School testing to get tougher for students
Current standards too low, experts say
By http://www.journal-news.com/staff/jeremy-p-kelley/" rel="nofollow - Staff Writer
For
more than a decade, Ohio
students were deemed “proficient” on state math and reading tests even if they
got more questions wrong than right.
Those
results led some parents to believe their children were doing better against
peers in other states than they actually were.
“We
have very low expectations in the state of Ohio. It’s pathetically low, ” said
Middletown City School District assessment coordinator Deborah Houser.
“Basically, it’s time to up the expectations.”
State
officials admit the low bar served a simple purpose: schools looked better to
the public and stayed out of “academic emergency.” And that likely eased
pressure to raise performance.
This
summer, Ohio
and 10 other states will revisit the issue, working together to establish
passing scores for the new, tougher tests that were given to students this
spring.
“We
have to raise the scores,” said state school board president Tom Gunlock. “We
have to tell people exactly where we are, instead of continually lying to
people.”
The
education reform group Achieve, a Common Core educational standards advocate,
this month ranked the cutoff scores on Ohio’s
2013-14 tests among the bottom 10 in the nation. That report put the state in
the same grouping with Louisiana,
Georgia Arkansas and others. This newspaper’s investigation found:
·
Ohio used to score well
above the national average on the National Assessment of Educational Progress
(NAEP) reading tests, but its scores have stagnated and even declined in the
past six years while other states narrowed the gap.
·
While the state said 90 percent of Ohio seniors met Ohio
Graduation Test requirements in 2013, only 63 percent of those students who
went on to an Ohio college were able to begin college without remedial help.
Some,
like Gunlock, say students and educators will rise to the occasion if held to
higher standards.
Others
say setting the bar higher could causes thousands of Ohio students to fail the tests, making a
high school diploma more difficult to obtain.
“Are
you willing to say to the people of this state that 70 percent of our children
fail (these tests)?” asked Springfield City Schools superintendent David
Estrop, pointing to New York’s
69 percent failure rate when it set a very high bar.
“Second
question: If we say that’s OK, what’s the plan to deal with those 70 percent?
Do 70 percent or 60 percent of the kids of Ohio not graduate? What do we do with them?”
Previous system called ‘terrible’
Ohio tested its students
via the Ohio Achievement Assessments and the Ohio Graduation Test, which are
being phased out after more than a decade. State officials decided what scores
qualified as advanced, accelerated, proficient, basic or limited on those tests
— and many state leaders now admit those standards were poor.
House
Education Committee member Mike Henne called them “terrible.” Senate Education
Committee Chair Peggy Lehner said they were clearly too low.
To
be proficient (or passing), an Ohio
seventh-grader only had to correctly answer 45 percent of the reading questions
and 32 percent of math questions. In virtually every school, a classroom grade
of 59 percent is an F, but all 14 OAA/OGT reading and math tests deemed 59
percent a “proficient” score.
“In
our world, even on our report cards, if you walked into your house and said to
your mom, ‘I got 37 percent on my test and it was proficient,’ that’s a
contradiction,” said Houser. “But in the state of Ohio, that’s all you would have to get
correct to be proficient.”
The
report by Achieve took individual states’ proficiency standards and compared
them to the states’ performance on the national test from NAEP.
The
report claimed Ohio’s
proficiency scores in fourth- and eighth-grade reading and math were among the
most inflated in the nation. Ohio
deemed 87 percent of its eighth-graders proficient in reading, but only 39
percent of Ohioans who took the corresponding NAEP test were proficient by that
national standard.
Ohio’s old system also
made it easy for schools to earn state praise. To meet the standard on any
state test, an elementary or middle school had to have 75 percent of its
students score proficient — a number that was bumped up to 80 percent last
year.
Scoring process questioned
Ohio has been raising
standards the past few years, including the new requirement that most
third-graders reach a minimum reading standard to advance to fourth grade.
The
state took a big step toward a higher bar by implementing new learning
standards and harder tests this year, including English and math tests from
PARCC (Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers) and
science and social studies tests from AIR (American Institutes for Research).
School
officials say the new tests also focus more on critical thinking and problem
solving. Students, for example, must explain how they arrived at an answer and
some questions have more than one correct answer. This replaces past tests that
have been filled with multiple choice answers, where some students might guess
their way through the test.
“There’s
an increased emphasis on being able to demonstrate your understanding of how
you’re going about solving a problem or arriving at your solution,” said Keith
Millard, the assistant superintendent for instruction at the Hamilton City
School District.
He
added that in answering reading questions, too, the tests place a bigger
emphasis on citing evidence from text.
Those
tests have been finished for weeks, but the state hasn’t set passing score
standards yet and PARCC hasn’t explained the scoring process yet. Scores won’t
be available until the fall.
“You
really have no idea what target it is that you’re shooting for,” said Keith
Millard, the assistant superintendent for instruction at the Hamilton City
School District.
PARCC
officials said representatives of the 11 member states will review graded tests
in July and August, and recommend cutoff scores for the five-level scoring
system. PARCC’s governing board, which includes Ohio state superintendent Richard Ross, will
vote on those recommendations in September.
The
biggest change is in the five scoring levels. In Ohio’s current system, the top three levels
(proficient, accelerated, advanced) are the equivalent of passing the test.
According to PARCC, only two levels (strong and distinguished) are the
equivalent of passing.
Which way will state go?
Despite
the controversy over the states proficiency scores, officials at Miami University
in Oxford say they’re admitting more- and
better-performing Ohio
students than ever at the university.
Since
2010, the university has seen a two-point increase in ACT scores for Ohio students, even as
the school admits a larger number of in-state high school graduates. The school
doesn’t analyze state proficiency scores when selecting applicants. Instead,
ACT or SAT scores are analyzed, along with grades and curriculum, among other
things.
“We’re
seeing students who are incredibly well-prepared, particularly in looking at Ohio,” said Susan
Schaurer, the university’s interim director of admissions . She said the
strength of classes students are taking has increased, as well.
“They’re
demonstrating that they’re prepared to take more challenging coursework.”
Sen.
Lehner said kids will improve if the tests improve — even if the state must suffer
through a few first years of bad test scores.
“Look
at Massachusetts,”
said Lehner, R-Kettering. “They moved their bar up substantially. And within 10
years, they were exceeding it and moving it up again. It doesn’t happen
overnight, but it certainly is something that needs to happen if we’re going to
improve the overall quality of our kids.”
Lehner
also wants all states to have the same proficiency standards on tests. Letting
each state set its own score means that students in different states could take
the same test, provide the same answers, and be declared passing in one state
and failing in the other.
Regardless
of what the legislature decides, the schools are the ones who will have to hand
out the tests.
“It’s
really a state issue, not a district issue,” said Lakota Local
School spokesman Randy
Oppenheimer. “We’re going to administer the tests the states send us.”
The wild card
Despite
educators’ complaints about constant change in schools, Ohio House members this
month supported a bill that could completely ditch the PARCC and AIR tests and
start over next year.
The
Senate seems less likely to go that route, and Ohio Department of Education
spokesman J.C. Benton pushed back against that idea, saying if Ohio wants its
students to make progress, the state needs to “stay the course” with Common
Core and PARCC and AIR assessments.
Gunlock
said that after PARCC approves cut scores, it’s possible the state legislature
would vote to throw out the scores and create its own scale.
“I
hope and pray that they do what is best for kids and the state of Ohio and leave politics
out of it,” Gunlock said. “This is the last time, I think, that we have a
chance to raise the standards high enough so that the kids who are graduating
are truly college and career-ready.
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