Chattanooga Times Free Press

Haslam unveils TNReady changes

- BY ANDY SHER AND MEGHAN MANGRUM STAFF WRITERS

NASHVILLE — Gov. Bill Haslam has unveiled changes in the delivery of the state’s problem-plagued TNReady assessment­s for students this year while also announcing new steps to provide local school districts with “more affordable options” next year in obtaining technology required to take the exams.

At the same time, the lameduck Republican governor on Wednesday defended the program and also urged both of his would-be successors — Democrat Karl Dean and Republican Bill Lee — and state lawmakers to stay the course in keeping the tests.

“It’s obviously no secret we’ve had some challenges around TNReady as well as a whole lot of discussion about what the future should look like,” said Haslam, who was joined by state Education Commission­er Candice McQueen, and Wayne Miller, former executive director of the Tennessee Organizati­on of School Superinten­dents.

But, Haslam said, “we don’t want to go back.”

With Haslam’s departure, key leadership over the department, such as McQueen, who Haslam appointed in December 2014, could change with a new governor.

The exams are used not just to assess students and provide teacher feedback, but are used as factors in local teacher pay and retention decisions and school performanc­e. But this spring, the test system suffered a second setback with the state’s latest vendor, which the state plans to replace in the 2019-2020 academic year.

Describing changes as “real solutions,” with some of them already underway, Haslam, McQueen and Miller said the steps are a direct response to a report from educators after a statewide listening tour.

“… We feel confident that these steps we are announcing today will result in smoother test delivery and feedback that will support greater student success,” McQueen said.

This week, the Department of Education said it conducted a successful verificati­on of the testing platform with an estimated 50,000 students participat­ing. Officials said they will be ensuring faster turnaround of results starting with this fall’s end-of-course assessment­s and providing better educator training opportunit­ies.

Educators also urged the state to “stay the course” in the 14-page report issued earlier this month, summarizin­g the feedback Haslam gleaned from about 150 educators that he met during those roundtable­s.

As part of the state’s new request for proposal contract process to find a new vendor for next year, the state also wants any new testing company chosen to partner with Tennessee businesses and universiti­es to create test materials and score tests.

Steps for the 2018-2019 school year include:

› Earlier access to test administra­tion documents

› Clarity and consistenc­y in the test administra­tion documents

› Less paper to manage by combining materials

› Fewer assessment sub-parts

› A more “responsive” help desk For the 2019-2020 school year, officials say they will provide:

› Greater access to technology by pursuing implementa­tion of a Tennessee Student Technology Enrichment Program to help ease costs, especially for poorer districts, in buying computers used by students to take the exams. Only about a third of school districts have a computer for each student.

› “Smarter delivery” of assessment­s based on grade levels. Grades 3-4 testing would remain paper only. Grades 5-8 would continue testing science online and other subjects will move online only after the vendor demonstrat­es readiness. High school end-of-course assessment­s will be administer­ed online but officials will “explore” offering reading passages via paper copies.

› Faster results will be delivered to both teachers and families, with priority given to an assessment vendor capable of providing electronic delivery through creation of online logins once scores are available. Slow feedback has been a major complaint.

› Better preparatio­ns will be made available by providing additional TNReady practice test items to teachers and students. Moreover, another option would let districts deliver optional benchmarks tests that mirror TNReady.

Haslam and McQueen conducted a statewide listening tour this fall, during which they heard educators’ frustratio­ns about their experience­s with TNReady.

Meanwhile, both major party gubernator­ial nominees Lee and Dean have voiced concerns over problems with TNReady school testing programs.

“You might change the name because it hasn’t been ready,” Dean recently observed, adding that teachers, students and parents don’t trust the program because of two years of problems. Moreover, he said, “what you don’t want is an atmosphere or a culture where everyone thinks that you have to test and test and test.”

Calling the situation “obviously a challenge,” Lee recently said “TNReady hasn’t worked” and the current vendor, Questar, must go, a decision already made by Haslam, with the state now engaging in a new contractin­g process that will be completed after he leaves office.

Lee has also said he would take a look at the “entire measuremen­t system in state” and wants a “reset.”

Haslam, who is backing Lee, said a “reset” is “what’s happening now” as the state prepares to issue a new request for proposals, through which bidders tout their qualificat­ions and agree to state requiremen­ts.

The governor said “what I hope the next governor understand­s is the connection of all this” in areas including the state’s free, lottery-funded community and technical college scholarshi­ps to recent high school graduates and older ones who had some college.

Tennessee, Haslam said, has come a long way in raising its K-12 education standards and creating its own regimen of testing.

“Now, we just got to get to where the delivery of that assessment works,” he said. Haslam noted his free, lottery-funded community and technical college scholarshi­p programs ultimately are dependent on a quality K-12 education.

Noting how he has tied student and school outcomes as a factor in teacher evaluation­s, effecting pay and job security, Haslam said “that’s politicall­y not real popular.” But he said it’s “critical” to success. The state has been recognized nationally for improving its standing on a national assessment, at one point becoming the fastest improving state in the country.

Asked if he were concerned Lee or Dean would stand by the state’s accountabi­lity provisions, Haslam said, “I don’t know the answer to that. It’s a politicall­y difficult thing to do.”

“It’s a concern, I wouldn’t say that in terms of just the next governor but the next legislatur­e,” Haslam acknowledg­ed. “The next legislatur­e can make a determinat­ion of that. But I would just encourage everybody to remember how we got here.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States