Chattanooga Times Free Press

Students will test in person

- BY MARTA W. ALDRICH CHALKBEAT TENNESSEE

While at least six states are seeking to cancel student testing this spring as the pandemic grinds on, Tennessee isn’t wavering in its plan to give tests in person to most of its nearly 1 million students.

“Let’s test and see where we are,” said House Education Committee Chairman Mark White, calling the results crucial to understand­ing how much students know after a year of learning disruption­s. “I think it will help us in the long run.”

His gung-ho attitude is shared by Gov. Bill Lee and most Tennessee policymake­rs who are trying to figure out how to target support for students who have

fallen behind.

But it runs counter to thinking in states like Illinois, Michigan, New York, New Mexico, Oregon and Washington, where leaders have said they intend to ask the federal government to waive testing requiremen­ts for a second straight year.

Whether and how to test this spring are the latest pandemic questions being debated and brainstorm­ed in every state. While testing could start as soon as March in some places, the spread of more contagious coronaviru­s variants, some possibly resistant to vaccines, might cause more school buildings to shutter and disrupt testing again.

The Biden administra­tion is accepting state requests for testing waivers but has not indicated whether it will approve them or issue a blanket waiver as former Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos did last spring. Miguel Cardona, the president’s nominee to succeed DeVos, has said testing could be useful this year but that schools should not test students on campuses that are closed for safety reasons.

Those wanting to cancel tests say they can’t create an ideal testing environmen­t when some students are learning in person, some remotely and some in a hybrid of both. Officials also worry about the stress that weeks of annual assessment­s would add to an already difficult school year.

In Tennessee, state officials believe testing can be done safely and well with careful planning. Last summer, they brushed aside early calls for cancellati­on from the state’s largest teacher organizati­on, which questions the validity of assessment results even in normal years. And as for more recent concerns raised by several school boards about whether remote students should have to participat­e, they say adequate safety protocols are in place.

Since early fall, state and local school leaders have mapped out the logistics for giving assessment­s to more than 726,000 public school students between April 12 and June 10.

The Tennessee Department of Education widened its testing window by several weeks to provide more flexibilit­y because of varying school calendars and the potential for illness and quarantine­s to disrupt testing for some students.

“The health of our students, families, and educators is paramount,” said department spokeswoma­n Victoria Robinson, detailing meetings, training, guidance and adjustment­s aimed at following health protocols and policies.

WHY TEST IN PERSON?

With approximat­ely a fifth of its students learning remotely, Tennessee has practical reasons for requiring all students to test in person.

First, it’s a more secure environmen­t, with test administra­tors and proctors on site to make sure students are doing the work themselves. Second, it alleviates concerns about internet bandwidth at home that could put some students at a disadvanta­ge if tests were given online.

Perhaps most important, though, is Tennessee’s plan to administer paper-and-pencil tests for one year before transition­ing to online exams under its 2019 contract with testing company Pearson. The state planned to use the paper tests last spring before assessment­s were canceled nationwide because of the emerging virus. Since then, Pearson has stored about 75 tons of testing materials, for which the state already has paid $11 million, in its warehouse in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.

To keep students socially distanced during testing, the state has encouraged staggering schedules or securing additional testing locations like libraries, churches or community centers. Most districts that offer remote learning plan to test those students separately from classmates learning in person.

In rural Dickson County, west of Nashville, testing coordinato­r Ray LeComte is looking to use large meeting rooms in churches to test students who are learning virtually. Meanwhile, in-person students will test in school classrooms already set up for social distancing.

“It’s going to be an adventure, but we’ll get it done,” LeComte said of his 8,000-student district.

Rutherford County Schools, the state’s fourth-largest school system with more than 47,500 students, expects to bring in distance learners to school buildings on days when other students aren’t there. The district already tested some of its high school students on nontraditi­onal schedules in November and “it went very well,” said testing coordinato­r Kevin Whittingto­n.

“The No. 1 thing is you have to communicat­e with students, parents, and stakeholde­rs that we’re offering a very safe testing environmen­t,” Whittingto­n said.

GETTING FAMILIES ON BOARD

State testing in the fall went smoothly for about 50,000 high school students, Assistant Commission­er Casey Haugner Wrenn said last month in a report to the state Board of Education. The bigger test happens this spring when hundreds of thousands of students are to take their TNReady assessment­s in grades 3-8 and endof-course exams for high schoolers.

Whether remote students will show up to test in person is a concern.

State lawmakers recently approved a one-year policy with incentives for districts to encourage student participat­ion. In addition to allowing test results to be excluded from teacher evaluation­s, it lets districts exclude the scores from their state ratings, as long as at least 80% of their students take the tests. In a normal year, the federal government requires 95% participat­ion, and Tennessee is seeking a federal waiver for the lower threshold.

“I think everybody across the country is expecting a lower participat­ion rate this year,” said Scott Marion, executive director of the Center for Assessment, which advises about 40 states on testing matters.

But Marion said, “there’s nothing magical about 95% participat­ion, or even 80% participat­ion” when it comes to data.

“There are political polls that are based on calls to a thousand representa­tive households across the country,” he said, and the same representa­tive analysis can be applied to test results.

Others say the more student results, the better, especially in a state like Tennessee that for 15 years has used data to inform its education improvemen­t work.

“Data-driven decisions are the right thing to do for students, and the way we do that is by having assessment data on how students are doing,” said David Mansouri, president and CEO of the State Collaborat­ive on Reforming Education, a Tennessee research and advocacy organizati­on.

“I think 80% is an indicator meant to say we care about knowing how students are doing,” he said, “and we want to make sure there’s a good-faith effort to administer the test this year.”

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