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Department of Education Office of Educational Assessment
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1. Ethical Issues in Testing: Following the Rules -
The Basics and Beyond
2. Department of EducationOffice of Educational Assessment & Accountability Marilyn Roberts, Director, OEAA
Michael Radke Ph.D. Supervisor, MEAP Jim Griffiths Manager, MEAP Test Administration
Kim Young, State Coordinator, NAEP
3. Objectives: By the end of this session you should be able to - Identify testing ethics issues, guidelines and processes
Define administrative, ethical, student and other testing issues
Propose preventative and corrective solutions
Recognize prohibited testing practices and initiate resolution
4. The Purpose of the Michigan Educational Assessment Program To assess what students know and can do in relation to the state curriculum/benchmarks
To provide valid and reliable results for parents and students, teachers and school administrators
To assist in providing quality teaching and learning
To provide information for AYP, and Education YES! and MERIT Awards
5. Curriculum Alignment The state establishes curricula, related benchmarks and content standards
Districts and schools define their own curricula and align them with the state content standards
MEAP tests student performance in relation to the state content standards
6. What makes a practice ethical? Any action that provides a fair and equal opportunity for a student to get a valid score
Problematic practices are those that give a student an unfair advantage or disadvantage and an invalid score
7. MEAP Testing Practices: Ethics Policies Prohibited practices before testing
Use of unreleased test questions
Teach SOLELY to skills, strategies, and concepts measured by MEAP test Questions
Drill on test questions/require students to memorize answers
Exclude students from testing
Administer tests to ineligible 10th graders
Other practices that compromise validity
8. Prohibited Practices During Testing Actions that may guide a student response
Alter a response (darkening, erasing, editing, etc.)
Read, define, explain, or interpret except when expressly directed by instructions
Allow collaboration or communication among students
9. Prohibited Practices During Testing Schedule a break during a part of a test
Post answers or any other material specifically related to tests
Prompt students to reconsider, review, or reevaluate responses
Allow a student to complete, revise, delete, correct or alter responses on another test part
Other practices that compromise validity
10. Prohibited Practices After Testing Failure to return or destroy testing materials as required
Copy testing materials except as allowed
Alter responses
Allow students to retrieve answer folders or alter responses
Participate inor fail to report prohibited actions
Other practices that compromise validity
11. Prohibited Student PracticesBefore During or After Testing
Communicate or collaborate with someone
Copy anothers answers, request/accept help
Use materials not expressly permitted
Answer or provide assistance for another student
Other practices that compromise validity
12. How are issues reported?
Student Issues: Bubble Unethical Practice
Other issues: Contact MEAP 517-373-8393
Self report
Third party report
Scoring alert
13. Scoring Alerts Readers are trained to look for potential issues
4 types of alerts
Individual Student Issues
Teacher/School Interference
At-Risk
Erasure analysis (MCs)
14. How are issues addressed? Schools report immediately upon becoming aware of possible issue
Conduct internal school investigation: accurate description of what occurred
Investigation in cooperation with MEAP
Resolution and follow up (test reports, public relations, consequences)
Retesting when required and possible
15. What types of issues arise? Administrative errors: An error made that may affect the validity of the test with no intention of improving scores
Ethical issues: Practice occurred to improve scores that may affect validity
Student Issues: Student practice affecting validity
Non-issues: After investigation is completed, prohibited practice did not occur and is determined not to affect validity
16. Prevention is the best solution: MEAP Coordinators Schedule testing sessions
Plan student preparation activities
Train staff for administration
Clarify test security guidelines
Define requirements for material receipt & return
Communicate with administrators and teachers
Use the manuals effectively and consistently
Contact MEAP with questions !
17. Prevention is the best solution:Teachers and Proctors Read and follow the manual consistently
Prepare the room for testing
Administer tests in a single session
Read students the testing directions as written
Monitor during testing
Follow test security and return materials promptly
Contact your MEAP coordinator with questions
18. Keys to resolution: What is in the students best interest?
Early reporting
Complete disclosure
Cooperation between MEAP and the school
Thorough investigation
Retesting where appropriate
19. Sample Issues & Solutions
Part 2 (Reading) of the ELA was given before Part 1(Writing)
Is this an inappropriate practice (administrative error, or unethical)?
Should it be reported?
How could this have been prevented?
Solution?
20. Sample Issue #2 Student writes a math constructed response in the wrong place on the answer folder.
Is this an inappropriate practice (administrative error, unethical, or student)?
Should it be reported?
How could this have been prevented?
Solution?
21. Sample Issue #3 You just transferred to the high performing building in your district. The principal distributes a binder of MEAP questions that are not among the released items on the website - for use during the building MEAP prep classes.
Is this an inappropriate practice (administrative error, or unethical)?
Should it be reported?
How could this have been prevented?
Solution?
22. Sample Issue #4 Students were allowed to use inappropriate supplementary materials or not given access to supplementary materials where allowed
Is this an inappropriate practice (administrative error, or unethical)?
Should it be reported?
How could this have been prevented?
Solution?
23. Sample issue #5 During MEAP testing, a classroom is found to have posters on the wall that list, describe and give examples of the Core Democratic Values
Is this an inappropriate practice (administrative error, or unethical)?
Should it be reported?
How could this have been prevented?
Solution?
24. Sample Issue #6 A student bubbles in answers for the test to create a design/pattern on the answer folder
Is this an inappropriate practice (administrative error, unethical, or student)?
Should it be reported?
How could this have been prevented?
Solution?
25. Sample Issue #7 Principal passes out the current year test booklets at a staff meeting for review prior to testing. Staff is told not to discuss the contents with students prior to the assessment.
Is this an inappropriate practice (administrative error, or unethical)?
Should it be reported?
How could this have been prevented?
Solution?
26. Sample Issue #8 A colleague tells you that they allowed some students to complete their ELA test the next morning (or after a break).
Is this an inappropriate practice (administrative error, or unethical)?
Should it be reported?
How could this have been prevented?
Solution?
27. Sample Issue #9 Two of your best students run out of space to answer to a constructed response mathematics question. You tell them to complete it on a separate piece of paper?
Is this an inappropriate practice (administrative error, or unethical)?
Should it be reported?
How could this have been prevented?
Solution?
28. Sample Issue #10 Your best friend says he will lose his job if the MEAP scores dont go up this year. After MEAP testing is done for the day, you observe a staff member erasing and writing something on MEAP answer folders. You also see a list of numbers with As, Bs, Cs, and Ds on it.
Is this an inappropriate practice (administrative error, or unethical)?
Should it be reported? What other follow up is needed?
How could this have been prevented?
Solution?
29. What suggestions do you have for revising the current MEAP Testing Practices policy
Email us with suggestions at:
YoungK1@michigan.gov
GriffithsJ@michigan.gov
RadkeM@michigan.gov
RobertsM@michigan.gov\