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History of Anemic Progress of English Language Learners on State Accountability Tests. Manuel Barrera, PhD Associate Professor, Metropolitan State University; Research Associate, National Center on Educational Outcomes, University of Minnesota
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History of Anemic Progress of English Language Learners on State Accountability Tests Manuel Barrera, PhD Associate Professor, Metropolitan State University; Research Associate, National Center on Educational Outcomes, University of Minnesota First presented at Free Minds, Free People Conference, Chicago, Illinois July 11, 2013
Three Points • Historical results of state accountability testing with specific case of MN • Convolution of Summative testing to make formative decisions • The case for a return to classroom-based assessment, especially for English language learners and students with disabilities
Historical Results of State Testing • For students of color, ELLs, and students with disabilities: • Chronic Failure Across Years, Across Tests, Across States • Persistent Academic Disparity • $Millions spent to demonstrate the obvious: Children of color, English language learners and students with disabilities do worse than their White peers • For White students: • Despite doing better than their non-White peers, demonstrate persistently low performance than their “advantages” would seem to dictate, especially in mathematics and science • Charter Schools are the Worst
MN Reading Results by Major Groups 2008 (publically accessible data)
10th grade Passing Rates on MN Reading 2005-2008(publically accessible data)
MN Charter School 10th grade Reading Passing Rates (publically accessible data)
Summative Testing as Formative Assessment • Successive Administrations’ Policy: • State tests can be used to help determine educational improvements based on “data-based decision-making” • Teachers can use state tests as a way to determine how to teach students • Teacher “merit” can be determined by progress on state tests and improvement based on improved test results
Basics of Standardized Tests • Designed to provide stable results over time: all 5th graders should perform, on average, at a 5th grade level when they are 5th graders • “Average” is the observed Mean of scores when a test is given, which means exactly ½ of all students tested lower and ½ tested higher: a score within 1 standard deviation from the mean on either side represents 64% of all scores. “Normal” is considered to be within 2 SD of the mean • An average score can “bleed” into other average scores across grades
Basics II • The average score is not actually the “passing score” (e.g., “partially met” vs. “met” standard) • State tests are explained based on varying and often opposed “derived” scores (e.g., a percentile rank, a percent score, a standard “z” or “T” score, or a stanine) • None of these score is actually used to determine “passing”, which is often a taskforce of experts’ or more aptly, a political, decision known as a “cut score” • In short, these scores are Summative (How did they do?) not Formative (what explains the results?). • Hence, none of these interpreted scores provides relevant information for guiding instruction nor determining program changes
Classroom-based Assessment • Analyze what students know now and determine what they need to know to learn what I am going to teach. • Teach that • What did I teach and how did I teach it? • Informs what I should test and how to test it? • Measure progress on what was taught and the skills needed to learn it. • Provide individual student progress and teach students how to monitor their own progress
Improved Classroom Assessment and Instruction Cost Money • What you need • More Teachers • More resources—including technology and teacher support personnel • Fewer students per class • More student support including community supports • More professional development • Better leadership development (as opposed to better “administrators”)
It All Costs LESS than Current Policies • It All Costs LESS Than Spending on Tests That Tell You NOTHING about the problems and then sending students into the “prison-industrial complex” • It Costs Less than funding the worst kind of schooling, charter schooling • It Cost Less to Make Less Violent Individuals in a Less Violent Society Than to Produce Wars where violent individuals can play out their fantasies
Language Policy is a Social Policy • A policy that promotes testing among learners who we already know will not do well on an English test is social violence • Supporting different languages of learners and communities creates the best potential for creating multicultural integration and human interactions • No More Useless and Inappropriate Tests; More Teaching that facilitates learning