I
believe the opt-out movement is viable and capable of growth in
NYC--even though we have a Mayor and chancellor who are advocates of
mass testing in grades 3-8.
The Grade 6
ELA results for New York City are screwy. They strike me as a weak link in Questar’s testing
chain. The percentage of students deemed
proficient this year is 48.9%. It was
32.3% last year. That’s a 16.6
difference– or a shift of from nearly one-third to one-half of (65,000) sixth
graders who are now “proficient.” In no other grade is it more than 8.0.
Surprisingly,
differences of the same magnitude hold for all ethnic groups.
NYC ELA Percent Proficient by Grade
| |||
Grade
|
2018
|
2017
|
Diff.
|
3
|
50.6%
|
42.6%
|
8.0%
|
4
|
49.3%
|
42.0%
|
7.3%
|
5
|
38.0%
|
36.1%
|
1.9%
|
6
|
48.9%
|
32.3%
|
16.6%
|
7
|
42.6%
|
43.3%
|
-0.7%
|
8
|
50.7%
|
47.5%
|
3.2%
|
3 - 8
|
46.6%
|
40.6%
|
6.0%
|
NYC Grade 6 ELA Percent Proficient x
Race/Ethnicity
| |||
Group
|
2018
|
2017
|
Diff.
|
Asian
|
69.3%
|
55.0%
|
14.3%
|
White
|
70.3%
|
53.2%
|
17.1%
|
Black
|
35.0%
|
19.1%
|
15.9%
|
Hispanic
|
38.4%
|
21.4%
|
17.0%
|
And how does this useless testing program serve educators who are judged by
such inexplicable data and who must design programs to meet the academic needs
of students–based on such shaky (as in meaningless) information???
An outcome like this is an example of why we need to have timely information
about how the items on the examination functioned. Yet, SED and DOE have not provided data at their
disposal that would shed light on the matter.
Instead, NYC parents are expected to march their children off to the deadening
testing drumbeat for the next three years uninformed about the workings of the
exams.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
*The information consists of item-level statistics that SED and DOE
routinely keeps. It would allow multiple-choice
items and constructed response questions to be studied to see how students
answered them. For M-C items, we should
have classical item analysis data on the percentage of students selecting each option. For CRQs, we should have the percentage of
students receiving each score from trained raters. Having both sets of information would give us
a picture of the response and scoring distributions generated by students and lead
us to evidence-based insights into the quality of the exams. Not only must SED and
the City already have such overall data, they also have—or should be able to produce
it by subgroup—i.e., for ELLs, students with disabilities and for students by
race/ethnicity—that would give us further understanding.
(If you agree, please post and share the above with allies and potential allies in places I am incapable of reaching.)
Fred
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