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The myth is popular among education insiders who oppose high-stakes or externally mandated tests, but based on just two studies conducted without controls and employing an obscure definition of “high stakes”. Both studies actually used low-stakes tests that were administered without security protocols. Meanwhile, many controlled studies of the hypothesis have come to the opposite conclusion.<br><br>The talk will:<br><br>compare the methods and results of these studies;<br><br>describe the historical origin of the concepts in the 1980s Debra P v Turlington case in US federal courts and the “Lake Wobegon Effect” scandal; and<br><br>summarize the harms caused by belief in the myth, which include:<br><br>diverting attention from a widespread problem (at least in the US) of lax security in standardized test administration;<br><br>encouraging ineffective and detrimental test preparation procedures (e.g., excessive drilling on format, practice tests);<br><br>spawning numerous research studies using a low-stakes test score trend to “audit” a high-stakes test score trend; and<br><br>justifying the use of value-added measures, calculated from student low-stakes test score trends, to judge teacher performance.<br><br>An abundance of research reveals low-stakes test scores and trends to be unreliable. Student effort varies systematically by a number of background factors, and is easily manipulated.
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It’s a myth: High stakes cause test score inflation Richard P. Phelps researchED 2017 National Conference 7 October, 2017 Brooklyn, NY
Educational testing in the US: early 1980s researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
Educational testing in the US: 1980s Student testing with stakes reintroduced late 1970s, early 1980s Debra P. v. Turlington “Truth in testing” laws researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
Residency in rural, poor Appalachia, 1980s Surprised by claims that state and school district scored “above average” on national tests Investigated, all US states claimed to be “above average” John J. Cannell, M.D. researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
“Welcome to Lake Wobegon, where all the women are strong, all the men are good-looking, and all the children are above average.” - Garrison Keillor, A Prairie Home Companion researchED, October High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
Lax security Outdated or invalid norms Deliberate educator manipulation (i.e., cheating) Cannell’s suspects researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
US Education Establishment Responds researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
“While supporting Cannell’s general finding … our analyses lead us to conclusions that are different, and certainly less sensational, than the ones he reached.” — Linn, Graue, Sanders , CRESST, 1990 “There are many reasons for the Lake Wobegon Effect, most of which are less sinister than those emphasized by Cannell.” — Linn, CRESST, 2000 researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
Outdated or invalid norms High stakes, that induce “teaching to the test” (i.e., test coaching) under pressure CRESST’s Lake Wobegon suspects researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
“We know that tests that are used for accountability tend to be taught to in ways that produce inflated scores.” — Daniel Koretz, CRESST, 1992 “Corruption of indicators is a continuing problem where tests are used for accountability or other high-stakes purposes.” — Robert Linn, CRESST, 2000 researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
CRESST counters Cannell’s Lake Wobegon study with their own, 1991 Students took test a few years. Scores rose. Then took “competing test” district had used before. Scores fell. researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
CRESST 1991 “Generalization” Study Unnamed school district Unnamed tests Neither replicable nor falsifiable A conference presentation; not peer-reviewed. researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
CRESST 1991 “Generalization” Study • 3 tests in the study • Annual NRT • Parallel form • A “competing” NRT researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
1991 CRESST “Generalization” Study researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
1991 CRESST “Generalization” Study School district test was only “perceived to be high stakes.” researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
1991 CRESST “Generalization” Study Study’s assumptions 1. Publication of aggregate results = “high stakes” 2. “Competing” NRTs should get same results 3. “Test coaching” improves scores 4. Low-stakes test scores are reliable and can be used to benchmark unreliable high stakes scores 5. High-stakes cause test-score inflation? researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
Jim Popham “high stakes” definition 1987 1. Publication of aggregate results = high stakes? ... Such tests include the many statewide achievement tests whose results are reported by local newspapers on a school-by-school or district-by-district basis.” researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
Jim Popham “high stakes” definition 1992 1. Publication of aggregate results = high stakes? A test “subject to legal scrutiny.” Tests such as those used “for employment, licensure, or a high school graduation requirement” researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
“High-stakes test. A test used to provide results that have important, direct consequences for examinees, programs, or institutions involved in the testing.” (p.176) “Low-stakes test. A test used to provide results that have only minor or indirect consequences for examinees, programs, or institutions involved in the testing.” (p.178) 1. Publication of aggregate results = high stakes? Standards for Educational and Psychological Testing researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
1. Publication of aggregate results = high stakes? “...tests taken to obtain admission to an educational program or taken during and at the conclusion of a program to obtain a qualification.” “…high-stakes decisions, such as whether a student will move on to the next grade level or receive a diploma.” researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
A high-stakes test is a test with important consequences for the test taker. Passing has important benefits, such as a high school diploma, a scholarship, or a license to practice a profession. 1. Publication of aggregate results = high stakes? Wikipedia researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
2. Research: Comparability of different tests Scores Comparable ? Scores Not Comparable NRTs Freeman, Kuhs, Porter, Floden, Schmidt, Schwille (1983);Debra P. v. Turlington (1984); Cohen, Spillane (1993); La Marca, Redfield, Winter, Bailey, and Despriet (2000); Wainer (2011) Standards Archbald (1994); Buckendahl, Plake, Impara, Irwin (2000); Bhola, Impara, Buckendahl (2003); Phelps (2005) CRTs Massell, Kirst, Hoppe (1997); Wiley, Hembry, Buckendahl, Forte,Towles Nebelsick-Gullett (2015) researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
3. Research: Effects of test coaching It works Significant score increase from learning format tricks Aldeman & Powers (1980) Samson (1985) Scruggs (1985) Roznowski & Bassett (1992) McMann (1994) Holmes, Keffer (1995) Camel & Chung (2002) Filizola (2008) It doesn’t work Negligible score increase Messick & Jungeblut (1981) Ellis, Konoske, Wulfeck, & Montague (1982) DerSimonian and Laird (1983) Kulik, Bangert-Drowns & Kulik (1984) Fraker (1986/1987) Halpin (1987) Whitla (1988) Snedecor (1989) Becker (1990) Smyth (1990) Moore (1991) Alderson & Wall (1992) Powers (1993) Powers & Rock (1994) Scholes, Lane (1997) Allalouf & Ben Shakhar (1998) Robb & Ercanbrack (1999) McClain (1999) Camara (1999, 2001, 2008) Stone & Lane (2000, 2003) Din & Soldan (2001) Briggs (2001) Palmer (2002) Briggs & Hansen (2004) Cankoy & Ali Tut (2005) Crocker (2005) Allensworth, Correa, & Ponisciak (2008) Domingue & Briggs (2009) researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
4. Research: Low-stakes test reliability Not reliable student effort varies; scores easy to manipulate Rothe (1947); Jennings (1953); Uguroglu, Walberg (1979); Taylor & White (1981); Arvey, et al. (1990); Schmit, Ryan (1992); Brown & Walberg (1993); Kim, McLean (1995), Wolf, Smith (1995), Wolf, Smith, DiPaulo (1996); Schiel (1996); Sundre (1999), Sundre, Moore (2002), Sundre, Wise (2003); DeMars (2000), Wise (2006ª, 2006b), Wise, DeMars (2005, 2005, 2006, 2010), Wise, et al., (2009); Hoyt (2001); Eklof (2006, 2007, 2010); ….....etc. Reliable “no incentive to manipulate scores” Kipliinger, Linn (1992) O’Neil, Sugre, Baker (1995) * Hout, Elliot (2011) * 1 of 2 groups researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
4. Research: Low-stakes test reliability “…for consequential exams, the average score on the motivation scale was quite high with a low standard deviation. Essentially, most of the students were displaying uniformly high levels of motivation (i.e., ceiling effect). However, for the nonconsequential groups, motivation played an important role in predicting test performance. The overall motivation scores for the no consequence groups were lower than the motivation for the consequential groups, with much greater variability.” —Cole, Bergin, Whittaker (2008), p. 612 researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
5. High stakes cause test score inflation? Then, why no score inflation with certification and licensure tests? researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
CRESST’s Linn (2000) cites higher gains on a federal anti-poverty program’s pre-post testing over 9 months than over 12 as evidence of inflation More left-out-variable bias researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
Cannell found score inflation in elementary school tests in dozens of states – none of those tests had high stakes. Cannell also found score inflation in secondary school tests in dozens of states – only one had high stakes. Test Score Inflation Occurs where Security is Lax researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
Cannell’s test categorizations confirmed researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
Confusions from misinformation • Tests sample from larger domains • Campbell’s Law • “Teaching to the test” & “Narrowing the curriculum” • Incentives and causes • Educators face many incentives; “high stakes” only one • Today’s tests have much higher stakes than past tests • No one wants to be responsible for test security researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
1. Tests only sample larger domains "Tests are about making a measurement, and generally, tests are trying to measure something huge." — Daniel Koretz TRUE of many tests, e.g., NRTs, aptitude, IQ tests NOT TRUE of well-done standards-based tests researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
2. Campbell’s Law — a truism "The more any quantitative social indicator is used for social decision-making, the more subject it will be to corruption pressures and the more apt it will be to distort and corrupt the social processes it is intended to monitor." • Social indicators can be beneficial: • for understanding • monitor progress • benchmarking • setting goals • process improvements researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
3. Teaching the test; Narrowing the curriculum researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
4. Incentives and causes • Question: • Do high stakes present an incentive to cheat on tests? • Answer: • Of course they do researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
5. Educators face many incentives Incentives of test “stakes” is just one researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
6. Today’s tests have higher stakes Koretz: States in 1980s and 1990s were “chicken feed” compared to today’s tests. Exactly the opposite is true. researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
7. No one inside education wishes to be responsible for test security … including test development firms. researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
Large-scale test, tight security researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
Large-scale test, lax security researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
Harms of disinformation • 1. Acceptance of low standard for research as valid • 2. Unfairly discredits useful evaluation tool • 3. Test security (in U.S.) remains shoddy • 4. Teachers given mixed messages • 5. Now spreading worldwide • 6. Corruption of Test Standards barely averted researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
1. Acceptance of very low quality standard for popular research results CRESST studies: - no controls - secret test - secret location - secret definitions Non-replicable, Non-falsifiable researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
2. Uniquely useful evalution tool is discredited …and, in the US, the only objective measure available to the public (i.e., not under the control of insiders). researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
3. Test security (in U.S.) remains shoddy ACT, SAT, PARCC, SBAC now administered statewide by schools, on varying dates. Tests save money, hassle, gain customers by outsourcing (or, ignoring) test security. researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
4. Teachers given mixed messages “Teaching to the test” is unethical; Don’t do it! Teach content beyond the standards. “Teaching to the test works! You and your students will be better off if you do it! researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
5. Standards corruption barely averted researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
6. Disinformation spreading worldwide researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
Motive alone is not sufficient if test security is tight. Means and opportunity exist only in the absence of security measures and form and item rotation. Artificial test score gains (score inflation) are caused by lax security; they require means and opportunity. researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
“Unlike their other two tests, … teachers are allowed to look at test booklets, … teachers may obtain test booklets before the day of testing, … booklets are not sealed, and … testing is not routinely monitored by state officials. … Outside test proctors are not used, … test questions have not been rotated every year, and … answer sheets have not been scanned for suspicious erasures or analyzed for cluster variance. … There are no state regulations that govern test security and test administration for norm-referenced testing done independently in the local school districts.” Test Security in South Carolina: Cannel’s score-inflated test researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
“South Carolina also administers a graduation exam and a criterion referenced test, both of which have significant security measures. … Teachers are not allowed to look at either of these two test booklets, … teachers may not obtain booklets before the day of testing, … the graduation test booklets are sealed, … testing is routinely monitored by state officials, … special education students are generally included in all tests, … outside test proctors administer the graduation exam, and … most test questions are rotated every year on the criterion referenced test.” Test Security in South Carolina: Tests not in Cannell’s study researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017
Lessons Learned US education: Research quality standards extremely low for popular results; impossibly high for unpopular results If terms can be defined arbitrarily, and not specified, any research result is possible. Cleverly-disguised falsehoods and obfuscation can be well-rewarded in US education schools (e.g., with endowed professorships at Harvard and Stanford). researchED, Brooklyn High stakes & test score inflation 7 October, 2017