Title: Equity and Assessment The Opportunity to Learn Challenge
1Equity and AssessmentThe Opportunity to Learn
Challenge
Math/Science Partnerships Workshop Assessment Of
Student Learning
February 1 - 3, 2004
William T. Trent University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign
2Introduction
The focus of this workshop on assessment is
timely and occurs at a critical point as the
results from the NCLB required assessments become
more clear. Combined with the results from
graduation tests and state standards-based
assessments, the resulting discussions have
necessitated a renewed focus on the role of race,
socioeconomic status, ethnicity and school
factors in shaping academic preparation, access
and performance. The persisting inequalities
require a renewed level of attention focused on
issues of equity.
3Equity and Assessment
- The main point addressed in this presentation
is straight forward. - The constraints on Opportunities to learn for
students of color and poor students are
substantial. - As a consequence, our assessment tools and
practices are called into question, especially
when they are the basis for high stakes decisions
about students placements in the school setting
.
4Equity and Assessment
- A point of focus
- A key assumption in the conceptualization and
design of most assessments is that all students,
by and large, have received a substantial dose of
the treatmentinstruction and learning
experiences. This is a necessary assumption and
one with we can all agree. - Addressing the equity question however tells us
immediately that this assumption is untenable for
a substantial proportion of our students and for
a number of reasons.
5Critical Points Along the Educational Pipeline
6Equity and Assessment
- Several factors influence the opportunity to
learn and thereby impact assessment - Segregated schooling
- Disparate school quality
- Teacher expectations
- Parent resources
- Community resources
7In 1978, a divided court ruled to preserve the
use of race in college admissions. In that
decision, Justice Harry Blackmun wrote a more
frequently quoted phrase but one which is
challenging to operationalize"In Order to Get
Beyond Race, We Must First Take Account of Race.
There Is No Other Way."Justice Harry Blackmun in
BAKKE
Access and equity issues remain unresolved
- Fifty (50) years ago Brown was handed down by
the U.S. Supreme Court
8Equity and Assessment
- Segregated schooling is on the increase
- Hyper segregated-- high minority high poverty
-- schools are especially harmful to student
learning and attainment - African American and Latino/a students are often
in schools where the quality of courses available
AP courses for example -- are limited - African American and Latino/a students are often
in schools where they are overrepresented in
Special Education, Suspensions and Expulsions but
underrepresented in Gifted Education - Race and ethnicity, gender and poverty status at
the student level, along with school level
factors like school size, racial composition and
teacher credentials and expectations are
consequential for educational outcomes.
9Equity and Assessment
- There are important correlates of school racial
composition that implicate equity. - For example
- High SES and race concentrations
- Differential College-going rates
- Differential Teacher expectations
- Differential access to quality teachers
- Differential access to a high quality curriculum
10Race, Ethnic and Poverty Concentrations
11Table 2. College Going Rates by High School
Racial Composition
12Missouri V. JenkinsTeacher Efficacy - tables
Mean 1994 Standardized Math Test Scores by
Teacher Efficacy and Student Race
13Missouri V. JenkinsTeacher Efficacy - tables
Mean 1994 Standardized Reading Test Scores by
Teacher Efficacy and Student Race
Â
Â
14(No Transcript)
15(No Transcript)
16Access to AP courses by Race and Ethnicity.
Detroit Metro Area 1995-1998
17Honors and AP Courses by High School
18Equity and Assessment
- These correlates of school racial composition and
differential access to high quality teachers and
curriculum are associated with low and or poor
performance on a variety of assessments.
19(No Transcript)
20(No Transcript)
21(No Transcript)
22(No Transcript)
23Percent Special Education and Gifted Blacks
24Percent Special Education and Gifted Latino
25Percent Special Education and Gifted Whites
26Equity and Assessment
- These conditions are just some of those that
challenge useful and effective assessment of
student learning. - Following are recommendations from NRC reports
that can help guide good assessment practices in
the face of these challenges.
27High Stakes Findings and Recommendations
CROSS-CUTTING THEMES
- What teachers teach and what students learn
vary widely by track, with those in lower tracks
receiving far less than a world-class curriculum.
If world-class standards were suddenly adopted,
student failure would be unacceptably high (Linn,
1998a). - Recommendation Accountability for educational
outcomes - should be a shared responsibility of states,
school districts, - public officials, educators, parents, and
students. High standards - cannot be established and maintained merely by
imposing - them on students.
- Recommendation If parents, educators, public
officials, and - others who share responsibility for educational
outcomes are - to discharge their responsibility effectively,
they should have - access to information about the nature and
interpretation of - tests and test scores. Such information should be
made avail-able - to the public and should be incorporated into
teacher - education and into educational programs for
principals, administrators, - public officials, and others.
28High Stakes Findings and Recommendations
CROSS-CUTTING THEMES
- Recommendation A test may appropriately be used
to lead - curricular reform, but it should not also be used
to make high-stakes - decisions about individual students until test
users can - show that the test measures what they have been
taught. - Recommendation Test users should avoid simple
either-or - options when high-stakes tests and other
indicators show that - students are doing poorly in school, in favor of
strategies combining - early intervention and effective remediation of
learning problems. - Recommendation High-stakes decisions such as
tracking, pro-motion, - and graduation should not automatically be made
on - the basis of a single test score but should be
buttressed by other - relevant information about the students
knowledge and skills, - such as grades, teacher recommendations, and
extenuating circumstances.
29High Stakes Findings and Recommendations
CROSS-CUTTING THEMES
- Recommendation In general, large-scale
assessments should - not be used to make high-stakes decisions about
students who - are less than 8 years old or enrolled below grade
3. - Recommendation All students are entitled to
sufficient test - preparation so their performance will not be
adversely affected - by unfamiliarity with item format or by ignorance
of appropriate - test-taking strategies. Test users should balance
efforts to - prepare students for a particular test format
against the possibility - that excessively narrow preparation will
invalidate test - outcomes.
- Recommendation High-stakes testing programs
should routinely - include a well-designed evaluation component.
Policy-makers - should monitor both the intended and unintended
con-sequences - of high-stakes assessments on all students and on
- significant subgroups of students, including
minorities, English- - language learners, and students with disabilities.
30High Stakes Findings and Recommendations
APPROPRIATE USES OF TESTS IN TRACKING,PROMOTION,
AND GRADUATION
TRACKING
- Recommendation As tracking is currently
practiced, low-track - classes are typically characterized by an
exclusive focus - on basic skills, low expectations, and the
least-qualified teachers. - Students assigned to low-track classes are worse
off than - they would be in other placements. This form of
tracking - should be eliminated. Neither test scores nor
other information - Recommendation Since tracking decisions are
basically placement - decisions, tests and other information used for
this purpose - should meet professional test standards regarding
placement.
31High Stakes Findings and Recommendations
APPROPRIATE USES OF TESTS IN TRACKING,PROMOTION,
AND GRADUATION
PROMOTION AND RETENTION
- Recommendation Tests and other information used
in promotion - decisions may be interpreted either as evidence
of mastery - of material already taught or as evidence of
student readiness - for material at the next grade level. In the
former case, - test content should be representative of the
curriculum at the - current grade level. In the latter case, test
scores should predict - the likely educational effects of future
placements - whether promotion, retention in grade, or some
other intervention - options.
- Recommendation If a cut score is to be employed
on a test - used in making a promotion decision, the quality
of the standard- - setting process should be documented and
evaluated - including the qualification of the judges
employed, the method - or methods employed, and the degree of consensus
reached.
32High Stakes Findings and Recommendations
APPROPRIATE USES OF TESTS IN TRACKING,PROMOTION,
AND GRADUATION
PROMOTION AND RETENTION
- Recommendation Students who fail should have the
opportunity - to retake any test used in making promotion
decisions - this implies that tests used in making promotion
decisions - should have alternate forms.
- Recommendation Test users should avoid the
simple either-or - option to promote or retain in grade when
high-stakes tests - and other indicators show that students are doing
poorly in - school, in favor of strategies combining early
identification and - effective remediation of learning problems.
33High Stakes Findings and Recommendations
APPROPRIATE USES OF TESTS IN TRACKING,PROMOTION,
AND GRADUATION
TRACKING
- Recommendation As tracking is currently
practiced, low-track - classes are typically characterized by an
exclusive focus - on basic skills, low expectations, and the
least-qualified teachers. - Students assigned to low-track classes are worse
off than - they would be in other placements. This form of
tracking - should be eliminated. Neither test scores nor
other information - Recommendation Since tracking decisions are
basically placement - decisions, tests and other information used for
this purpose - should meet professional test standards regarding
placement.
34High Stakes Findings and Recommendations
FORMS OF TESTINGPARTICIPATION AND ACCOMMODATIONS
STUDENTS WITH DISABILITIES
- Recommendation More research is needed to enable
students - with disabilities to participate in large-scale
assessments in ways - that provide valid information. This goal
significantly challenges - current knowledge and technology about
measurement - and test design and the infrastructure needed to
achieve broad-based - participation.
- Recommendation The needs of students with
disabilities - should be considered throughout the test
development process. - Recommendation Decisions about how students with
disabilities - will participate in large-scale assessments
should be - guided by criteria that are as systematic and
objective as possible. - They should also be applied on a case-by-case
basis as - part of the childs individual education program
and consistent - with the instructional accommodations that the
child receives.
35High Stakes Findings and Recommendations
FORMS OF TESTINGPARTICIPATION AND ACCOMMODATIONS
STUDENTS WITH DISABILITIES
- Recommendation If a student with disabilities is
subject to - an assessment used for promotion or graduation
decisions, the - IEP team should ensure that the curriculum and
instruction - received by the student through the individual
education pro-gram - is aligned with test content and that the student
has had - adequate opportunity to learn the material
covered by the test. - Recommendation Students who cannot participate
in a large-scale - assessment should have alternate ways of
demonstrating - proficiency.
- Recommendation Because a test score may not be a
valid - representation of the skills and achievement of
students with - disabilities, high-stakes decisions about these
students should - consider other sources of evidence such as
grades, teacher recommendations, - and other examples of student work.
36High Stakes Findings and Recommendations
APPROPRIATE USES OF TESTS IN TRACKING,PROMOTION,
AND GRADUATION
TRACKING
- Recommendation As tracking is currently
practiced, low-track - classes are typically characterized by an
exclusive focus - on basic skills, low expectations, and the
least-qualified teachers. - Students assigned to low-track classes are worse
off than - they would be in other placements. This form of
tracking - should be eliminated. Neither test scores nor
other information - Recommendation Since tracking decisions are
basically placement - decisions, tests and other information used for
this purpose - should meet professional test standards regarding
placement.
37High Stakes Findings and Recommendations
FORMS OF TESTINGPARTICIPATION AND ACCOMMODATIONS
ENGLISH LANGUAGE LEARNERS
- Recommendation Systematic research that
investigates the - impact of specific accommodations on the test
performance of - both English-language learners and other students
is needed. - Accommodations should be investigated to see
whether they - reduce construct-irrelevant sources of variance
for English-language - learners without disadvantaging other students
who - do not receive accommodations. The relationship
of test accommodations - to instructional accommodations should also be
- studied.
- Recommendation Development and implementation of
alternative - measures, such as primary-language assessments,
- should be accompanied by information regarding
the validity, - reliability, and comparability of scores on
primary-language - and English assessments.
38High Stakes Findings and Recommendations
FORMS OF TESTINGPARTICIPATION AND ACCOMMODATIONS
ENGLISH LANGUAGE LEARNERS
- Recommendation The learning and language needs
of English- - language learners should be considered during
test development. - Recommendation Policy decisions about how
individual English- - language learners will participate in large-scale
assessments - such as the language and accommodations to be
used - should balance the demands of political
accountability with - professional standards of good testing practice.
These standards - require evidence that such accommodations or
alternate - forms of assessment lead to valid inferences
regarding performance. - Recommendation States, school districts, and
schools should - report and interpret disaggregated assessment
scores of English- - language learners when psychometrically sound for
the - purpose of analyzing their educational outcomes.
39High Stakes Findings and Recommendations
FORMS OF TESTINGPARTICIPATION AND ACCOMMODATIONS
ENGLISH LANGUAGE LEARNERS
- Recommendation Placement decisions based on
tests should - incorporate information about educational
accomplishments, - particularly literacy skills, in the primary
language. Certification - tests (e.g., for high school graduation) should
be designed - to reflect state or local deliberations and
decisions about the - role of English-language proficiency in the
construct to be - assessed. This allows for subject-matter
assessment in English - only, in the primary language, or using a test
that accommodates - English-language learners by providing
English-language - assistance, primary language support, or both.
- Recommendation As for all learners,
interpretation of the - test scores of English-language learners for
promotion or graduation - should be accompanied by information about
opportunities - to master the material tested. For
English-language learners, - this includes information about educational
history, - exposure to instruction in the primary language
and in English, - language resources in the home, and exposure to
the main-stream - curriculum.
40High Stakes Findings and Recommendations
APPROPRIATE USES OF TESTS IN TRACKING,PROMOTION,
AND GRADUATION
TRACKING
- Recommendation As tracking is currently
practiced, low-track - classes are typically characterized by an
exclusive focus - on basic skills, low expectations, and the
least-qualified teachers. - Students assigned to low-track classes are worse
off than - they would be in other placements. This form of
tracking - should be eliminated.
- Neither test scores nor other information should
ever be used to assign children to inefficacious
treatments. - Recommendation Since tracking decisions are
basically placement - decisions, tests and other information used for
this purpose - should meet professional test standards regarding
placement.
41High Stakes Findings and Recommendations
FORMS OF TESTINGPARTICIPATION AND ACCOMMODATIONS
ENGLISH LANGUAGE LEARNERS
- Recommendation Systematic research that
investigates the - impact of specific accommodations on the test
performance of - both English-language learners and other students
is needed. - Accommodations should be investigated to see
whether they - reduce construct-irrelevant sources of variance
for English-language - learners without disadvantaging other students
who - do not receive accommodations. The relationship
of test accommodations - to instructional accommodations should also be
studied. - Recommendation Development and implementation of
alternative - measures, such as primary-language assessments,
- should be accompanied by information regarding
the validity, - reliability, and comparability of scores on
primary-language - and English assessments.
42High Stakes Findings and Recommendations
FORMS OF TESTINGPARTICIPATION AND ACCOMMODATIONS
ENGLISH LANGUAGE LEARNERS
- Recommendation The learning and language needs
of English- - language learners should be considered during
test development. - Recommendation Policy decisions about how
individual English- - language learners will participate in large-scale
assessments - such as the language and accommodations to be
used - should balance the demands of political
accountability with - professional standards of good testing practice.
These standards - require evidence that such accommodations or
alternate - forms of assessment lead to valid inferences
regarding performance. - Recommendation States, school districts, and
schools should - report and interpret disaggregated assessment
scores of English- - language learners when psychometrically sound for
the - purpose of analyzing their educational outcomes.
43High Stakes Findings and Recommendations
FORMS OF TESTINGPARTICIPATION AND ACCOMMODATIONS
ENGLISH LANGUAGE LEARNERS
- Recommendation Placement decisions based on
tests should - incorporate information about educational
accomplishments, - particularly literacy skills, in the primary
language. Certification - tests (e.g., for high school graduation) should
be designed - to reflect state or local deliberations and
decisions about the - role of English-language proficiency in the
construct to be - assessed. This allows for subject-matter
assessment in English - only, in the primary language, or using a test
that accommodates - English-language learners by providing
English-language - assistance, primary language support, or both.
- Recommendation As for all learners,
interpretation of the - test scores of English-language learners for
promotion or graduation - should be accompanied by information about
opportunities - to master the material tested. For
English-language learners, - this includes information about educational
history, - exposure to instruction in the primary language
and in English, - language resources in the home, and exposure to
the main-stream - curriculum.
44Equity and Assessment
- Resource materials from the National Academies
- High Stakes Testing for Tracking, Promotion, and
Graduation (1998) - Testing English-Language Learners in U.S.
Schools Report and Workshop Summary (2000) - Understanding Dropouts Statistics Strategies and
High Stakes Testing (2001)