Information vs. Evaluation

My local paper carried a wire service story on new problems with NCLB mandated testing. It appears that schools, with state encouragement, are knowingly not submitting test scores generated by 2 million minority students. The exclusions are based on a loophole that allow groups to be excluded when the group is not considered to be statistically significant.

When future teachers consider testing as an academic topic, they learn that tests serve many purposes. Included on such a list are evaluation and information. Problems can occur when attempting to use the same assessment to meet both purposes. The situation with high stakes testing reminds of comments Helen Barrett has made about electronic portfolios. She claims that when colleges use electronic portfolios to evaluate programs and students the value of the portfolio for self reflection is diminished. Students in such a system are reluctant to use the portfolio to explore strengths and weaknesses. The situation with standardized tests seems similar. Once consequences related to performance are in play, the interest in the information value of the tests become secondary.

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NCLB – Four Year Year Review

I was listening to Public Radio this morning and the news program had a piece on No Child Left Behind. The discussion was focused around a recent report by the Center on Education Policy summarizing the 4 year record of NCLB.

The report basically concludes that results are mixed. Aside from issues of whether or not expectations are adequately funded and whether the approach is appropriately punitive, I think a major conclusion is that math and reading benefit at the cost of attention to other activities (an example used is history). Advocates claim that fundamental skills (i.e., reading) provide the basis for learning everything else (i.e., social studies). Critics note that what have been reported as achievement gains attributed to the program are deceptive and simply result from the common practice of school/teacher decisions to reduce the time spent on other topics. Hence, we claim to teach social studies in elementary school, but tend to actually do little of this as the time for achievement tests measuring reading and math approach.

Thomas Friedman had an article on a related topic this past week (sorry – I can’t link you to the NYTimes editorial). Examining the priorities of education from an international perspective, he notes that the U.S. is worried that students cannot compete in math and science (I guess the focus is on more advanced levels of education) and this is a concern for future economic competitiveness. In contrast, other countries worry that a lack of interest in the humanities will reduce higher level thinking capabilities so necessary for creative approaches in many fields. Everyone sees the connection between education and commerce and everyone is concerned (anxiety is the word Friedman uses) that national educational practices will limit the nation’s capacity to compete.

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Last Day

Blogging NECC has caught on. I see that an organized group of contributors is creating NECC blogs so a link from here is warranted.

I have noticed there is not a lot of support here for “No Child Left Behind.” Perhaps this is a function of the sessions I select. I listed to Ferdi Serim this morning. He and a colleague talked about the difference between growth (NWEA) and performance orientations to evaluation. The idea is that a hurdle system (performance) does a poor job of informing teachers how to work with individual students and is insensitive to entering differences in capabilities/background.

I attended a David Thornburg presentation to end the day. Again, a big picture person with challenging ideas. The theme of the presentation was helping students navigate from data to understanding. Thornburg offered some interesting data on data – just how much of it we experience. He also recommended tools for working with data – how to locate meaningful data (Grokker), how to organize (Inspiration) and how to personalize and add context (eZedia). I assume other tools could be substituted. Grokker was new to me. This application is a different type of search engine/organization tool and it is certainly worth a look.

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