Category Archives: Accountability

Texans and Their Tests

Inside Higher Ed: Texans and Their Tests

When the Education Secretary’s Commission on the Future of Higher Education started meeting, many professors and college leaders feared it would push for some sort of mandatory standardized testing of graduating college seniors — a prospect they saw as inconsistent with the values of liberal education. In the end, the Spellings Commission didn’t make such a recommendation. But in Texas — home to the education secretary and the panel’s chair — mandatory standardized testing for graduating seniors may now be on the way.

Texas Gov. Rick Perry, a Republican, on Thursday proposed a major expansion of state support for public higher education and for student aid. He also proposed one of the broadest testing requirements for graduating college students to date. Seniors would be required to take either licensure exams in their fields or Education Testing Service exams for various college majors. While students would not be required to pass the exams to graduate, colleges’ state funds would be linked to students’ scores, so institutions where many students did well on the standardized exams would get more money.

The New Top Fed for Higher Ed

Inside Higher Ed: The New Top Fed for Higher Ed

It’s a few days before Christmas, and Sara Martinez Tucker has been running nonstop in the few days since the U.S. Senate confirmed her as the new U.S. under secretary for education. Emerging from back-to-back-to-back meetings, she arrives a few minutes late for an early-afternoon interview with a reporter, but when an aide suggests that she take a few minutes to catch her break, and perhaps grab a bite, Tucker demurs. “If I stop running, I’ll fall down,” she says.

Gates: U.S. education system needs work

The Boston Globe: Gates: U.S. education system needs work

Microsoft Corp. Chairman Bill Gates said Monday that the U.S. higher education system is the envy of the world but primary and secondary schools are failing to adequately prepare students for college.

Should government take a yardstick to colleges?

USA Today: Should government take a yardstick to colleges?

Ever since Education Secretary Margaret Spellings unveiled plans seven weeks ago to overhaul the nation’s higher education system, she and her staff have been trying to relieve anxieties. No, she says, she’s not suggesting extending into universities President Bush’s No Child Left Behind law, which she helped design. It relies heavily on standardized tests.

Spellings Urges Education Researchers to Support Proposal to Track Individual Students’ Progress

The Chronicle: Spellings Urges Education Researchers to Support Proposal to Track Individual Students’ Progress

The U.S. secretary of education, Margaret Spellings, called on higher-education researchers on Thursday to champion the Bush administration’s proposal to create a national system, known as a “unit record database,” that would allow the government to track individual students’ progress through college.

N.Y. Lawmakers Grill College Board Officials Again

The Chronicle :N.Y. Lawmakers Grill College Board Officials Again

Nearly a year after scoring glitches skewed the SAT results of some 5,000 students nationwide, one New York legislator has put the College Board in the hot seat again.

At a public hearing last week, State Sen. Kenneth P. LaValle questioned officials from the Manhattan-based organization about the mishap. Senator LaValle, a Republican and chairman of the State Senate’s Higher Education Committee, also criticized the nonprofit group for opposing his efforts to increase public oversight of the testing industry.

Secretary Spellings’ Database, Automated Essay Scoring, and America’s National 16-Hour Pre-Professional Test

EdNews.org: Secretary Spellings’ Database, Automated Essay Scoring, and America’s National 16-Hour Pre-Professional Test

By Robert Oliphant

Secretary Margaret Spellings (EdNews 9/27) has recently called for a “cradle to grad school” database. It will probably include the four pre-professional tests that several million Americans now take each year, namely, the Graduate Record Examination (GRE), the Graduate Management Admissions Test (GMAT), the Law Schools Admissions Test (LSAT), and the Medical College Admissions Test (MCAT). As a group these four tests comprise in effect a 16 hour final exam for American college pre-professional graduates, almost four hours of which require traditional essay writing and traditional high-cost essay-scoring by hand. Practically considered, then, a workable automated system for scoring essays is bound to be a major priority for Secretary Spellings and her database experts.

Panel urges higher-ed overhaul

Christian Science Monitor: Panel urges higher-ed overhaul

When today’s babies grow up and head to college around 2025, will they look back at 2006 as a radical turning point in American higher education? That’s the hope of the Commission on the Future of Higher Education, a prestigious 19-member panel that presented its findings this month after a year of hearings and deliberations. On Tuesday, Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings, who had appointed the group, outlined what she would do to address the keynotes of affordability and accountability in higher education.

Kurtz on grade inflation

The National Review: Deflating Grade Inflation

Is there anything the general public can do about the politically correct academy? In a word, yes. It’s easy to write off the academy as hopeless. Take the Larry Summers affair. Although the public, and Harvard’s own students, overwhelmingly supported Summers, the tenured faculty won that battle. The professors held the power, and by definition, tenured faculty cannot be dislodged.

Spellings: Let’s really throw open doors to higher education

Houston Chronicle: Let’s really throw open doors to higher education

American colleges and universities have long been incubators of great ideas, birthplaces of great inventions and testing grounds of great individuals. And — as never before — they are the key to the American Dream.

Response to Spellings Panel

Inside Higher Ed:
One day after Margaret Spellings offered her prescription for the future of higher education, the Cato Institute sponsored the first of what will be many more forums in the coming months about the work of the education secretary’s Commission on the Future of Higher Education. The panel featured commentators from across the political spectrum: The author and blogger Anya Kamenetz bemoaned the absence of student voices and student-centered concerns from the commission’s work. Neal McCluskey, an analyst at the libertarian Cato think tank, criticized the secretary and the commission for opening the door to a significantly expanded federal role in higher education. Christopher B. Nelson, president of St. John’s College, in Maryland, said colleges were already assessing their performance and measuring student learning much more than the commission gave them credit for, and urged Spellings to respect the variety in institutions’ missions. And Charles Miller, chairman of the Spellings panel, warned colleges that they need to take the commission’s calls for change seriously or risk having government impose solutions, which he agreed was not desirable. A Webcast of the Cato panel, which Inside Higher Ed moderated, should be available on the institute’s Web page soon.

No God Left Behind — Why Not?

Inside Higher Ed: No God Left Behind — Why Not?

By William G. Durden

…In the nation’s current zeal to account for all transfer of teaching and insight through quantitative, standardized testing, perhaps we should advance quantitative measurement into other areas of human meaning and definition. Why leave work undone?

I suggest, for example, that a federal commission propose an accountability initiative for those of faith (not such a wild notion as an increasing number of politicians are calling the traditional separation of church and state unhealthy for the nation). This effort should be titled No God Left Behind. …

The Secretary Offers a Preview of Higher Ed Commission’s final report

Inside Higher Ed: The Secretary Offers a Preview

The formal coming-out party for the final report of the Secretary of Education’s Commission on the Future of Higher Education isn’t scheduled until the end of the month, when Margaret Spellings will be the featured guest at a September 26 National Press Club luncheon at which she is expected to unveil the report of the panel she created a year ago and offer her views about how its recommendations might be carried out.

Texas Southern U moves to revoke tenure from ex-prez

Houston Chronicle: Fired TSU president taken off teaching

Texas Southern University has relieved former President Priscilla Slade of her teaching duties and started the process to revoke her tenure, campus officials said Thursday.

Revised Paper From State-College Groups Proposes New Accountability System

The Chronicle News Blog: Revised Paper From State-College Groups Proposes New Accountability System

Two state-college associations have released a revised version of a paper calling for a voluntary accountability system that would allow prospective students, their parents, and policy makers to compare similar institutions.

National School Testing Urged

This is a development that many opponents of standards-based reforms (which rely on high-stakes testing) predicted at the dawn of the movement during the George H. W. Bush administration.

The US Department of Education’s Higher Education Commission is laying the groundwork for NCLB-like, standards-based reform of post-secondary education, including, perhaps, individual tracking of college and university student performance. So national testing of college and university students, while perhaps far in the distance, is likely a predictable result. The results of which will have a similar effect on undergraduate education as it has had on K-12 education (narrowed curriculum, de-emphasis on critical thought, and loss of academic freedom). EWR

Washington Post: National School Testing Urged

Many states, including Maryland and Virginia, are reporting student proficiency rates so much higher than what the most respected national measure has found that several influential education experts are calling for a move toward a national testing system.

The growing talk of national testing and standards comes in the fifth year of the No Child Left Behind era. That federal law sought to hold public schools accountable for academic performance but left it up to states to design their own assessments. So the definition of proficiency — what it means for a student to perform at grade level — varies from coast to coast.Maryland recently reported that 82 percent of fourth-graders scored proficient or better in reading on the state’s test. The latest data from the National Assessment of Educational Progress, known as “the nation’s report card,” show 32 percent of Maryland fourth-graders at or above proficiency in reading.

Virginia announced last week that 86 percent of fourth-graders reached that level on its reading test, but the NAEP data show 37 percent at or above proficiency.

Some experts say it’s time to be more clear about how well American schoolchildren are doing.

“The more discontented the public is with confusing and dumbed-down standards, the more politically feasible it will be to create national standards of achievement,” said Diane Ravitch, a New York University professor who was an assistant U.S. education secretary under President George H.W. Bush.

The political obstacles are formidable, including a long tradition of local control over public education. But the approaching presidential campaign, a pending debate over congressional reauthorization of the No Child Left Behind law and the wide gaps between assessments have raised hopes among proponents that the issue will gain steam. Some say gradual steps toward a national system would be better than none.

A recent study by Bruce Fuller, a professor of education and public policy at the University of California at Berkeley, found that states regularly inflate student achievement. In 12 states studied, the percentage of fourth-graders proficient in reading climbed by nearly two percentage points a year, on average.

The NAEP (pronounced “Nape”) data show a decline on average in the percentage who were proficient over the same period, Fuller said.

Another Fuller-led study found only three states — Massachusetts, Missouri and South Carolina — with proficiency standards that come close to NAEP’s. (A similar rating by the journal Education Next showed that D.C. school standards have been stringent. It showed 14 percent of D.C. elementary school children reading proficiently on the D.C. scale and 11 percent on NAEP’s.)

Unlike state tests, which are used to help rate public schools and measure achievement of all students in certain grades, NAEP has a more limited mission. It tests selected pools of students in key subject areas to produce data on long-term educational trends.

NAEP standards were designed to establish what students ought to know to do well in the next grade and beyond, said Mark D. Musick, former president of the Southern Regional Education Board, who helped draft them. State standards, he said, more typically reflect what teachers say are the levels good students reach in their classes.

Although classroom experience varies across the country, Musick said, what students should know to be proficient in Algebra I is clear to most educators, and a national test would help set that standard.

The argument over national standards splits both major political parties. Many Republicans defend each state’s right to set its own standards, but the Bush administration includes advocates for a stronger federal role.

No Child Left Behind, which President Bush signed into law in 2002, struck a balance: It required a major expansion of state testing programs but left standard-setting authority to the states.

Many Democrats supported President Bill Clinton’s effort in the 1990s to encourage national standards, which was blocked by a Republican-led Congress. Other Democrats, particularly those allied with teachers unions, oppose judging schools by standardized tests.

Charles E. Smith, executive director of the National Assessment Governing Board, which oversees NAEP, said many state officials tell him they are moving toward the national benchmarks.

A senior Maryland education official, for instance, said the state’s standards are aligned with some of the NAEP benchmarks. Some, he said, but not all.

“The gaps will generate differences in performance,” said Ronald A. Peiffer, Maryland’s deputy superintendent for academic policy. “If NAEP were the national test to which all states taught and tested, then there would be no gaps, and I would expect Maryland students to do much better on NAEP.”

Last week, the Washington-based Thomas B. Fordham Foundation released a report from several experts, including advisers to Republican and Democratic administrations, that outlined ways to move toward national standards.

First, the federal government could order a new national testing program. The report said that surely would raise standards but would be unlikely to win congressional approval. Second, Washington could fund an expanded, voluntary national testing system. The report said that probably would raise standards and could be passed.

Third, states could build on efforts to share test items among themselves. That would be less likely to raise standards but politically feasible, the report said. Fourth, the federal government could take steps to ensure that state standards and test results could be easily compared with one another and with NAEP.

The experts in the report include Texas lawyer Sandy Kress and former deputy U.S. education secretary Eugene W. Hickok, both key education advisers to Bush, as well as Ravitch and former Clinton advisers Michael Cohen and Andrew J. Rotherham.

Chester E. Finn Jr., president of the Fordham Foundation, a former Reagan administration official and one of the architects of the NAEP standards in 1990, said creating a national test would be difficult. “But I think it’s a manageable hurdle, especially with presidential leadership,” he said.

“There’s an assumption around that national standards are political suicide even if they make educational sense,” Finn said. “We need to bust through that.”

Musick said he believes the best way to introduce national tests would be in a few high school subjects, such as first- and second-year algebra.

Some educators see comparisons with NAEP as unrealistic. Gerald W. Bracey, an educational psychologist who writes frequently on testing, noted that 1996 NAEP results found only 30 percent of fourth-graders to be proficient or better in science, even though an international study that year ranked American fourth-graders third in science among 26 nations.

Others want to cut back on standardized testing entirely.

Deborah Meier gained fame for starting schools in low-income areas of New York City’s Manhattan that had experts rate students by viewing their schoolwork and discussing it with them. The schools did not rely on standardized tests. Instead of a national test, Meier said, the country should adopt “a combination of in-depth local instruments, independent review of schools and student work.”

She also said there is value in limited testing to sample student progress.

Skeptics of national testing have long noted the influence of politics on proficiency standards. Put simply, how many kids will voters allow to score below proficiency? Some policymakers are tempted to keep standards low so that schools will look successful; others seek to set them high to spur schools to improve.

© 2006 The Washington Post Company

N.Y. State Senator Plans to Hold Hearing on Standardized-Testing Industry

The Chronicle: N.Y. State Senator Plans to Hold Hearing on Standardized-Testing Industry

Kenneth P. LaValle, a powerful New York State senator who earlier this summer locked horns with the College Board over a report on an SAT-scoring snafu, plans to hold a public hearing on the standardized-testing industry in late September.

Numbers to Make Our Colleges Better

Washington Post: Numbers to Make Our Colleges Better

Gathering and analyzing information, advancing unfettered inquiry, expanding knowledge — these are surely hallmarks of American higher education. So, when the academy itself is the subject of rigorous study, shouldn’t we expect the leaders of our colleges and universities to support such inquiry on the same principles?

Assessing colleges proves challenging

Atlanta Journal-Constitution: Assessing colleges proves challenging

The reputation of Southern colleges traditionally depended more on completed passes by their football teams than on courses completed by their student bodies. Today, schools and students take academics far more seriously.

Still, the question persists: Are Georgia colleges and universities doing a good job educating students and preparing them for careers?

A report approved last week by the U.S. Secretary of Education’s Commission on the Future of Higher Education suggests that better and more transparent measures are needed to make that assessment.

Testing, testing

Inside Higher Ed: Testing, testing

At another time, in another place, the conversation that unfolded in a conference room at the Washington office of the Educational Testing Service on Monday, about national efforts to measure student learning, might have focused on the sort of arcane concepts that usually dominate discussions about testing, such as “design,” “validity” and “reliability.” But coming as it did just days before the federal higher education commission prepares to gather less than a mile away to (in all likelihood) approve a report that calls for a national accountability system, the ETS discussion was, for better or worse, about the politics of the possible — and the impossible.

Nominally, ETS brought together a small group of accreditors and higher education association officials to discuss the testing service’s recent report, “A Culture of Evidence: Postsecondary Assessment and Learning Outcomes,” which recommends that higher education leaders work together to create a “comprehensive national system for determining the nature and extent of college learning.”