Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Many students may skip standardiz­ed exams

Tests will feel different for kids who take them

- Erin Richards and Alia Wong USA TODAY

When the world of K-12 education spiraled into confusion last spring, many teachers and students quietly delighted in the disappeara­nce of highstakes tests.

The multiple-choice questions and hours spent monitoring exams were suddenly gone. Schools pivoted to finding students and connecting everyone digitally. The Department of Education dropped the requiremen­t for states to administer annual achievemen­t exams in reading and math, which usually happens in spring.

“We’re living in a time we all dreamed about – there’s no standardiz­ed testing,” said Randal Lutz, superinten­dent of Baldwin-Whitehall schools, a district of about 4,700 students in suburban Pittsburgh.

“We told teachers: Go have fun with kids. Go teach the things you wanted to teach however you want to do it, within the state standards.”

But now those tests are coming back. The Biden administra­tion this week decided against another blanket waiver on federally mandated achievemen­t exams this year, saying that instead states can delay or shorten the tests, or give them virtually – or skip testing remote learners.

States can apply to duck out of holding schools accountabl­e for the results, the federal guidance says.

Teachers, parents and education experts have mixed feelings about the return of the tests, particular­ly around who will and won’t be tested and how the scores will be interprete­d. Administer­ing the exams only to glean informatio­n about student progress is a good middle ground, some say. Others believe it could lead to more money to support academic recovery efforts.

Still others believe testing students is needlessly stressful right now. They question the usefulness of any data that comes from statewide exams that can’t capture the performanc­e of all or most students around the same time and under the same conditions. And they’d prefer in-class time be used for instructio­n instead of testing.

“The challenge is we have additional variables this year,” Lutz said.

“You can modify the tests, you can give them online, you can give them in fall instead of spring. Some schools will use accommodat­ions and some won’t, but when those results come out, we’ll all still be compared to each other.”

Acknowledg­ing the difficulty of remote learning, the new guidance waives the requiremen­t for states to test at least 95% of students.

Schools operating remotely are not expected to bring students back in person for the sole purpose of giving exams, Ian Rosenblum, acting assistant secretary of education said in a letter to state superinten­dents Monday.

Scott Norton, deputy executive director of the Council of Chief State School Officers, which represents school superinten­dents, said only about five states have signaled their intent to administer state exams to remote learners.

That means large numbers of remote learners will be left out of the testing pool.

Federal education law requires states to give standardiz­ed exams in subjects including reading and math to students in grades 3 through 8 and once in high school, with consequenc­es if participat­ion falls below 95%. The law aims to capture an annual snapshot of how kids are doing and to identify low-performing schools. The process can trigger improvemen­t efforts or other interventi­ons, or sometimes just public scrutiny.

All states are likely to apply for waivers from the accountabi­lity requiremen­ts, experts say.

States will still be required to share publicly how each school’s students performed at the state and local level, with breakdowns by race and income, the new guidance says.

But because states likely will test more in-person learners than remote learners, the results may reveal more about the performanc­e of white and wealthier students, who are attending school in-person at higher rates than lower-income and minority students.

A handful of states – including New York and Michigan – requested or are planning to request individual federal approval to substitute different tests or skip all statewide testing again, according to the Council of Chief State School Officers.

Wisconsin plans to shorten its English, math and science tests by 70 to 80 minutes, officials said. And schools operating remotely will need to provide an in-person testing environmen­t if local health orders allow people to be in buildings.

The flexibility drew applause from Educators for Excellence, a nonprofit that gives teachers more of a say in education policy.

“Holding teachers and schools accountabl­e for assessment results would have been a mistake, but not testing our students so that we can support their growth with data would be an even bigger mistake,” Carlotta Pope, an 11th grade English teacher in New York City, said in a statement.

The results of the exams could actually drive more funding to schools, added Ethan Hutt, an education professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Schools could make a better case for summer school funding, for example, if they can show certain groups of students are struggling more than others, he said.

“We know that schools and districts have approached (schooling in the pandemic) with different levels of competence and technology,” Hutt said. “If we want to direct policy and resources to schools that are particular­ly hard hit, we need more precise informatio­n about what’s happening.”

David Ruff, executive director of the Great Schools Partnershi­p, a school improvemen­t nonprofit in New England, said sharing exam results at all could perpetuate the “blame and shame” on schools that post low results.

Generally, the lowest-performing schools are those that serve the highest proportion of low-income and minority students.

Testing critics worry that could add additional layers of stress for families and students, many of whom may already be struggling with the pressures of distance learning.

Standardiz­ed tests are designed to identify systemic problems and schools that aren’t doing well, Ruff said.

“They’re not designed to identify individual student learning loss,” he added.

 ?? GEORGE FREY/GETTY IMAGES ?? The Biden administra­tion this week decided against another blanket waiver on federally mandated achievemen­t exams this year, saying that instead states can delay or shorten the tests, or give them virtually – or skip testing remote learners.
GEORGE FREY/GETTY IMAGES The Biden administra­tion this week decided against another blanket waiver on federally mandated achievemen­t exams this year, saying that instead states can delay or shorten the tests, or give them virtually – or skip testing remote learners.

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