USA TODAY US Edition

Feds: Schools must give standardiz­ed tests this year

States will be able to pick date, length and location

- Erin Richards and Elinor Aspegren

States will need to administer annual standardiz­ed achievemen­t exams to students this year, but they can modify or delay the tests, the U.S. Department of Education said Monday.

In a letter to state education leaders, acting Assistant Education Secretary Ian Rosenblum wrote that the Biden administra­tion will not consider “blanket waivers of assessment­s” this year.

Under federal law, states must administer annual exams in key subjects including reading and math to students in third through eighth grade and once in high school. The results of those exams can be used to judge schools, and sometimes teachers, on their performanc­e, and they can trigger improvemen­t efforts.

The requiremen­t to administer state exams was waived by Education Secretary Betsy DeVos in spring 2020, when most U.S. schools shut down as a result of COVID-19.

The new guidance from the Biden administra­tion comes before its secretary of education nominee, Miguel Cardona, has been confirmed. During his confirmati­on hearing early this month, Cardona didn’t say whether the federally required exams should be waived again this year. He said it was important to assess student progress, but schools probably shouldn’t bring students back in person just to administer an exam.

States can decide whether to shorten the annual exams, administer them remotely or delay giving them until summer or fall, the new guidance says. Schools won’t be held accountabl­e for the results of how students perform.

“Certainly, we do not believe that if there are places where students are unable to attend school safely in person because of the pandemic that they should be brought into school buildings for the sole purpose of taking a test,” Rosenblum wrote.

The issue of standardiz­ed testing has divided the education community, and this policy decision is no exception.

The announceme­nt embodied a “frustratin­g turn” for the administra­tion, said Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, the nation’s largest teachers’ union.

“As the educators in the classroom, we have always known that standardiz­ed tests are not the best way to measure a child’s developmen­t, nor do they particular­ly help kids or inform best practices for teaching and learning,” she wrote in a statement. “That is especially true in these unpreceden­ted times, when students and teachers alike are remaking the school experience in the most unlikely of circumstan­ces.”

Carissa Moffat Miller, CEO of the Council of Chief State School Officers, said she supported the federal requiremen­t, writing in a statement Monday that the announceme­nt “acknowledg­es the real, varied challenges that educators, students, and families are facing across the country.”

“State education leaders and CCSSO deeply value assessment as a tool to know where students are academical­ly, identify inequities, and inform decision-making, including ensuring supports get to the students who need them,” she said.

The National Parent Teacher Associatio­n released a survey Monday that found 52% of parents surveyed favored end-of-year testing this spring “to measure the impact of the pandemic on student learning.”

Usually, state achievemen­t tests are administer­ed to students in the spring. They allow “a clearer picture of where children are academical­ly and help equip parents to effectivel­y advocate on behalf of their child’s learning,” PTA leader Leslie Boggs said.

“As underscore­d by the results of the survey, parents and educators alike should have meaningful data on student learning and progress” to tailor learning, she said.

 ?? ROBERT F. BUKATY/AP ?? Seventh grader Trinity Cressey works on her computer at the Bruce M. Whittier Middle School on Jan. 29 in Poland, Maine.
ROBERT F. BUKATY/AP Seventh grader Trinity Cressey works on her computer at the Bruce M. Whittier Middle School on Jan. 29 in Poland, Maine.
 ?? TED S. WARREN/AP ?? Schools won’t be held accountabl­e for the results of standardiz­ed tests given to students this year as required by the Department of Education.
TED S. WARREN/AP Schools won’t be held accountabl­e for the results of standardiz­ed tests given to students this year as required by the Department of Education.

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