"Testing, Testing, 1, 2, 3..."
19.1K views | +1 today
Follow
"Testing, Testing, 1, 2, 3..."
This collection has been gathered to raise awareness about concerns related to high-stakes standardized tests and related assessments and as a research tool to organize online content. There is a grey funnel shaped icon at the top right corner of the screen (in desktop view mode) where one can enter keyword searches of content (such as PARCC, SBAC, Smarter Balanced, CAASPP, SAT, Pearson, validity, etc.). The following is the link for the Smarter Balanced (SBAC) subset of posts: https://www.scoop.it/topic/testing-testing?q=SBAC.  Readers are encouraged to explore related links within each post for additional information. Views provided here are for information only and do not necessarily constitute an official position of the curator nor her employer. For more updates, see Educator Resources tab at http://EduResearcher.com [Links to external site].
Your new post is loading...
Your new post is loading...
Scooped by Roxana Marachi, PhD
Scoop.it!

I'm Sorry Students... [From a Teacher] // Angela Morales

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vdVwSLwWf1c

 

"This video and poem is protected by my first amendment rights. This is a general statement, and I believe I speak for many teachers. When I say students, I mean students in general who are part of a system in which teachers and students must comply. I give a quick anecdote as being "brought into the principal's office" to show that even administration must comply with numbers. I address the others as the lawmakers who run education and don't understand what is happening across American classrooms on a daily basis. We need change. Open your eyes, ears, and hearts...and listen to the educators."

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vdVwSLwWf1c

 

No comment yet.
Scooped by Roxana Marachi, PhD
Scoop.it!

Connecticut State Department of Education Reaction to Informed Parent 2/29/16

CT State Department of Education meeting with CT Superintendents with high SBAC refusal rates. Monday, February 29, 2016.  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XA3cX3Z8Qnk&feature=youtu.be 

  

..."After claiming that the meeting was actually a workshop, the State Department of Education told numerous parents and members of the public that they could not participate or even attend the “roundtable discussion on family and community engagement strategies.”

 

The state agency was clear – family and community were not welcome to attend or participate in a discussion about how to promote family and community engagement.

 

Finally, hours before the meeting was to begin, the State Department of Education reversed course or “clarified” its position saying that the public could come and watch, but would not be allowed to participate."...

 

For full post, please visit http://jonathanpelto.com/2016/03/04/incredulous-watching-ct-department-education-officials-lecture-school-administrators-mislead-parents/  

 

##

 

... also see: http://jonathanpelto.com/tag/sbac/ 

and http://eduresearcher.com/category/smarterbalanced/ 

No comment yet.
Scooped by Roxana Marachi, PhD
Scoop.it!

AERA Issues Statement on the Use of Value-Added Models in Evaluation of Educators and Educator Preparation Programs // American Educational Research Association

AERA Issues Statement on the Use of Value-Added Models in Evaluation of Educators and Educator Preparation Programs // American Educational Research Association | "Testing, Testing, 1, 2, 3..." | Scoop.it

"WASHINGTON, D.C., November 11—In a statement released today, the American Educational Research Association (AERA) advises those using or considering use of value-added models (VAM) about the scientific and technical limitations of these measures for evaluating educators and programs that prepare teachers. The statement, approved by AERA Council, cautions against the use of VAM for high-stakes decisions regarding educators.


In recent years, many states and districts have attempted to use VAM to determine the contributions of educators, or the programs in which they were trained, to student learning outcomes, as captured by standardized student tests. The AERA statement speaks to the formidable statistical and methodological issues involved in isolating either the effects of educators or teacher preparation programs from a complex set of factors that shape student performance.


“This statement draws on the leading testing, statistical, and methodological expertise in the field of education research and related sciences, and on the highest standards that guide education research and its applications in policy and practice,” said AERA Executive Director Felice J. Levine.


The statement addresses the challenges facing the validity of inferences from VAM, as well as specifies eight technical requirements that must be met for the use of VAM to be accurate, reliable, and valid. It cautions that these requirements cannot be met in most evaluative contexts.


The statement notes that, while VAM may be superior to some other models of measuring teacher impacts on student learning outcomes, “it does not mean that they are ready for use in educator or program evaluation. There are potentially serious negative consequences in the context of evaluation that can result from the use of VAM based on incomplete or flawed data, as well as from the misinterpretation or misuse of the VAM results.”


The statement also notes that there are promising alternatives to VAM currently in use in the United States that merit attention, including the use of teacher observation data and peer assistance and review models that provide formative and summative assessments of teaching and honor teachers’ due process rights.


The statement concludes: “The value of high-quality, research-based evidence cannot be over-emphasized. Ultimately, only rigorously supported inferences about the quality and effectiveness of teachers, educational leaders, and preparation programs can contribute to improved student learning.” Thus, the statement also calls for substantial investment in research on VAM and on alternative methods and models of educator and educator preparation program evaluation.
 

Related AERA Resource:

##


About AERA
The American Educational Research Association (AERA) is the largest national professional organization devoted to the scientific study of education. Founded in 1916, AERA advances knowledge about education, encourages scholarly inquiry related to education, and promotes the use of research to improve education and serve the public good. Find AERA on Facebook and Twitter.

Roxana Marachi, PhD's insight:

See also the American Statistical Association statement on VAM: http://sco.lt/6sqwFN.   

No comment yet.
Rescooped by Roxana Marachi, PhD from Educational Psychology & Emerging Technologies: Critical Perspectives and Updates
Scoop.it!

The National Center for Fair & Open Testing // FairTest.org

"The National Center for Fair & Open Testing (FairTest) works to end the misuses and flaws of standardized testing and to ensure that evaluation of students, teachers and schools is fair, open, valid and educationally beneficial."

http://fairtest.org/

No comment yet.
Scooped by Roxana Marachi, PhD
Scoop.it!

Opting Out Parental Choices with Spanish Translation

"Superintendent of Schools for the Patchogue-Medford School District Dr. Michael Hynes and Pat-Med parent Ericka Carey discuss a parents right to opt out of NY State ELA/Math 3-8 testing." 

For full video, view here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MhKAzaAUhkI 

No comment yet.
Scooped by Roxana Marachi, PhD
Scoop.it!

U.S. Department of Education: Investigation of the CIO // Oversight and Reform // Feb. 2nd, 2016

To view, click on title or video above, or here: https://youtu.be/BxswF6d-CQY 


The entire video is worth viewing. For those short on time, be sure to watch from

2:12:18

2:13:08 
2:17:29

2:19:19

2:20:03

2:20:42

2:21:08

2:21:41 

2:24:00

2:34:40 - 2:35:28... 

2:37:34

2:46:31

 

For more, please visit: http://Oversight.House.Gov

No comment yet.
Scooped by Roxana Marachi, PhD
Scoop.it!

Vermont State Board of Education Sends Letter to Parents Discrediting Smarter Balanced Test Scores

Vermont State Board of Education Sends Letter to Parents Discrediting Smarter Balanced Test Scores | "Testing, Testing, 1, 2, 3..." | Scoop.it

By Valerie Strauss 
November 7th, 2015 


"It’s not common for education policymakers to tell parents that they can give short shrift to their child’s scores on Common Core standardized tests (or on pretty much any test, for that matter), but that’s what the Vermont State Board of Education has just done.


Meeting earlier this week, the board, which includes the state’s education secretary, Rebecca Holcombe, approved a remarkable message for parents about scores on the 2015 Common Core tests known as SBAC, for the multi-state Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium, which created the exams.


The SBAC, along with tests created by another multi-state consortium, the Partnership for the Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers, or PARCC, were designed to be more sophisticated and better able to evaluate what students have learned than earlier-generation standardized tests. But the exams are not the “game-changing” assessment instruments the Obama administration — which funded their creation — had predicted because of time and money constraints.


With the recent release of the 2015 scores from tests taken in the spring, Vermont’s State Board, of which Holcombe is a member, approved a memorandum telling parents and guardians not to worry about the results because their meaning is at best limited. It says in part:


"We call your attention to the box labeled “scale score and overall performance.” These levels give too simplistic and too negative a message to students and parents. The tests are at a very  high level. In fact, no nation has ever achieved at such a level. Do not let the results wrongly discourage your child from pursuing his or her talents, ambitions, hopes or dreams.


These tests are based on a narrow definition of “college and career ready.” In truth, there are many different careers and colleges and there are just as many different definitions of essential skills. In fact, many (if not most) successful adults fail to score well on standardized tests. If your child’s scores show that they are not yet proficient, this does not mean that they are not doing well or will not do well in the future.


We also recommend that you not place a great deal of emphasis on the “claims” or sub-scores. There are just not enough test items to give you reliable information."...


##


For main post and link to full letter, click here:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/answer-sheet/wp/2015/11/07/vermont-to-parents-dont-worry-about-your-childs-common-core-test-scores-they-dont-mean-much/

No comment yet.