Archives for category: Pearson

A student in a gifted program wrote this piercing analysis of the state tests he and his classmates just endured.

The tests he took had many brand names and registered trademarks. He realized this is product placement.

He wrote:

“Non-fictional passages in the test I took included an article about robots, where the brands IBM™, Lego®, FIFA® and Mindstorms™ popped up, each explained with a footnote. I cannot speak for all test takers, but I found the trademark references and their associated footnotes very distracting and troubling.

“According to Barbara Kolson, an intellectual property lawyer for Stuart Weitzman Shoes, “The fact that the brands did not pay Pearson for the ‘product placement’ does not mean that the use is not product placement.” To the test-takers subjected to hidden advertising, it made no difference whether or not it was paid for. The only conclusion they (and this test-taker) made is that they could not be coincidental.”

When I served on the NAEP governing board, there was. Flat prohibition on any reference to brand names. I studied the guidelines of every publisher a decade ago when writing “The Language Police,” and all of them specifically banned brand names.

What gives here? Why the marketing in the new Common Core tests?

Yesterday I received an email from a reporter from the New York Daily News asking for my reaction to a bootleg copy of the Pearson-made fifth-grade exam for English Language Arts. This is part of the first tests of the Common Core in the state, administered in recent weeks to students in 3rd through 8th grades. Students spent about 90 minutes per day for three days on the ELA tests and repeated the process the next week in math.

I read the passages and the questions based on them. My reaction was that the difficulty level of the passages and the questions was not age-appropriate. Based on test questions I had reviewed for seven years when I was a member of the NAEP board, it seemed to me that the test was pitched at an eighth grade level. The passages were very long, about twice as long as a typical passage on NAEP for eighth grade. The questions involved interpretation, inference, and required re-reading of the passage for each question.

I suppose that is what the test-makers think of as critical thinking, and it may be, but there are also issues of what is appropriate for fifth-graders, as well as recognition that this is a timed test.

When the article appeared, I was not quoted but others agreed that the exam was above fifth-grade level. Aaron Pallas at Teachers College said the vocabulary was sixth grade. But it was not the vocabulary that was disturbing to me: it was the cognitive load, the expectation that fifth-graders could read and interpret long passages on a timed test. It would be interesting to put this test alongside released items from eighth grade NAEP. I tried doing that yesterday afternoon, and to my eye, most of the questions would be rated as “medium” or “hard” for eighth graders.

Very high-performing students may find the exam easy. I suspect it was beyond the comprehension of average fifth grade students, and extremely hard for students in the bottom half.

If this test is indicative of what is in store, It reinforces my concern that the Common Core will widen the achievement gaps. Struggling students will fail.

And by the way, read the smug, arrogant editorial in the Daily News. The editors think it is just great that many kids will fail. They are sure that the tests will reveal the poor quality of education in the city’s schools. They forget that every student in the city has been educated under mayoral control, for which this editorial board has been a consistent cheerleader. Do they understand the contradiction? Not likely.

From Alan Singer:

Pearson is reading the columns. Please spread the word to your lists and encourage people to reply online. Keep the pressure on!

Enough is Enough — Pearson Education Fails the Test Again and Again

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/alan-singer/enough-is-enough-pearson-_b_3146434.html

Attention: Charles Goldsmith, Head of Corporate Communications at Pearson Plc

Emailed Sunday, April 21, 2013, noon, New York time

Dear Mr. Goldsmith
I am very upset about what I have documented as a pattern of poor performance by Pearson Education and its sub-divisions and their repeated failure to deliver the services Pearson has contracted to provide American school districts. I plan to post this column on Huffington Post on Wednesday April 24, 2013 at 9AM New York time. I open with excerpts from two recent articles from local newspapers detailing serious Pearson “errors” on standardized tests administered to children in New York City. Because of the pattern of poor performance documented in this column stretching back for more than a decade, I am pressing New York City and New York State officials to suspend all current and future relationships with your company. The instances I cite in the column are the ones that I found through my research, primarily conducted online. I would appreciate comments from your office that I can include in this blog.
Sincerely,

Dr. Alan Singer, Ph.D.

Dear Readers,

This is a long post because there is so much about the Pearson company you need to read about and evaluate. Please read to the end, because if you agree with these findings, you need to contact public officials and press them to end the relationship between Pearson and American schools. I did receive a reply to my email from Susan Aspey, the Vice President for Media Relations at Pearson. It is included at the end of the report. I attach it without comment. It is up to you to decide if the reply satisfactorily addresses the issues I raise in this post.
Thank you for your support,
Alan

http://www.pearsoned.com/press-room/

Test-Takers See Double

By Yoav Gonen, New York Post, April 19, 2013

http://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/test_takers_see_double_LSNOc2ZDL69k4as0mGGGeO
Some reading passages on this week’s state exams came straight out of a school curriculum produced by the test-maker — giving schools that bought those materials a leg up, teachers and parents said yesterday. The rehashing of essays for students in Grades 6 and 8 was discovered on English exams created by Pearson. . . Officials at the firm said the inclusion of essays from their curriculum material was an “unintentional” consequence of the state’s emphasis on using nonfiction texts in the exams. “The process for selecting test material is separate from creating textbooks,” said Pearson director of communications Stacy Skelly. “The Pearson content developers who work on the [state] assessment contract do not work to develop curriculum for other divisions of Pearson.”

2,700 More in City Qualify as Gifted After Score Errors Are Fixed

By Al Baker, The New York Times, April 20, 2013

Nearly 2,700 New York City students were wrongly told in recent weeks they were not eligible for seats in public school gifted and talented programs because of errors in scoring the tests used for admission, the Education Department said on Friday. The company that both created and scored the tests, Pearson, has apologized for the mistakes . . . 13 percent of all those in kindergarten through third grade who sat for the tests — were affected by the errors, said Erin Hughes, a spokeswoman for the Education Department . . . Scott Smith, the president of learning assessment for Pearson, said “the fact that these errors occurred is simply unacceptable to Pearson as we fully understand the importance of accurate scoring . . . It is clear that we had a breakdown in our processes and we are conducting a complete, extensive investigation of every step” . . . Because of the mistakes, the city will withhold $500,000 from Pearson’s contract, which is worth $5.5 million over three years and is in its second year.”

Pearson Education is the North American affiliate of an international publishing and media company based in the United Kingdom. They own the publishers Adobe, Scott Foresman, Penguin, Longman, Wharton, Harcourt, Puffin, Prentice Hall, and Allyn & Bacon. They are deeply involved in test assessment producing the National Assessment of Educational Progress, the Stanford Achievement Test, the Millar Analogy Test, the New York City special high school admissions test, and the G.E.D. Through interlocking boards of directors, partnerships, and donation’s from the company’s foundation, they have developed relationships with the largely online University of Phoenix, Teach for America, Stanford University, the National Governors
Association, the Council of Chief State School Officers, and the Gates, Lumina, Broad, and Walton Foundations.

http://teacherblog.typepad.com/newteacher/2012/11/on-the-rise-of-pearson-oh-and-following-the-money.html

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/alan-singer/cuomo-common-core-and-pearson_b_1293465.html
http://www.pearsoned.com/stanford-university-and-pearson-collaborate-to-deliver-the-teacher-performance-assessment-tpa/

As of May 2012, Pearson worked with eighteen states in the U.S. as well as Washington, D.C. and Puerto Rico. In New York, Pearson held a $32 million, five-year contract to produce standardized tests. In Texas its contract was worth $500 million. In a statement issued ahead of its annual shareholder meeting in April 2012, Pearson said that education business accounts for more than 60% of earnings and sales and the company’s total revenue is up 12% this year to $1.16 billion.

http://www.foxbusiness.com/government/2012/05/31/in-testing-frenzy-who-scores-high/

According to its website, “As the leading education services company, Pearson is serious about evolving how the world learns . . . Real change is our commitment and its results are delivered through connecting capabilities to create actionable, scalable solutions that improve access, affordability, and achievement.” Unfortunately, their record suggests that Pearson is primarily serious about profit with little regard to “real change” or how the world actually learns.

http://www.pearsoned.com/about-us/

Pearson money, both from the corporation and from the foundation, gives it tremendous political influence over educational policy decisions in the United States. Michael Winerip reported in The New York Times that the Pearson Foundation was paying to send school officials on free trips to international conferences where Pearson products were promoted and they met with Pearson executives. According to a report in The Texas Observer, “Pearson has it all — and all of it has a price. For statewide testing in Texas alone, the company holds a five-year contract worth nearly $500 million to create and administer exams. If students should fail those tests, Pearson offers a series of remedial-learning products to help them pass. Meanwhile, kids are likely to use textbooks from Pearson-owned publishing houses like Prentice Hall and Pearson Longman. Students who want to take virtual classes may well find themselves in a course subcontracted to Pearson. And if the student drops out, Pearson partners with the American Council on Education to offer the GED exam for a profit.”

http://www.texasobserver.org/the-pearson-graduate/

A report published by In the Public Interest charged that Pearson and other for-profit companies are using their foundations to lobby for educational programs that directly benefit the companies. For example, the Foundation for Excellence in Education (FEE) and its partner Chiefs for Change are a conservative education policy advocacy organization founded by former Florida governor “Jeb” Bush. Because FEE is a 501(c)(3) organization, it is not required to disclose its donors. However, the Washington Post reported that FEE and Chiefs for Change are sponsored by among others Pearson and Amplify, which is a Murdoch company.

http://www.inthepublicinterest.org/article/emails-show-corporate-influence-conflict-interest-education-reform
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/wp/2013/01/30/e-mails-link-bush-foundation-corporations-and-education-officials/

The Foundation for Excellence in Education and Chiefs for Change are involved in writing education laws and regulations in Florida, Louisiana, Maine, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Rhode Island that benefit its private funders. According to David Cohen, chair of In the Public Interest, “Testing companies and for-profit online schools see education as big business. For-profit companies are hiding behind FEE and other business lobby organizations they fund to write laws and promote policies that enrich the companies.”

http://www.inthepublicinterest.org/article/emails-show-corporate-influence-conflict-interest-education-reform
http://www.tulsaworld.com/news/article.aspx?subjectid=19&articleid=20130210_19_A

The test score foul-up experienced in New York City is also nothing new. According to Bob Schaeffer, Public Education Director for FairTest: National Center for Fair & Open Testing, it happens repeatedly. In 1998, test score delivery was delayed in California. In 1999-2000, Pearson misgraded 12,000 tests in Arizona.

http://www.tampabay.com/blogs/gradebook/content/pearson-problems-nothing-new-testing-world

2000 was a particularly bad year for Pearson. Florida fined Pearson $4 million because of delays in test score delivery. In Washington, over two hundred thousand writing exams had to be rescored. In Minnesota, Pearson misgraded 45,739 graduation tests, which resulted in a lawsuit with a $11 million settlement. The judge hearing the case found that there had been “years of quality control problems” and a “culture emphasizing profitability and cost-cutting.”

http://www.twincities.com/ci_15535831

But the problems in Minnesota did not stop. In 2002, a computer glitch caused malfunctions in some online math tests and Pearson incorrectly failed nearly 8,000 Minnesota students on a test that was required for high school graduation. Pearson agreed to pay up to $7 million in damages for that problem. In 2007, a Minnesota online statewide math test was shut down after the program malfunctioned for 25% of the districts that were using it. In 2010, the results from online science tests taken by 180,000 students in grades 5 to 8 were delayed due to scoring errors.

http://minnesota.publicradio.org/display/web/2007/04/26/mathtestglitch
http://edleadnews.blogspot.com/2010/07/fcat-testing-company-also-has-problems.html

Meanwhile Pearson’s problems seemed to be spreading like a virus. In 2005, test scores were delayed and fines were levied against Pearson in Michigan; in Virginia computerized tests were misgraded; and on the 2005-2006 SAT college admissions test over four thousand tests were wrongly scored and Pearson was forced to pay a $3 million settlement. Pearson blamed the SAT errors on “excessive moisture that caused the answer sheets to expand before they were scanned at the company’s large test-processing site in Austin, Tex.”

And the beat goes on. In 2008, scoring errors delayed school report cards in South Carolina; in Arkansas first graders had to retake a Pearson exam because the test used questions from the practice material. This problem, which also arose in New York (see above), seems to be the result of standard Pearson practice. One group of student teachers that took the Pearson New York State Content Specialty Test in Social Studies reported to me that their essay question, which called on them to compare two primary source documents from the era of the French Revolution, was taken directly from the California social studies teacher’s exam where it included a sample answer worth full credit.

http://www.cset.nesinc.com/

In 2009-2010, Wyoming’s new computer testing program failed and the state demanded that Pearson repay $9.5 million for “complete default of the contract.” In 2010, Florida test scores were delayed by more than a month and Pearson agreed to pay nearly $15 million in fines and in 2011 writing exams delivered to Florida school districts without cover sheets exposed topics on the test in advance. Meanwhile, according to the Tampa Bay Times, students taking Florida’s new computerized algebra final exam could not submit finished tests because Pearson’s servers were down.

http://www.tampabay.com/blogs/gradebook/content/problems-problems-everywhere-pearsons-testing-system/2067044

Just recently, Pearson and one of its partners, the Stanford Center for Assessment, Learning, and Equity (SCALE), were forced to send out an email to participants in a new testing program for prospective teachers that “Due to unanticipated delays in the qualification of edTPA™ scorers, we are unable to confirm that all edTPA portfolio submissions scheduled for the April 11 field test reporting date will be scored by this date.”

http://assessment.pesb.wa.gov/faq/tpa-communications

The value of other Person education services has been questioned. In 2007-2008, a study conducted by the National Center for Education Evaluation and Regional Assistance (NCEE) found that professional development provided by Pearson for math teachers did not significantly improve student performance compared with students whose teachers did not participate in the program. In Atlanta, a 2006 study conducted by the Comprehensive School Reform Center found that Pearson Achievement Solutions showed limited evidence of effectiveness for promoting comprehensive school reform in elementary schools.

http://ies.ed.gov/ncee/pubs/20104009/
http://www.bestevidence.org/word/CSRQ_Elem_Nov_08_2006.pdf

The reliability of Pearson’s tests is also subject to question. In May 2012, only 27% of the fourth grade students passed a new Florida writing test. When parents complained, the test was reevaluated, the passing score was changed, and the percentage of students who passed climbed to 81%. In 2012, eighth grade reading tests in New York State had to be reevaluated after parents and teachers complained about meaningless reading passages about talking pineapples and misleading questions.

http://www.foxbusiness.com/government/2012/05/31/in-testing-frenzy-who-scores-high/#ixzz2PnN9tPuY

http://www.pearsonassessments.com/pai/ea/teacher/teacherhome.htm
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/alan-singer/the-wisdom-of-pearsons-pi_b_1505897.html

In a press release, New York City School Chancellor Dennis Walcott called the recent errors by Pearson in grading the city’s gifted and talented test “unacceptable” and told the public “they let our children and families down. I have told the company’s officials in no uncertain terms that I expect this will never happen again.”

But enough is enough. Pearson’s history suggests that these types of errors will happen again and again.

In a somewhat bolder statement, New York City Public Advocate Bill de Blasio, a mayoral candidate, said it was time for the city’s Department of Education to “reassess its relationship with the company.”

But that still is not enough. The relationship between New York City, New York State, and Pearson Education must end. Other states and municipalities should reconsider their relationship with Pearson as well. This company and its testing regime have not earned the right to work in American schools.

In response to my query, Susan Aspey emailed me and the editorial staff at Huffington Post. Ms. Aspey is the Vice President for Media Relations at Pearson. According to the website Linkin, she previously was press secretary at the United States Department of Education. I think she epitomizes the disturbing relationship between private companies that are selling products to many levels of American government and government agencies that promote educational policy and are supposed to regulate private contractors. I am posting it without comment. It is up to you to decide if the reply satisfactorily addresses the issues I raise in this post.
http://www.linkedin.com/pub/susan-m-aspey/5/ba4/998

Ms. Aspey wrote:

“Once again, Mr. Singer is planning a post that mischaracterizes Pearson. For example, the change of proficiency levels for last year’s Florida writing assessment was a policy decision enacted by the Florida State Board of Education. Pearson was responsible for reporting the scores to the districts. We compete for all of our contracts through open and transparent bid processes. I’d also note that we acknowledge our responsibility when errors do occur while implementing state or district testing programs. Though rare, these errors are unacceptable and we thoroughly analyze the cause to be sure it doesn’t happen again, as we stated in our letter to parents and our public statement regarding the assessment scoring of the New York City Gifted and Talented program. The people of Pearson are committed to earning the trust of the educators and the students we serve.”

Alan Singer, Director, Secondary Education Social Studies
Department of Teaching, Literacy and Leadership
128 Hagedorn Hall / 119 Hofstra University / Hempstead, NY 11549
(P) 516-463-5853 (F) 516-463-6196

Valerie Strauss catalogued the long history of Pearson’s testing errors.

These are only the errors that were discovered and went public.

What about the errors that went undiscovered?

What about the students who never graduated because Pearson made a mistake?

What about those who failed because Pearson was wrong?

What about Pearson winning a contract for almost $500 million in Texas at the same time that the legislature slashed the public schools’ budget by $5.4 billion? Isn’t that cheating students?

If Pearson were a student, it would flunk.

No wonder they insist on keeping their tests secret.

We might find more pineapples if we had the chance to look at them.

Two websites have been created to allow students, teachers, principals, and parents to register their comments about the Common Core assessments created by Pearson for students in New York.

One was created to discuss the English language arts exam. If you open the link, you will see numerous comments about the ELA exams. The comments are varied and interesting. The site was set up by  by Professor Lucy Calkins at Teachers College, Columbia University.

Despite the efforts of the New York State Education Department to shield the exams in the deepest secrecy, those who took the exams have plenty to say about them. I didn’t see disclosure of any confidential information, but a great deal of concern about the lack of time to complete the exam.

Another website was created to collect reactions to the math tests.

Once again, social media may be the best source of information for parents, students, and teachers, and the mainstream media.

Ask the experts, those who took the test and those who administered them.

Jason Stanford wonders why Texas Instruments wants every student to pass Algebra 2 as a graduation requirement. That is the current requirement. And why Texas Instruments feels so keenly about it that it hired high-powered lobbyist Sandy Kress to work the Legislature. Stanford explains why TI is so passionate about this particular subject.

Kress was the architect of No Child Left Behind. He also lobbies for Pearson. He is an outstanding lobbyist. Pearson won a $500 million contract to test kids in Texas even as the state cut funding by more than $5 billion for public schools.

Once you start following the money, it’s hard to stop.

An article by journalist Yoav Gonen in the New York Post reveals that the Pearson Common Core tests given last week in New York include at least half a dozen plugs for brand name products.

In the film industry, corporations pay to have their brand mentioned or shown.

In the world of standardized testing, it is usually forbidden to use brand names.

This is a huge embarrassment for Pearson.

Pearson made scoring errors on tests for gifted programs in Néw York City.

13% of the students who qualified were wrongly rejected.

New York City is the only school district that uses a single exam to determine admissions to gifted programs. Because of differences in opportunity to learn, the children with the most advantages in life win the most places.

It is surprising that Dennis Walcott, once active in the civil rights movement, would defend this approach, which systematically discriminates against children with the fewest opportunities.

Remember the real civil rights movement? The one that fought for those with the least?

Not the ones who defend standardized testing. Not the ones who defend privilege tied to social class and wealth. They falsely claim to be fighting for civil rights. They are not. They fight for the status quo of inequality.

A teacher in upstate New York wrote me to say that the state English language arts test for 8th grade (written by Pearson) contained a passage that his students had read a week earlier—in a Pearson 8th grade textbook! The story is “Why Leaves Turn Color in Fall,” by Diane Ackerman. The story appears on page 540 of the Pearson textbook.

Moral of the story: if you want your students to succeed on the state tests written by Pearson, be sure to buy the Pearson textbooks.

The teacher wrote:

I am an 8th grade teacher in Xxxx, NY. On Day 1 of the NYS ELA 8 Exam, I discovered what I believe to be a huge ethical flaw in the State test. The state test included a passage on why leaves change color that is included in the Pearson-generated NYS ELA 8 text. I taught it in my class just last week. In a test with 6 passages and questions to complete in 90 minutes, it was a huge advantage to students fortunate enough to use a Pearson text and not that of a rival publisher. It may very well have an impact on student test scores. This has not yet received any attention in the press. Could you help me bring this to the attention of the public?

Texas is fed up with the testing obsession. The state has handed over nearly a billion dollars to Pearson in recent years, even as the Legislature cut $5.4 Billion from public education.

For an insiders’ view of the revolt against high-stakes testing in Texas, read Jason Stanford.

He says only two people in the state still defend the testing deluge, and one of them is paid to lobby for Pearson.

That would be Sandy Kress, the same man who is widely acknowledged as the architect of No Child Left Behind. In recent years, he has served on state advisory commissions, testified in favor of more and more testing, written opinion pieces in favor of testing.

But now the game is up. 86% of school boards across the state have said no to high-stakes testing. Moms have organized to fight it. The Legislature is listening. Texas is the place where the testing vampire (as former state commissioner of education Robert Scott called it) gets a stake through the heart.