Oklahoma’s State Superintendent, Ryan Walters, changed last years’ testing cut scores, redefining the term “proficient” in the state’s accountability data. Fortunately, there has been a bipartisan backlash against Walters’ lack of transparency when making the change, which looked like an effort to trick Oklahomans into believing that he had improved student outcomes.
But, this month, the Oklahoma Commission for Educational Quality and Accountability brought back a misleading, inappropriate, and destructive definition of the term proficiency for accountability purposes.
In doing so, the Commission revitalized the use of one of the most effective weapons for privatizing public education. They perpetuated the lie that “proficiency” is “grade level,” thus making it sound like public schools are irrevocably broken.
We need to remember the history of this propaganda which took off during the Reagan Administration, which misused data in its “A Nation at Risk” to push high-stakes testing.
The National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) scores are the best estimate of students’ outcomes, but they should be used for diagnostic, not accountability purposes. But, as the Tulsa World reported, in 2011, Jeb Bush’s Foundation for Excellence in Education (FEE) high-jacked NAEP’s terminology when writing and editing then State Superintendent Janice Barresi’s new accountability-driven A-F school report card. The World presented evidence that the FEE was engaged in a “pay-to-play” scheme to reap profits while influencing policy.
As The Washington Post reported in 2013, FEE was at the nexus of rightwing political influence in K-12 education and corporate interests seeking to profit from the nation’s schools. It claimed that raising “expectations” for students would advance their learning. In fact, NAEP scores provide evidence that starting in 2012 , when corporate reforms were in place, the opposite happened, as NAEP scores declined, reversing decades of incremental growth.
It did, however, advance the privatization of public education.
At the 2024 Oklahoma conference, Bush’s new think tank, ExcelinEd used misleading and misconstrued data from the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), to conflate NAEP “proficiency” with “grade level.”
In fact, as Oklahoma Watch’s Jennifer Palmer explained, Oklahoma’s 8th grade reading proficiency grade requires that “students demonstrate mastery over even the most challenging grade-level content and are ready for the next grade, course or level of education.” That definition of mastery of grade level skills included critical thinking, interpretation, evaluation, analysis, and synthesis when reading across multiple texts, and writing.
But, Palmer noted, “8th graders who didn’t score proficient, but are in the ‘basic’ category, can still do all this.”
Moreover, as Jan Resseger further explained, the nation’s NAEP proficiency grade “represents A level work, at worst an A-.” She asks, “Would you be upset to learn that “only” 40% of 8th graders are at an A level in math and “only” 1/3rd scored an A in reading?”
Resseger also cited the huge body of research explaining why School Report Cards aren’t a reliable tool for measuring school effectiveness.
We need a better understanding how and why the word “proficiency” has been weaponized against schools. To do so, we must master the huge body of research which explains why standardized tests aren’t fair, reliable, or valid measures of how well schools are performing.
In 2013, after surveying national experts about “misnaepery,” Education Week explained that NAEP “is widely viewed as the most accurate and reliable yardstick of U.S. students’ academic knowledge … But when it comes to many of the ways the exam’s data are used, researchers have gotten used to gritting their teeth.”
Also in 2013, James Heckman, a Nobel Prize laureate who lived in Oklahoma City as a child, warned of the dangers of misusing test data. In 2025, Heckman and his co-author, Alison Baulos, published “Instead of Panicking over Test Scores, Let’s Rethink How We Measure Learning and Student Success.” They urge us to “pause some tests and redirect resources toward more meaningful ways to promote and assess student learning.”
They don’t oppose the use of tests as one measure when used for diagnostic purposes; those metrics “may be valuable for tracking large-scale trends — such as monitoring recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic.” However, “the current overreliance on tests is costly in many ways and is not an effective strategy for improving education as a whole.” And, “standardized tests often conceal more than they reveal.”
Getting back to recent headlines, I appreciate the press’ reporting on Ryan Walters’ lack of transparency. I’m even more impressed with their reporting on the lack of evidence to support his claims that his administration has improved outcomes. But they now need to report on the reasons why the Commission made a terrible mistake, apparently based on the alt facts generated by corporate reformers’ false public relations spin.

The use of data after the release of Nation at Risk was as always for the purpose of excluding people. Never was any republican politician desirous of improving public instruction. The democrats who followed were either ignorant or complicit in this attempted destruction
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Roy,
Lots of Dems bought into the lies about public schools. They were willing to blame public schools for the recession early in Reagan’s term. Like, no connection whatever but blame the schools. The Dem governors led the way. Clinton, Riley, others.
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“The National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) scores are the best estimate of students’ outcomes, but they should be used for diagnostic, not accountability purposes.”
If that is the best estimate, it might as well be thrown in the trash. They shouldn’t be used for anything as all of the onto-epistemological invalidities pointed out by N. Wilson hold true rendering any usage of the scores “vain and illusory” (per Wilson)-in other words pure horse manure.
Why do educators (and I use that term very cautiously) believe that mimicking the medical diagnostic paradigm is the way to go?? I’d say mainly it’s an attempt to scientize a process (teaching and learning) in order to gain prestige-and therefore more monies. Teaching and learning is not a medical issue, even though sometimes medical diagnoses come into play with determining a student’s course of study. Teaching and learning is a normal, natural process that humans must experience in order to become fully adult. It is not an illness, an abnormality that must be diagnosed and “healed”. IT IS THE WRONG PARADIGM.
When one starts with a false premise/paradigm the results almost always are bogus, wrong, harmful.
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I know it is wrong to assign motivation to a whole group of people, but I find it hard to feel that data mining was ever anything but cynical on the part of those who were trying to convince the public of the inferiority of American Education.
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“The National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) scores are the best estimate of students’ outcomes, but they should be used for diagnostic, not accountability purposes.”
Diagnostic of what? The pool of tests we used in case studies for determining special education services did not include NAEP. There are far better tools out there for making those decisions. All of them require the skilled observation of professional educators.
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This post highlights a big problem with state cut scores and state designated proficiency on state tests. Proficiency is a subjective determination that can be manipulated by politicians trying to control their messaging. Governors can raise and lower cut scores based on their political agenda as state tests are not norm referenced tests.
So-called education reform has repeatedly misused the results of testing to punish schools, districts, teachers and students. The results are rarely used to help students or improve instructional programs. The misleading conclusions of reporters on the NAEP are a perfect example of test score results become politicized. While proficiency on the NAEP is above average performance, it is never mentioned when scores are reported. This misunderstanding leads to false reporting on how American students performed on the assessment.
On a personal note kudos to a unsung hero algebra teacher in the Clint School District in Texas. Last year my grandson barely passed the STAAR state test in math. He started out the year feeling very confused and lost in algebra. Thanks to his diligent, dedicated math teacher and my grandson’s interest in remaining on the wrestling team, he aced this year’s STAAR in math test and says math is his favorite subject.
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Imagine that! It took both a real, live, dedicated teacher and a motivated student to produce results
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On May 27, 2025 the news website The Missouri Independent published a story about a portion of a current Missouri education bill that includes proficiency and state testing. I don’t know if the Missouri version is bad or good.
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Frances,
Any legislation that defines “proficiency” as grade-level is garbage.
Frankly, I don’t think these terms should be legislated.
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Please read the article. The legislator who introduced this portion of the bill did it to reduce the confusion that non educators have about grade level and state testing. The legislator is a retired educator.
I would put the link in this post, but when ever I have tried to do so, the system refuses my post.
Personally I support the abolition of high stakes state testing. Also, I think that sorting elementary school students by birth year is junk science.
The article gives an example of State Senator Eigel mishandling the use of the terms grade level, proficiency, etc.
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The scores are weaponized at the district level to force us to use the iReady test prep platform instead of teaching and to outsource a good deal of the teaching profession to low paid, untrained, uneducated Sylvan tutors, among other things. It’s a scam. Test scores are wielded by the superintendent like a chainsaw, like he’s Elon the Destroyer himself.
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LCT,
I have had many comments here from students who say they hate IReady.
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I’ve seen too many iReady questions with no correct answers, among other problems. Don’t get me started on the ridiculously stupid “brain breaks”. IReady is an assault on the brain. You have to see and hear it to believe it.
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