The Oakland Press

State denied standardiz­ed testing waiver for this year

- By Anna Liz Nichols

The U.S. Department of Education on Tuesday denied Michigan’s request to waive standardiz­ed testing for this school year, meaning students who have had a “brutally difficult” year learning amid the COIVD-19 pandemic must take tests this spring, according the Michigan Department of Education.

This is the second straight year that Michigan has requested a waiver for standardiz­ed testing such as the M-STEP and SAT. State education officials instead wanted to focus on other metrics for academic progress and support students emotionall­y during a disrupted academic year. Last school year, the federal agency waived standardiz­ed testing for the state.

“With its decision today to deny Michigan’s request to waive M-STEP testing in the midst of the pandemic, USED continues to demonstrat­e its disconnect from conditions in public schools in Michigan and across the country,” state Superinten­dent Michael Rice said in a news release.

In January, Rice appealed to the federal agency in his request, saying there is no safe and uniform way to administer standardiz­ed tests because the state would not pull students into schools who have remained fully online for safety reasons. Online test taking isn’t a solution because of inconsiste­nt internet connection­s and noisy home environmen­ts, he said.

Michigan’s Education Department had hoped that benchmark assessment­s now required by the state would be a substitute to measure what students learned during the pandemic, giving teachers and parents an opportunit­y to find out where students need extra help.

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