Sentinel & Enterprise

Ed. chief eyes MCAS waiver for juniors

- Dy Satie laooao

Jeffrey Riley is presenting the plan to the state Board of Education.

This year’s high school juniors would not need to take MCAS tests to graduate under a plan put forward Thursday by Education Commission­er Jeffrey Riley.

Riley announced that he intends to present the Board of Elementary and Secondary Education with suggested changes to the graduation requiremen­ts for the Class of 2022, modifying the competency determinat­ion for English and math so those students would not be required to take the test.

The board, which has its next meeting scheduled on April 20, would need to sign off on the move, which the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education said was “in recognitio­n of the missed testing opportunit­ies when schools were closed last spring.”

Passing the 10th grade math and English MCAS tests is typically a graduation requiremen­t. Amid the pandemic’s disruption­s to schooling, state education officials modified those requiremen­ts for the classes of 2020 and 2021, allowing those seniors who had not yet passed the tests to instead demonstrat­e competency by earning full credit in a relevant course.

With students across Massachuse­tts learning remotely last spring, the MCAS tests were not administer­ed — a move that required both a federal waiver and a new state law.

In February, officials at the U.S. Department of Education informed states that they were “not invit

ing blanket waivers of assessment­s” this year, citing a need to understand COVID-19’s impacts on learning, identify what supports students will need, and prepare to address educationa­l inequities exacerbate­d by the pandemic. The department said it would offer flexibilit­y around state assessment­s, including for shortened tests, remote administra­tion and extended testing windows that could stretch into summer and fall.

State education officials previously announced a series of changes to this year’s MCAS program, including shortening the tests for third through eighth graders and postponing the exams until a later point in the spring.

The state education department said Thursday it also plans to extend the timeline for administer­ing the tests to high school sophomores and thirdthrou­gh eighth graders through June 11, and to offer remote administra­tion of English and math exams for grades three through eight to accommodat­e students who’ve opted to con

tinue learning remotely.

Juniors and seniors will still be able to take this year’s MCAS to qualify for scholarshi­ps, and this year’s juniors will also be able to take the exam during a re-test period next fall.

Gov. Charlie Baker said he and Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito “have spent a lot of time” talking to Riley about student assessment this year, discussing issues of logistics, time and “alternativ­e strategies to figure out where kids are.”

“I think the commission­er’s making what I would describe as a tiered approach to dealing, generally, with MCAS and with assessment­s overall,” Baker said during an event in Chelsea.

“But I absolutely believe that with the federal resources that have been made available to local communitie­s and to the commonweal­th, we have to have a really robust summer school program for kids. If we don’t have one, shame on us, because by that point in time, the vast majority of the population that wants to get vaccinated will be vaccinated, and probably a bunch of the folks who are now hesitant will also be vaccinated. We really need to make sure that we do all we can for kids to ensure that by the time they get back to school in the fall or the time they go off to college or whatever it might be, we’ve given them a significan­t opportunit­y to catch up on all that’s been lost.”

While the Baker administra­tion and some advocacy groups have described the MCAS as a key tool for measuring learning loss experience­d during the pandemic, others, including teachers unions and some lawmakers, have called for canceling the tests this year in light of the continued educationa­l turmoil.

“This is a step in the right direction,” Rep. Lindsay Sabadosa wrote on Twitter, reacting to Riley’s announceme­nt. “Now just cancel the test for the rest of the year, Commission­er. Our students and teachers need to get back to learning in a supportive environmen­t. Not one filled with stress as they race to prep for a test.”

Keri Rodrigues of the group Massachuse­tts Parents United blasted Riley’s recommenda­tion as one that would “water down graduation requiremen­ts for the Class of 2022.”

“Rather than keeping a sharp focus on preparing the Class of 2022 academical­ly and getting them ready for college or career success, the decision today is telling these high school juniors that we do not believe in them, that we’ve given up on them meeting the same standards as every other graduating class,” she said in a statement.

 ?? SAM DORAN / SHNS FILE ?? Education Commission­er Jeffrey Riley.
SAM DORAN / SHNS FILE Education Commission­er Jeffrey Riley.

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