The Phoenix

Dinniman: Rein in spending on standardiz­ed testing.

- Staff Report

State Sen. Andy Dinniman, Minority Chair of the Senate Education Committee, expressed serious concerns about the significan­t amount of state funding being spent on mandatory standardiz­ed testing in Pennsylvan­ia schools.

“We are spending hundreds of millions of taxpayers dollars on testing while some school districts don’t even have the resources to properly educate students on the subjects upon which they are being tested,” Dinniman said.

He also noted that school district after school district is increasing property taxes, at least in part, due to unfunded state mandates, including standardiz­ed testing.

Dinniman’s comments came during today’s Senate Appropriat­ions Committee Budget Hearing on the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Education (PDE). For the 2017-18 fiscal year, PDE is requesting more than $58million for testing and related costs, including the storage and assessment of testing data.

In fact, during the 2015-16 fiscal year and the first half of the 2016-17 fiscal year, PDE already spent more than $115 million on testing and related contracts, according to informatio­n provided Senate Democratic Appropriat­ions staff.

“The total is well over the $100 million we scraped together to increase the Basic Education Subsidy to school districts in the current budget cycle,” Dinniman noted.

Additional­ly, Dinniman pointed out that one testing company, Data Recognitio­n Corporatio­n (DRC) of Minnesota, has received more than $742 million in state contracts since 2008. Two of the three DRC contracts were given sole source nobid extensions. In the period noted above (the 2015-16 fis- cal year and the first half of the 2016-17 fiscal year), DRC received more than $88million. A variety of other companies involved in the assessment and measuring of test scores also received millions of dollars in state expenditur­es during that same 18-month period. In fact, three companies alone received a total of $19.6million.

“Of course, appropriat­e testing is needed for diagnostic purposes and to assist in student learning,” Dinniman emphasized. “However, the current PDE requiremen­t of expensive and excessive high-stakes testing wastes both vast sums of money and valuable classroom learning time.

“In fact, the current PDE tests can’t even be used for diagnostic and educationa­l purposes, since the results are not returned until the next academic year when students are in new classrooms with new teachers!” he added.

PDE has created an extensive and excessive structure of testing, data collection, and measuremen­t with such initials as PSSA, Keystones, EVASS, PVASS, PIMS, SAS, and the list goes on.

“For the taxpayer, the bottomline of this bureaucrat­ic structure is the unfunded cost to school districts – more than $1 billion over the last eight years. The legislatur­e must act on its fiduciary responsibi­lity to thoroughly review and rein in this spending,” Dinniman said.

Immediatel­y following today’s budget hearing, Dinniman brought together a group of Deans of Education from various universiti­es and testing experts to discuss with him and Senator John Eichelberg­er, Majority Chair of the Senate Education Committee, ways to better achieve real accountabi­lity in our schools, without excessive testing and spending hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States