Smarter Balanced Forum Reveals Weak Arguments of Test
Supporters
By: Kathleen Jeskey
On Thursday night, I attended a forum held by The Oregonian
newspaper titled, "The Big Idea: Education and Test Anxiety". The
event consisted of a panel of five: Derek Brown, Director of Assessment at
Oregon Department of Education; Toya
Fick, Executive Director of Stand for Children; Lew Frederick, Democratic State
Representative, House District 43 in Portland; Rob Saxton, Superintendent of
Northwest Regional Educational Service District; and David Wilkinson, Westview
High School Teacher.
The event was structured so that people who wanted to ask
questions were required to fill out a card and turn it in to an assistant, who
then carried those cards to Erik Lukens and Helen Jung, Editorial and
Commentary Editor and Associate Editor (respectively) from The Oregonian. They
were the discussion facilitators. I sat near the front and watched as stacks of
questions were turned in from the audience of about 150 people. They only got
to about four of those questions. Having read many of the Oregonian's editorials, which heavily favor continuing
SBAC testing, and having attended a prior session with Rob Saxton and Derek
Brown presenting about SBAC last February, I suspected that there would not be
a lot of chance for the audience to speak. In preparation for that, I brought
paper and a marker and made signs, which I held up discreetly to both the panel
and the audience behind me during the presentation.
The first thing that moved me to make a sign was when Mr.
Saxton was asked what the price tag for SBAC was to Oregon. He stated that it
was $27 million. That is far more than what OAKS cost, and far more than the
originally predicted cost of SBAC. He also stated that due to some needed
improvements to the test, we may need to spend more than that in coming years.
That prompted my first sign. If $27 million is divided by the average beginning
teacher's salary in Oregon (about $34,300) it shows that Oregon could hire 800
new teachers for the price of SBAC administration. And wouldn't it be great if
some of those teachers could teach subjects that have been cut, like music,
art, and PE?
There was some discussion around the length of the SBAC
test. Derek Brown claimed that the SBAC takes less time than the old OAKS.
He stated that the math test takes about 2 and a half hours
(a low estimate even according to SBAC: see pg. 34) and failed to mention the
English Language Arts portion of the test. Brown explained further that while
many students took up to three opportunities on OAKS, SBAC gives only one
opportunity, which cuts the time for test taking.
The truth is that only some students took multiple
opportunities on OAKS: those who were still attempting to meet or those who had
already met and were attempting to exceed the standards. The average time for
OAKS was about 90 minutes for each exam, English Language Arts and Math. That
adds up to three hours for both exams, per attempt. Thus, a student who met or
exceeded the standard on the first attempt spent an average total of 3 hours
testing. Only a student who took all three attempts, and on both exams, would
spend an average of 9 hours. The average amount of time for a student to take
both sections of SBAC, according to a survey of teachers done by the Washington
Education Association, is around 8 hours. SBAC states the test will take an
average of 7 hours. And all students
take those 7 or 8 hours of exams, not just a few students. One third grader at
my school took 13 hours to complete the assessments. Most of my 6th graders
were in the testing environment for 10 hours.
When Mr. Wilkinson raised these points, we were told by Mr.
Brown that research was being done to improve the tests, including possibly
shortening them. I kept wondering...
I'm not the only one who's wondering that.
The question of time came up again, not only about how long
the test itself takes, but about how much time we are spending teaching to the
test. Toya Fick asserted that if teachers were just using good instructional
practices, it would follow that the students would do well on the test. Mr. Wilkinson responded by explaining that
although that sounded good in theory, many students were not as well versed in
computer skills, depending on the availability of technology in their home or
school, and that keyboarding skills were being required of children as young as
third grade. This, along with unfamiliarity with the new testing interface,
would require students to spend time getting acquainted with the interface and
working on those pre-requisite skills in order to do their best on the test. It is just not true that "good
teaching" in the Language Arts and Math classrooms is enough.
Someone asked why we couldn't use sampling of students, why
must every student be tested every year if the goal is systems accountability?
We could maintain systems accountability with sampling, and it wouldn't be
nearly as expensive.
I assert that one of the reasons, besides obtaining massive
amounts of data on every single student, is that testing companies make more
money if more tests are given.
Rob Saxton stated that we needed to test every student
because if we didn't, parents would have no way of knowing how their children
were doing in school.
There was then again insistence from Derek Brown that the
Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium and the American Institutes for Research
(AIR) the test delivery system for Smarter Balanced, would be working on
improving the tests so that the results would be more informative to parents
and teachers, as well as making the tests shorter. At one point, Rob Saxton
stated that Smarter Balanced was taking more time than OAKS, contradicting
Brown's earlier statement about OAKS taking less time than SBAC.
Toya Fick questioned how we would know where our gaps in
student learning are without these tests. I assert that we already know where
the gaps lie. Derek Brown stated at the beginning of the forum that SBAC was
revealing the same gaps for students that we have seen in the past: gaps based
on ethnicity, status as an English Learner, Special Education status, and
poverty. In fact, it appears that SBAC did a great job of measuring poverty in
California.
I question when we are going to actually do something about
those gaps besides measure them.
Rob Saxton asked how we will know the needs of our students
if we don't have these tests. How will we know what they need in order to
achieve? (I thought back again to that $27 million.)
Lew Frederick and
David Wilkinson did a fabulous job of explaining why we don't need these very
expensive tests, how they are not effective for the purposes they are being
used for, how they are taking away a great deal of instructional time,
narrowing the curriculum, and changing the focus of teaching and learning from
student centered to test centered.
Representative Frederick answered Ms. Fick's fear based
statement that we could lose our federal money if too many people opt out by
mentioning a number of states that, like Oregon, have also been threatened by USDOE with loss
of funds including Vermont and New York, neither of which has actually lost
funding. Representative Fredrick also mentioned that he had recently been in DC
and that neither the House or Senate versions of the ESEA, which are currently
headed to a joint committee for
finalization, contain any penalty for opting out. Mercedes Schneider's research
found the same.
Representative Frederick also clarified that HB 2655 did not
give parents the right to opt out, they already had that right. The bill merely
created a consistent system for how opt out should be dealt with, as there was
great disparity between Oregon districts, with some allowing parents to opt out
easily while others were going so far as to question parents' religious
exemption from testing. The bill, in fact, came about due to this problem. The
bill will not "encourage" parents to opt out; parents were already
opting out. It is the Common Core and the accompanying tests that are
encouraging the Opt Out movement.
Mr. Wilkinson mentioned the New Path assessment work that
has been done by a number of Oregon teachers in partnership with the now
disbanded Oregon Education Investment Board (OEIB) and the Governor's office
during Mr. Saxton's tenure at ODE. Salam Noor, who currently holds the position
of Deputy Superintendent of Public Instruction (the position formerly held by
Mr. Saxton) told members of Oregon Save Our Schools at a recent meeting that in
order to continue work on that more
authentic method of assessing students, he would need to get his ODE staff on
board.
I wondered why the ODE staff wasn't already on board, since
Mr. Saxton had participated in that work and attended meetings of that
assessment work group. However, Mr. Saxton did insist that without the Smarter Balanced Assessment he would not know
how his child was doing in school.
Maybe it's not
surprising that he didn't get his staff on board with a project that not only
seems to be a better way to assess students, but was a cooperative effort
between teachers and the state that should be a standard practice, not an
afterthought.
That work not only produced a plan for a better assessment
system, but I'm guessing that work cost a lot of money as well. Now we're just
going to ignore it and do SBAC harder?
And we're back to my first sign.
UPDATE: An audio recording of the event has been made
available to me. Listen here:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B8gXjrg0OWluX2dfSm95ZVpxSDg/view?usp=sharing
Well done, Kathleen! Thank you for sharing.
ReplyDelete