Arab Times

Some states dropping GED

Concerns raised over test price hike

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KANSAS CITY, Mo, April 15, (AP): Several dozen states are looking for an alternativ­e to the GED high school equivalenc­y test because of concerns that a new version coming out next year is more costly and will no longer be offered in a pencil and paper format.

The responsibi­lity for issuing high school equivalenc­y certificat­es or diplomas rests with states, and they’ve relied on the General Education Developmen­t exam since soon after the test was created to help returning World War II veterans. But now 40 states and the District of Columbia are participat­ing in a working group that’s considerin­g what’s available besides the GED, and two test makers are hawking new exams.

“It’s a complete paradigm shift because the GED has been the monopoly. It’s been the only thing in town for high school equivalenc­y testing. It’s kind of like Kleenex at this point,” said Amy Riker, director of high school equivalenc­y testing for Educationa­l Testing Service, which developed one of the alternativ­e tests.

Last month, New York, Montana and New Hampshire announced they were switching to a new high school equivalenc­y exam, and California officials began looking into amending regulation­s to drop the requiremen­t that the state only use the GED test. Missouri has requested bids from test makers and plans to make a decision this month. Several others states, including Massachuse­tts, Maine, Indiana and Iowa, are making plans to request informatio­n about alternativ­e exams.

Meanwhile, Tennessee and New Jersey are exploring offering more than one test.

Situation

“The national situation is definitely fluid,” said Tom Robbins, Missouri’s director of adult education and high school equivalenc­y, noting that other states plan to use the GED for now and bid later.

The pushback comes as GED Testing Service prepares to introduce a new version of the exam in January. In the first revamp since for-profit Pearson Vue Testing acquired a joint ownership interest in the nonprofit Washington­based GED Testing Service, the cost of

Medics confirmed that the woman had died when they reached the base of the mountain, Larson said.

The woman, whose identity was not known, had been hiking with her dog near a group of a dozen other people Saturday the test is doubling to $120. That’s led to a case of sticker shock for test takers, nonprofits and states. Some states subsidize some or all of the expense of the exam, while others add an administra­tive fee. The new GED test would cost $140 to take in Missouri if the state sticks with it.

Kirk Proctor, of the Missouri Career Center, said the organizati­on is looking for a way to cover the increased test cost for students participat­ing in a GED preparatio­n and job training program he oversees. He said his students can’t come up with $140, noting they need help paying for the current, cheaper test.

“A lot of them are just barely making it,” he said. “Transporta­tion is a challenge. Eating is a challenge. For them, coming up with $140 for an assessment, it’s basically telling them, ‘Forget about ever getting this part of your life complete.’”

One program participan­t, Nicole Williams, a 21-year-old Kansas City mother of three, said she was hopeful she’d pass the GED test soon so she could avoid the electronic version. With it, she said, “you’ve got to learn how to type, use the computer, plus your GED. That’s three things instead of just trying to focus all on your GED test.”

Version

Developers say the new version is needed because nearly all states are adopting tougher math and reading standards to ensure students are prepared for college and careers. Because the new version is so different, a million or so adults who have passed some but not all of the five parts of the current GED test must complete the missing sections by Dec. 31. If not, their scores will expire and they’ll have to begin again under the new program Jan. 1.

“The GED was in dangerous position of no longer being a reflection of what high schools were graduating,” said Randy Trask, president and CEO of GED Testing Service, which previously was solely operated by the nonprofit American Council on Education.

He said the computeriz­ed version, which students are passing at higher rates than the paper version in pilot sites, will be cheaper to administer because states will no longer have to afternoon when an avalanche hit Red Mountain near Snoqualmie Pass.

She was buried in five feet (1.5 meters) of snow but was dug out with the help of a group of a dozen snowshoers, who had also been caught in the avalanche. pick up the tab for things like grading the exam. For test-takers who fail a section, the computeriz­ed version provides details about what skills they need to work on before retaking the exam.

“I personally went into it a little bit naively,” said Trask of the new version. “I don’t know why I expected a marching band, but I did because I’m convinced that what we are doing is the right thing for the adults in this country.”

Combine

Competitor­s responded with a paper version and a cheaper base price, although GED Testing Service said its price includes services the other two test makers don’t. The alternativ­e exams’ makers also said they will work with states to find ways to combine scores from the GED with their new exams so students who have passed some sections of the current GED won’t be forced to start from scratch. GED Testing Service said that would undermine the validity of a state’s equivalenc­y credential or diploma.

Trask also said he feared the competing exams would be confusing for colleges and employers. But states considerin­g switching say they’ll put more emphasis on the equivalenc­y credential or diploma they issue rather than the test taken to earn it.

Art Ellison, who leads the Bureau of Adult Education in New Hampshire, called the sudden choice in the exams “the new reality of adult education.” His state and Montana are switching to HiSET, a $50 test that the Educationa­l Testing Service, or ETS, is offering. Both states said cost influenced their decision, with Montana’s Superinten­dent of Public Instructio­n Denise Juneau proclaimin­g in a news release that residents “looking to improve their economic situation by obtaining a high school equivalenc­y diploma should not have to overcome a significan­t financial barrier in order to achieve that goal.”

Ellison also noted that a paper option was important because many students in adult education classes lack the skills needed to take a computer-based test and that it will take time to beef up the courses to add that training.

Members of the group told authoritie­s that it took them 45 minutes to find the woman. “They did their best to try to warm her up,” Larson said.

This is the first avalanche fatality reported in Washington state for the 2012-2013 season, according to the Northwest Weather and Avalanche Center in Seattle. Nationwide, 16 others have died avalanches this season, according to the Colorado Avalanche Informatio­n Center.

Meanwhile, the search for a 60-year-old hiker who was swept down the mountain in a separate avalanche at Granite Mountain Saturday was suspended indefinite­ly due to the poor weather conditions.

The man, from Kent, Washington state, was with two other friends when the avalanche carried them more than 1,200 feet (365 meters) down the mountain. The two friends emerged from the snow, but their friend did not.

The two survivors suffered injuries that were described as not life-threatenin­g. One of them was taken to a hospital for treatment, but Larson did not know his condition.

The avalanches occurred as heavy snow fell near Snoqualmie Pass.

Kenny Kramer, director of the Northwest Weather and Avalanche Center, said between 20 and 30 inches (50 and 75 centimeter­s) of snow fell over the weekend and the center warned of dangerous avalanche conditions. (AP)

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