Albuquerque Journal

NM PED reducing PARCC test time further

In most cases, test time will drop by 30 to 40 minutes

- BY KIM BURGESS JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

New Mexico Secretary of Education Hanna Skandera on Tuesday announced a reduction in PARCC testing time across nearly every grade.

In most cases, test time will drop by 30 to 40 minutes when the standardiz­ed assessment is next administer­ed in spring 2018.

Fourthand fifthgrade­rs are the only students for whom there will be no change in PARCC — the Partnershi­p for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers — which measures proficienc­y in math and English language arts.

“We’re excited,” Skandera told the Journal. “Our commitment is we put the big pieces in place, now how do we continue to refine and serve our students, our parents and support our educators better?”

This is the second time the Public Education Department has reduced the time needed to take the PARCC test. Skandera decreased testing time by about 90 minutes before the 2016 exam, and across the two reductions, the time has fallen 15 to 20 percent in total.

For instance, third-graders will now spend seven hours and 45 minutes on PARCC — about two hours

less than they did in 2015, when New Mexico first administer­ed the exam.

The time required to complete PARCC has been a source of controvers­y since the state replaced the Standards Based Assessment with it to meet federal requiremen­ts for standardiz­ed testing of public school students.

Skandera also announced that the testing window for PARCC will start two weeks later in the school year than it does now, which adds up to 10 more instructio­nal days before students tackle the rigorous exam. Under the plan, the testing window will be cut from six weeks to four weeks and last from mid April through mid-May.

Additional­ly, districts will receive final PARCC scores four weeks earlier — in July rather than August — starting this year.

The changes were driven by parents, teachers, superinten­dents and community members, Skandera said.

Last fall, PED held 25 public events to receive feedback about the state’s educationa­l goals. The meetings — attended by roughly 660 people across New Mexico — helped shape PED’s plan to meet new federal requiremen­ts laid out in the Every Student Succeeds Act.

Skandera said she repeatedly heard requests for less exam time, a later testing window and faster results.

“We’ll keep improving on it, but we need high-quality assessment­s, high expectatio­ns, really shifting our expectatio­ns to align not with New Mexico standards, not just with national standards, but with internatio­nal expectatio­ns for kids to be set up for success,” Skandera said.

The state’s two teachers unions — which have both opposed PED for imposing PARCC and using the scores in teacher evaluation­s — gave the changes mixed reviews.

“While a small reduction in the time students are actively testing sounds good on paper, educators must still spend extraordin­ary amounts of time preparing students for the PARCC exam,” and that time “is not acknowledg­ed by the NM PED,” said Stephanie Ly, president of the American Federation of Teachers New Mexico.

Betty Patterson, president of the National Education Associatio­n of New Mexico, applauded the PED for listening to stakeholde­rs but said the teacher evaluation system is still a concern.

In March, Albuquerqu­e Public Schools, New Mexico’s largest school district, criticized PARCC in a written response to the state’s Every Student Succeeds Act plan.

The district held its own series of forums on ESSA, “and APS stakeholde­rs were incredibly strong in their belief that (standardiz­ed) assessment­s should look and feel drasticall­y different than they currently do,” APS administra­tors wrote in the report.

“Therefore, APS is disappoint­ed at the continued focus of the ESSA draft plan to utilize the PARCC test as its main measure of student performanc­e and overarchin­g tool for accountabi­lity.”

ESSA, which replaced No Child Left Behind with bipartisan support in the U.S. Congress, gives states more oversight of their education policies, including testing, but still requires standardiz­ed testing similar to PARCC.

PARCC — a computeriz­ed exam that aligns with Common Core, a set of English and math standards — generated some student walkouts across New Mexico when it was first administer­ed in 2015, though the protests died down the next year.

The test was developed by Pearson, a British multinatio­nal publishing and education company, and is currently used in seven states.

 ??  ?? State Education Secretary Hanna Skandera
State Education Secretary Hanna Skandera

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