against teacher assigned grades?
We should all take an ed reform voucher and transfer to a private school. We could avoid most of the ed reform mandates if we switch and attend one of the (now) publicly funded private schools they prefer.
People who don’t support or value public schools direct what goes on in public schools.It’s lunacy. Public schools should reject it. It’s madness to continue to accept directives from people who don’t value public schools and work to eradicate them.
It definitely has NOT been lost sight of in Illinois. For yet another month, public pressure by IL Families for Public Education & a coalition
of groups (Journey for Justice, IFT, Learning Disabilities Assn of IL, KOCO & others) have pressured the ISBE to postpone an RFP at their monthly meeting (I’ve been informed that it’s not on the August agenda either, so that makes, I think, 4 months!).
I have confidence that more groups will join & that we will, in fact, DO something to blow up this terrible testing scourge.
At least here in Illinois.
Broad-brush, scores show exactly what you would expect: students are 4 [white/asian] -6 [black/brown] months’ behind the curriculum they would have covered in a pre-pandemic year; scores dropped double for black/ brown [18pts] compared to white/asian [9pts].
Using scores to measure “so-called ‘learning loss,’ which many fear will stigmatize and discourage the children in America’s poorest communities” ? Scores are always reported on racial/SES basis, we’ve been stigmatizing & discouraging them for 20 yrs. Keep eye on ball: the wrong-headed, teaching/ learning-harming ANNUAL testing– & equally bad that there are STAKES attached (whether or not they enforce that during pandemic).
Standardized tests as we all know were designed only to pencil in broad national patterns among regions—not to compare individual districts, schools or teachers. Results can be roughly compared every few years to yield that broad brush. Year-to-year comparisons just add a bunch of unrelated static. Title I et al fed/ state assistance should be distributed in a progressive manner, i.e. more to lowest-SES areas [which now, as before NCLB, are the lowest-scoring on stdzd tests].
Standardized test scores interpretation = mental masturbation with a bit of onanism thrown in.
Crap in, crap out!
Doing the wrong thing righter:
“The proliferation of educational assessments, evaluations and canned programs belongs in the category of what systems theorist Russ Ackoff describes as “doing the wrong thing righter. The righter we do the wrong thing,” he explains, “the wronger we become. When we make a mistake doing the wrong thing and correct it, we become wronger. When we make a mistake doing the right thing and correct it, we become righter. Therefore, it is better to do the right thing wrong than the wrong thing right.”
Our current neglect of instructional issues are the result of assessment policies that waste resources to do the wrong things, e.g., canned curriculum and standardized testing, right. Instructional central planning and student control doesn’t – can’t – work. But, that never stops people trying.
The result is that each effort to control the uncontrollable does further damage, provoking more efforts to get things in order. So the function of management/administration becomes control rather than creation of resources. When Peter Drucker lamented that so much of management consists in making it difficult for people to work, he meant it literally. Inherent in obsessive command and control is the assumption that human beings can’t be trusted on their own to do what’s needed. Hierarchy and tight supervision are required to tell them what to do. So, fear-driven, hierarchical organizations turn people into untrustworthy opportunists. Doing the right thing instructionally requires less centralized assessment, less emphasis on evaluation and less fussy interference, not more. The way to improve controls is to eliminate most and reduce all.”