Imperial Valley Press

Test meant to screen teachers instead weeded out minorities

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NEW YORK (AP) — New York education officials are poised to scrap a test designed to measure the reading and writing skills of people trying to become teachers, in part because an outsized percentage of black and Hispanic candidates were failing it.

The state Board of Regents on Monday is expected Monday to adopt a task force’s recommenda­tion of eliminatin­g the literacy exam, known as the Academic Literacy Skills Test.

Backers of the test say eliminatin­g it could put weak teachers in classrooms. Critics of the examinatio­n said it is redundant and a poor predictor of who will succeed as a teacher.

“We want high standards, without a doubt. Not every given test is going to get us there,” said Leslie Soodak, a professor of education at Pace University who served on the task force that examined the state’s teacher certificat­ion tests.

The literacy test was among four assessment­s introduced in the 20132014 school year as part of an effort to raise the level of elementary and secondary school teaching in the state.

Leaders of the education reform movement have complained for years about the caliber of students entering education schools and the quality of the instructio­n they receive there. A December 2016 study by the National Council on Teacher Quality found that 44 percent of the teacher preparatio­n programs it surveyed accepted students from the bottom half of their high school classes.

The reformers believe tests like New York’s Academic Literacy Skills Test can serve to weed out aspiring teachers who aren’t strong students.

But the literacy test raised alarms from the beginning because just 46 percent of Hispanic test takers and 41 percent of black test takers passed it on the first try, compared with 64 percent of white candidates.

A federal judge ruled in 2015 that the test was not discrimina­tory, but faculty members at education schools say a test that screens out so many minorities is problemati­c.

“Having a white workforce really doesn’t match our student body anymore,” Soodak said.

Kate Walsh, the president of National Council on Teacher Quality, which pushes for higher standards for teachers, said that blacks and Latinos don’t score as well as whites on the literacy test because of factors like poverty and the legacy of racism.

“There’s not a test in the country that doesn’t have disproport­ionate performanc­e on the part of blacks and Latinos,” Walsh said.

But she said getting rid of the literacy test would be “a crying shame.”

In implementi­ng the exams, she said, New York had become “light years ahead of other states” in its teacher certificat­ion regimen.

“New York put together a suite of testing products that really got at the lack of rigor in teacher prep,” Walsh said.

The Academic Literacy Skills Test consists of multiple-choice questions about a series of reading selections plus a written section.

A practice test available for $20 on the New York State Education Department website features John F. Kennedy’s inaugural address as one of the reading passages and asks questions like this one: “In which excerpt from the passage do Kennedy’s word choices most clearly establish a tone of resolve?”

Ian Rosenblum, the executive director of the New York office of the Education Trust, a nonprofit that advocates for high achievemen­t for all students, called the literacy test “a 12th grade-level assessment” — something a high school senior should be able to pass.

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 ??  ?? The front page of a document explaining a certificat­ion exam known as the Academic Literacy Skills Test, designed to measure the reading and writing skills of aspiring teachers, is shown Wednesday in New York. AP PHOTO
The front page of a document explaining a certificat­ion exam known as the Academic Literacy Skills Test, designed to measure the reading and writing skills of aspiring teachers, is shown Wednesday in New York. AP PHOTO

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