The NYC Department of Education is mandating that all schools administer standardized interim tests three times a year, also called benchmark or formative assessments. Here is the excerpt from the DOE handbook, “Instructional Principles”, describing these assessments, which are euphemistically call “screeners”.
Alternative standardized assessments can be selected by schools but must be approved by DOE central.
According to the UFT, the first round of testing for grades K-10 will occur starting Sept. 27 and will continue through Oct. 22. Students in grades 3-10 will be administered computer-based tests during this period, and K-2 kids will be assessed via “individual 15-minute question-and-answer sessions.” Given that many kids in grades 1 and 2 are in classes of 28 or more, these sessions could take a teacher seven to eight hours of class size over this three -week period.
This new regimen of commercially-prepared tests according to the
DOE will cost $36 million – more than twice the amount they are
spending for their “class
size pilot”.
Some of us remember how in the first phase of Children's First
under Chancellor Joel Klein, similar interim assessments were required at every
school, along with literacy and math coaches and a unified curriculum, similar
to the regime of reforms that DOE is now attempting once again. Here is an excerpt from a DOE 2005
press release, heralding these measures as leading to gains in state test
scores:
Our new Citywide core curriculum, coaches, professional
development, interim assessments, and aggressive intervention programs for
struggling students, coupled with the enormously hard work of our teachers and
other school staff, all contributed to these tremendous gains.
These same test score gains, however, were not seen on the NAEPs, the more
accurate and reliable national assessments, and when the state exams were
re-calibrated in 2010 to eliminate the rampant test score inflation that had
occurred over this period, the gains disappeared.
This is not surprising. As I wrote
recently in
the Gotham Gazette, there is little or no research showing standardized
interim assessments help students learn, or reliably diagnose their learning
problems.
Few if any independent
peer-reviewed evaluations have offered evidence for their validity or
demonstrated that they have any positive impact on learning. One of the few
randomized studies showed that administering the MAP exams had “no significant effect” on
achievement. Many teachers have critiqued iReady exams, and many
students despise them.
As the late Robert Slavin wrote, director of the Center for Research and Reform in Education at Johns Hopkins University:
Research finds that benchmark assessments do not make any difference in achievement. …In a rational world, these findings would put an end to benchmark assessments, at least as they are used now. The average outcomes are not just small, they are zero. They use up a lot of student time and district money… Interim assessments fall into the enormous category of educational interventions that are simple, compelling and wrong. Yes, teachers need to know what students are learning and what is needed to improve it, but they have available many more tools that are far more sensitive, useful, timely, and tied to actions teachers can take.
Why are these assessments so relatively useless? Because by and large, they are disconnected from the actual curriculum and work being done in classrooms. UFT President Michael Mulgrew pointed out in 2019,when then-Chancellor Carranza first proposed imposing these tests, “How do you use a standardized formative assessment when you don’t have any sort of standardized curriculum….You don’t even know what you’ll be measuring.”
Indeed, after the first round of Children’s First in NYC, interim assessments were quietly eliminated after a few years, along with all those literacy and math coaches.
Scott Marion, the Executive Director of the Center for Assessment explains,
Interim assessments do not have a de facto place in balanced assessment systems. In fact, my colleagues and I argued in our Tricky Balance paper and policy brief that interim assessments more likely create unbalanced systems….Widely-used commercial interim assessments, in particular, generally are not tied to any specific curriculum and are not necessarily coherent with instruction and other assessments in the system…commercial interim assessments have a limited role, at best, in balanced systems of assessment, and any role must be supported by positive evidence that outweighs negative consequences.
In Seattle, the MAP tests were dropped in 2013 in all high schools after a successful boycott of teachers and students, and made optional in other grades. Teachers pointed out how they didn’t test students on the material they were learning in the classroom.
And last
spring, after many Chicago students were found to be taking hours and even days to complete the open-ended MAP exams, the Chicago Board
of Education dropped
its contract with North West Evaluation Association, the company that
produces them.
There are also serious privacy
concerns with these exams. The MAP exam attempts
to measures student engagement and self-regulation by a student’s pattern of clicks
and responses. NWEA
claims that “Teachers can use this information to
identify students who may benefit from SEL (social
and emotional learning)
interventions.” Parents
have expressed concerns about the company’s use of this data, and the fact
that NWEA hasn’t signed the Student Privacy pledge.
Recently, a Brooklyn parent wrote me: “One of my
sons already took a round of MAP when his middle school began administering
them …. The data still follows him, the test was so "ridiculous and
meaningless, unrelated to what he was learning" (his words) and the
predictive analysis so deeply flawed (forecasting that this honor roll student
would not graduate HS or go to college on time).
She added: “I will be opting both of my HS students out of MAP and will
continue to advocate for what our schools and all students really need to
flourish and be safe, especially this year.”
Other NYC parents, students and teachers should seriously consider doing the same.
Watch Democracy Now's coverage of the successful Seattle boycott of these exams nearly a decade ago.
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