糖心动漫vlog

Assessment

States Eye Assessment Throughout the Year as Frustration With Standardized Testing Mounts

By Libby Stanford 鈥 September 07, 2023 6 min read
Arial view of a classroom of lined desks where a diverse group of high school students are working with pens, pencils, and paper.
  • Save to favorites
  • Print
Email Copy URL

Frustrated with an accountability system that revolves around once-a-year standardized exams, more states are looking to redesign the tests, hoping they provide teachers and districts with more timely and useful feedback on their students鈥 progress.

Last month, the Montana education department secured a rare waiver from the U.S. Department of Education, allowing the state to forgo its usual standardized tests used for federal accountability purposes and instead field test a new system of exams given at various points throughout the 2023-24 school year. In Missouri, the state education department has awarded 鈥渋nnovation waivers鈥 to a group of 20 school districts so they can pilot through-year programs in addition to the state standardized tests, and the state is hoping to secure a federal waiver like the one Montana received to start offering the through-year tests in lieu of the current system. And in Florida, schools have switched from an end-of-year test to a 鈥減rogress monitoring鈥 model that involves testing three times a year.

The U.S. Education Department鈥檚 decision to approve Montana鈥檚 request for the Field Test Flexibility waiver on Aug. 10 is an extremely rare instance of the department allowing a state to forego federal testing requirements without a natural or public health disaster, like COVID-19, driving that decision.

鈥淭he Department is committed to partnering with States to develop more innovative approaches to assessments and supporting States in their provision of timely academic achievement and student progress data to 糖心动漫vlog, parents, and families,鈥 a department spokesperson said in an email to Education Week.

At least 13 states have started exploring through-year test models, The slow movement reflects 糖心动漫vlog鈥 opinions that state-mandated tests aren鈥檛 useful for teaching. But a wholesale transition away from the testing regime would require a federal law change dispensing with the two-decade-old accountability system introduced under the No Child Left Behind Act. No such change, however, appears to be in the offing.

The old accountability model was built on outdated assumptions that the primary audience for test scores should be policymakers, not teachers, students, or parents, said Mike Fulton, lead facilitator of the Success-Ready Student Network, the group in Missouri leading the work to change testing.

鈥淭hat is a model centered on the notion if we just weigh the schools and report out on how they鈥檙e doing, improvement will occur,鈥 Fulton said. 鈥淏ut the assessment actually has nothing to do with informing continuous improvement in real time, making adjustments in real time, informing instruction, informing school design on how time and structures 鈥 are used to support learning.鈥

In a recent EdWeek Research Center survey, nearly 80 percent of 糖心动漫vlog said they feel moderate or large amounts of pressure to have students perform well on state exams, with 49 percent of 糖心动漫vlog saying they feel more pressure now than they did prior to the COVID-19 pandemic.

But most 糖心动漫vlog don鈥檛 find end-of-year assessments useful.

An outdated system

Tony Lake, superintendent of the Lindbergh school district in St. Louis, compares the current end-of-year state testing model to being a quarterback playing in the Super Bowl in the 1970s.

鈥淚f you watched the Super Bowl last year, you saw [Kansas City Chiefs quarterback] Patrick Mahomes sitting on the sidelines with his tablet getting real-time information to help him win that Super Bowl or win that game, and they won that Super Bowl,鈥 Lake said. 鈥淜ansas City won Super Bowl IV [in 1970] when Len Dawson was the quarterback. Len Dawson got his information from the game about four days later.

鈥淲hen you think of the current assessment, Len Dawson is our current state assessment system.鈥

District leaders like Lake would prefer to live in a world where testing gives 糖心动漫vlog real-time feedback on student progress so they can ensure they鈥檙e meeting student needs throughout the school year. Lindbergh is one of the 20 districts in Missouri piloting new testing models.

The district is using NWEA tests administered multiple times throughout the year for students in 3rd through 9th grade in addition to Missouri鈥檚 year-end standardized tests. (NWEA creates the series of MAP tests designed to be given throughout the year to measure student progress.) The idea is to give students, teachers, and families the full information on how the student is progressing throughout the year.

See Also

A small group of diverse middle school students sit at their desks with personal laptops in front of each one as they work during a computer lab.
E+/Getty

In the Show Me State, it鈥檚 individual school districts driving the change. But it鈥檚 the same thought process as in Montana, where State Superintendent Elsie Arntzen and her team developed the Montana Alternative Student Testing Pilot Program, which the state has used in a small set of schools since September 2022. It is a through-year test administered five times a year to all students in grades 3-8.

Before becoming superintendent, Arntzen spent some of her career as an elementary school teacher and became aware of the current testing model鈥檚 pitfalls.

鈥淭hat test score just didn鈥檛 recognize my work as a teacher or the work that [my students] did,鈥 Arntzen said.

The federal education department鈥檚 , issued Aug. 10, allows Montana to expand the pilot, and removes the usual year-end testing so teachers don鈥檛 have to double-up exams for their students.

The new testing model is 鈥済oing to bring parents and students and teachers all together on the same page,鈥 Arntzen said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 going to recognize that the accountability of the classroom is spread between family, the student, and the teacher.鈥

The issue of accountability

One of the major criticisms of state-mandated standardized tests is that they aren鈥檛 an accurate measurement of school performance. Standardized tests can favor districts with more resources and leave districts with high rates of poverty struggling to catch up.

Many 糖心动漫vlog would like to see states and the federal government put more emphasis on other measures to assess school performance, like teacher turnover and attrition rates and school climate surveys. As for the tests 糖心动漫vlog find useful, a majority of respondents to the recent EdWeek Research Center survey listed teacher-created formative assessments and teacher-created end-of-unit exams.

See Also

Image is teenagers taking a test
E+/Getty

But for accountability purposes, through-year testing may give policymakers a more accurate view of how students are doing and provide more transparency to families, Fulton said.

Fulton, Arntzen, and Lake would all like to see state and federal policymakers provide more opportunities for flexibility from current accountability requirements, like the waiver from the U.S. Education Department.

There are options built into federal law to allow states and individual districts the flexibility to overhaul their testing systems or opt for different tests. But there haven鈥檛 been many takers. Only a handful of states ever showed an interest in an Innovative Assessment pilot, for example, that federal lawmakers hoped might pave the way for a new generation of tests.

In an email, an Education Department spokesperson said the agency is working to strengthen the Innovative Assessment pilot, while also providing states with grant funding for more assessment innovation.

Teachers, meanwhile, have often argued they鈥檙e overburdened with testing, and that test prep takes away from time that could be spent on student learning: Thirty-six percent of 糖心动漫vlog in a recent EdWeek Research Center survey said they or teachers in their district spend pretty much the entire school year on test prep. Some that through-year testing can add to that burden, especially as schools are still required to do year-end testing.

Those pushing a real-time testing model argue that it鈥檚 one ingredient in a system that better promotes learning.

鈥淩eplace heavy-handed accountability with an absolute laser-like focus on learning,鈥 Fulton said. 鈥淭hen support student learning with good instructional practices and policy that encourages people to take risks based on research.鈥

A version of this article appeared in the September 27, 2023 edition of Education Week as States Eye Assessment Throughout the Year As Frustration With Standardized Testing Mounts

Events

This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
College & Workforce Readiness Webinar
Smarter Tools, Stronger Outcomes: Empowering CTE Educators With Future-Ready Solutions
Open doors to meaningful, hands-on careers with research-backed insights, ideas, and examples of successful CTE programs.
Content provided by 
Reading & Literacy Webinar Supporting Older Struggling Readers: Tips From Research and Practice
Reading problems are widespread among adolescent learners. Find out how to help students with gaps in foundational reading skills.
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Reading & Literacy Webinar
Improve Reading Comprehension: Three Tools for Working Memory Challenges
Discover three working memory workarounds to help your students improve reading comprehension and empower them on their reading journey.
Content provided by 

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide 鈥 elementary, middle, high school and more.
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.

Read Next

Assessment Should Students Be Allowed Extra Credit? Teachers Are Divided
Many argue that extra credit doesn't increase student knowledge, making it a part of a larger conversation on grading and assessment.
1 min read
A teacher leads students in a discussion about hyperbole and symbolism in a high school English class.
A teacher meets with students in a high school English class. Whether teachers should provide extra credit assignments remains a divisive topic as schools figure out the best way to assess student knowledge.
Allison Shelley for All4Ed
Assessment Opinion We Urgently Need Grading Reform. These 3 Things Stand in the Way
Here鈥檚 what fuels the pushback against standards-based grading鈥攁nd how to overcome it.
Joe Feldman
5 min read
A hand tips the scales. Concept of equitable grading.
DigitalVision Vectors + Education Week
Assessment Opinion Principals Often Misuse Student Achievement Data. Here鈥檚 How to Get It Right
Eight recommendations for digging into standardized-test data responsibly.
David E. DeMatthews & Lebon "Trey" D. James III
4 min read
A principal looks through a telescope as he plans for the future school year based on test scores.
Vanessa Solis/Education Week via Canva
Assessment Explainer What Is the Classic Learning Test, and Why Is It Popular With Conservatives?
A relative newcomer has started to gain traction in the college-entrance-exam landscape鈥攅specially in red states.
9 min read
Students Taking Exam in Classroom Setting. Students are seated in a classroom, writing answers during an exam, highlighting focus and academic testing.
iStock/Getty