The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

U.S. allows relaxed grades on Ga. school performanc­e

Milestones tests won’t be aggregated in the scoring.

- By Ty Tagami ty.tagami@ajc.com

Georgia’s public schools won’t be scored in the normal way for their students’ results on state standardiz­ed tests this year as the federal government continues a relaxed stance on account- ability due to COVID-19.

The lingering effects of the pandemic led the U.S. Depart- ment of Education to grant state School Superinten­dent Richard Woods’ request for a continued reprieve from the normal reporting requiremen­ts, he told local super- intendents last week.

Results from all the Mile- stones tests taken from third grade through high school will not be aggregated into the 100-point scoring system published in the annual school report card known as the College and Career Ready Performanc­e Index. Prior to the pandemic, the overall CCRPI scores were used by parents and other observers to compare schools against each other and against their own past performanc­e.

Some test scores will still influence portions of the report, but there will be no overall score this time.

Woods told local superinten­dents about the federal decision and its impact in a June 2 email. He said test scores and other measures this year will serve as the basis for future comparison­s, effectivel­y erasing the pandemic from the record.

“We structured our re qu est s to ensure that the 2022 CCRPI is realistic and takes into account the extraordin­ary circumstan­ces of the last two years,” Woods wrote. “Our goal is to establish a new baseline, rather than compare your schools’ performanc­e to pre-pandemic norms.”

The federal government waived testing in the first year of the pandemic but required test administra­tion again starting last year. As many expected, the resulting scores showed performanc­e declines amid the disruption­s and stressors of COVID-19. Also, low student participat­ion undermined the reliabilit­y of the aggregate scores as a measure of overall learning last year, when Georgia got a pass on publishing the CCRPI. Instead, the state Department­of Education released “CCRPI-RElated” data files.

The CCRPI will be required this year, but not in its complete form, the federal government told Woods in a May 26 letter. Student attendance will be excluded from the report along with data comparing students’ performanc­e to prior years.

 ?? NATRICE MILLER/NATRICE.MILLER@AJC.COM ?? A student at Thurgood Marshall Elementary in Morrow works on a math problem during class in April. The Georgia Milestones tests take place every April and May.
NATRICE MILLER/NATRICE.MILLER@AJC.COM A student at Thurgood Marshall Elementary in Morrow works on a math problem during class in April. The Georgia Milestones tests take place every April and May.

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