Santa Fe New Mexican

N.M. details its request for student testing waiver

- By Cedar Attanasio

New Mexico education officials have clarified plans to seek a partial waiver from federal testing requiremen­ts as many students remain in remote or hybrid learning programs.

State Public Education Secretary Ryan Stewart affirmed last week that the Public Education Department has not canceled spring end-of-year assessment­s.

“We have a request before the U.S. Department of Education to waive a requiremen­t that 95 percent of New Mexico students participat­e in these assessment­s,” he said. “Instead, we have asked to test a representa­tive sample of students, which would provide us with the informatio­n educators, families and communitie­s need to gauge academic progress.”

The recent clarificat­ion followed a statement made in January in which the department said it would request a waiver to allow schools and districts to skip high-stakes student assessment­s again this spring, shifting instead to optional testing. Following requests by the Associated Press, the Public Education Department on Thursday released a letter it sent to the Department of Education that included specifics of its waiver request.

Instead of the traditiona­l non-random survey of nearly all students, the Public Education Department wants to get a snapshot of student achievemen­t by taking a sample of at least 1 percent of students.

“While we will make every effort to assemble a strong sample population, we think it would be challengin­g to test even a non-random 50 percent of the students,” Stewart wrote in the letter.

He explained that the state will invite all families and schools to participat­e in the English language arts, math and science assessment­s, as well as the English language proficienc­y assessment­s, as long as such assessment­s are administer­ed under standardiz­ed testing conditions.

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