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High-Stakes Games




 

Across the country, students, teachers and education officials are playing a game of chicken with testing regimes. In an effort to raise standards, both federal legislation – as embodied in the No Child Left Behind Act – and many state testing systems threaten to penalize students who can’t pass basic tests, along with the schools charged with educating them. After years of preparation, the dates for implementing these high-stakes graduation exams are coming up. Officials have warned that students who fall short won’t receive diplomas or, in some cases, promotion to the next grade level. But if thousands of students fail or look as if they might, will authorities blink?

The answer appears to be yes. Last month California postponed implementation of its high-stakes exam for two years. California’s 1999 legislation required that 2004’s high school seniors pass an exam to graduate. Yet as of January about a third of 2004 seniors had not passed the mathematics portion of California’s test, and nearly 20 per cent hadn’t passed the language arts section. These are students who have supposedly been working to meet standards since before they were in eighth grade.

And California is not alone. Of the states that promised a new regime of accountability, only a handful are on track to meet targets. Many states have made their tests easier. Others have lowered the passing score or delayed phasing them in as a graduation or promotion requirement. Some worry that this might happen in Maryland, where the State Board of Education has just set
standards that more than a third of the students who took math and reading tests this year would have failed. By contrast, Virginia is gearing up to enforce results of its tests on the class of 2004. Although some of the requirements have been changed – critics say "watered down" – since the launch of the program, the state should be commended for holding fast to the principle of statewide testing.

For Virginia is also proof that high-stakes testing might yield results. Student scores on Virginia's Standards of Learning tests have been improving on a number of fronts since the tests have been administered, and the gap between minority students and others has been narrowing. The proportion of schools meeting state standards in Virginia has risen from 2 per cent to 70 per cent since 1999, revealing a marked improvement in the curriculum.

Testing is never an end in itself but a measure of other factors – the commitment of teachers and of school districts, the willingness of students to work harder. But while a test can be a tool to inspire and an indicator of progress, it works only as long as education authorities take it seriously.

The Washington Post. 2003

 

 

5 Times More Fld. Kids to Repeat 3rd Grade

State's New Policy Links Promotion to Reading Test Scores

 

The number of Florida youngsters who must repeat third grade is about five times greater than last year because of a new policy that bases promotion largely on the Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test.

Gov. Jeb Bush (R) and the state Department of Education say allowing students who cannot read at the third-grade level to advance to the fourth grade would make it extremely difficult for them to catch up with their peers.

“I would just ask the people who think it's okay to socially promote to look a child in the eye when they are in 10th grade and are reading at fifth-grade level and say that that's a success,” Bush said in an interview.

However, the issue of retention in a grade can be divisive, and its value is often questioned.

A total of 188 107 third-graders took the Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test this year. Under this test, students who score at Level 1, the lowest, are retained.

The state is still gathering figures from school districts on the number of children being held back, but preliminary figures obtained on Friday from the education department show that the number could near 33 000, compared with 6 447 last year. The department will release a final figure next month.

The policy has led to protests, including two in which state Sen. Frederica Wilson posted third-graders at Bush's office to de­mand that retention not be based on the state assessment test scores.


 

“These children will either become so angry they're going to be aggressive and have discipline problems, or be demoralized, heartbroken and depressed,” said Wilson, a former elementary school principal who works in a dropout prevention program. “This is real to me, because this is my life's work. This is what I do. I know that these children are going to drop out.”

Bush and education officials believe that students who are retained and who receive extra reading help will benefit. The state set up summer reading camps, and individual plans are being developed for each child to target specific weaknesses.

Margaret Andrews of Miami said she supports the retention of her daughter, Melissa, so she can catch up with her peers. "I would rather work it out at this level here as opposed to when she's in the 10th grade," Andrews said.

But many experts argue that holding children back and having them simply repeat the same instruction hurts them, and some say holding students with the promise of extra help also puts them at a disadvantage.

Other experts say retention policies such as Florida's will work, though they acknowledge that research on the issue is limited.

Gary Dworkin, a University of Houston sociology professor, studied a similar policy established in Texas when Bush's brother, President Bush, was governor. On average, Texas students who were held back scored significantly higher when they were tested after completing the next grade level than did those who were not retained, Dworkin said.

But Mary Lee Smith, a professor at Arizona State University's College of Education, said research shows that students, who have been held back in earlier grades' are many times more likely to quit school, even when they have academically caught up with their peers.

Gov. Bush maintains that just the threat of retention is already improving schools. “The first lesson that researchers would have to admit, even the ones that oppose accountability, is that we have seen dramatic reductions in Level 1 readers in third grade because it matters now,” Bush said.

Brendan Farkington. The Washington Post

 

 




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