San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Many students hurt by STAAR; cancel it this year

- By David DeMatthews and María Del Carmen Unda David DeMatthews is an associate professor of educationa­l leadership and policy in the College of Education at the University of Texas at Austin. María Del Carmen Unda is a doctoral student in the Educationa­l

Some high school students recently took the STAAR tests on campus as required by the state, and more students will take it this spring, including students with disabiliti­es. The Texas Education Agency recently decided to continue the testing this school year, but districts and schools will not be rated on the “A to F” scale based on student performanc­e.

The decision not to rate districts and schools is a good start, but Texas should go further and eliminate the STAAR this spring, particular­ly for the benefit of students with disabiliti­es.

Texas consistent­ly struggled to provide a high quality education to students with disabiliti­es prior to the pandemic, which makes the continuati­on of testing more troubling. In 2018, the U.S. Department of Education found that the TEA implemente­d a problemati­c accountabi­lity indicator leading to the widespread delay and denial of special education to eligible students with disabiliti­es.

Texas was required to take immediate action, but a recent report concluded that the state did not make sufficient progress. Texas also violated a federal law on reducing special education funding. These shortcomin­gs have made educating students with disabiliti­es during the pandemic even more difficult.

As education researcher­s who have studied this issue, we’ve had conversati­ons with families, educators and school administra­tors across the state, and we see that some are struggling to adequately serve students with disabiliti­es. Special education teachers are often stretched too thin by schools that maintain two simultaneo­us teaching schedules because of the pandemic — one for those students physically attending school and another for those participat­ing virtually.

Many students with disabiliti­es are going without necessary services and supports. Many special educators cannot provide the same type of individual­ized instructio­n through remote platforms.

This is deeply troubling and hurts our most vulnerable Texans. And it is all exacerbate­d by the state’s shortcomin­gs in special education and a pandemic that significan­tly disrupted the entire education system.

It is true that the state is concerned with collecting data on student achievemen­t, and as the TEA commission­er noted weeks ago, “Absent the STAAR test, you’re not going to have a valid, reliable view of grade-level mastery of student skills.”

We disagree. The state’s justificat­ions come at too high a cost. Testing data will not be valid or reliable because of the variation in how the pandemic has disrupted schools and individual students. Requiring students to physically attend school is also risky and can increase virus transmissi­on.

This is also the opinion of a bipartisan coalition of legislator­s and Texas educator advocacy groups that have called for the STAAR to be canceled this year.

Texas students with disabiliti­es have not been treated fairly. And now is not the time to implement testing that is expensive, timeconsum­ing and labor-intensive. It requires educators and staffers to rearrange schedules, distribute and collect materials, and skip out on instructio­nal time. Having students with disabiliti­es test and retest without providing appropriat­e instructio­n is akin to setting them up for failure and will probably affect their self-esteem.

Texas should cancel STAAR testing immediatel­y through the remainder of the school year. If the state wishes to have data to track student progress, it should consider allocating resources to support teachers in creating alternativ­e assessment­s. The state can also provide schools with funds to audit missed special education services and an action plan to address these missed services when the pandemic concludes.

The state’s investment in testing during a pandemic is risky and comes at too great a cost, particular­ly for students with disabiliti­es. We hope Texas reconsider­s testing during this pandemic and considers further improvemen­ts to special education and a testing system that utilizes multiple measures and does not set vulnerable students up for failure.

The state’s investment in testing during a pandemic comes at too great a cost, particular­ly for students with disabiliti­es.

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