FOCUS: Comparing
Assessments and Tests
Text of Rep. Baldwins speech presented at Goals 2000
Conference, Washington, D.C.
February 12, 1997.
By Rep. Steven Baldwin When I became
the chairman of the California State Assembly Education Committee
last year, I was the first Republican to chair that committee in
about 30 years. I quickly started to dig out documents from all
the different education bureaucracies, and we have 12 in
California. As a longtime conservative activist, Ive always
been very aware of what was going on in education, but I was
shocked to see with my own eyes some of the internal documents I
was able to obtain. I held hearings right away on any areas
of interest, including Whole Language and the New Math.
When the Democrats regained control of the
legislature, I was removed as chairman of education. But I
continue to work hard on education issues in California
because we lead (unfortunately) in Whole Language, New Math, and
use of psychology in our schools. We are probably the leading
state in fusing our medical establishment into our school system,
and we are paying the price for it. (See what
happens when you let Goals 2000 Health care in schools happen...)
We are last in the country in reading
scores. Excuse me, were tied for last with Guam. We are
nearly last in the country in math and we have a large
percentage of students who cannot read or write by the time they
get to college.
While 30% of the students entering college in
Oregon, for example, must go through remedial education, in
California it is 50%. That is, 50% of all
students entering college do not have the basic knowledge of math
or English and must go through a half year, and maybe a full
year, of remediation courses in order to start their
college courses.
As for assessments, California is infamous for
an assessment test called the CLAS test. That test created a
national controversy. A group headed by Carolyn Steinke, called
Parents Involved in Education (PIE), generated literally tens of
thousands of phone calls and letters to the Governor in
opposition to the test. This issue dominated the media for weeks.
Eventually, the Governor was forced to back down, temporarily
anyway, from the use of the CLAS test, which was what the OBE
(Outcome-Based Education) crowd calls a Performance-Based test.
Many parents dont understand that the
reasons we test our children have changed. We used to test them
to find out where they were in terms of academic progress. In
some cases, we wanted to compare schools to see which ones were
doing better than others. These are no longer the purposes of
testing. Tests arent called tests any more; the politically
correct term is assessments.
What are the schools assessing? Well,
theyre not assessing academic performance. Thats
a very minor part of tests nowadays. In fact, the OBE crowd has
circulated the myth that objective standardized tests, the
norm-referenced tests, the measurable tests that we were used to,
are no longer valid. Without a shred of evidence, the OBE crowd
has rejected these tests, claiming that they do not test the
students progress, that they do not test authentic
knowledge, which is the new buzz word used in describing
tests.
Performance-Based tests are supposedly
authentic because theyre real. Yet,
when I challenge these people to show me any evidence whatsoever
that old-fashioned tests did not test the students knowledge,
theyre unable to show me one research report of any kind
that backs up their thesis that multiple-choice tests, for
example, or norm-referenced tests, are invalid.
When I challenge them to show me how a
Performance-Based test is somehow the magic wand thats
going to help us assess the students performance, theyre
unable to show me that at all. In fact, they openly admit that
Performance tests are designed to drive curriculum, methodology,
and teacher preparation. In other words, the OBE crowd believes
that open-ended tests lead to open-ended curricula. A test that
does not test for academic skills, but instead tests highly
subjective items, will eventually lead to a curriculum that is
highly subjective and open-ended.
Performance-Based tests are absolutely
compatible with Whole Language and New Math, and with the
abolition of grades and accountability in our schools. They are
very much a part of the whole Outcome-Based Education movement.
A lot of people still dont understand
what takes place in a Performance-Based test. Some of the
activities are hands-on tasks. They call them
hands-on tasks when they ask the student to assemble whats
in front of them: A couple of teachers sit around and grade how
the student assembles something.
Portfolios are part of Performance-Based
testing. Usually, a portfolio includes a self evaluation, where a
student is asked to evaluate himself. Of course, when I was a
kid, I would have evaluated myself with straight As.
Thats a pretty dumb thing to ask kids to do. Peer
evaluation, when friends evaluate each other, is also part of the
portfolio. I can just see kids saying, Well make a
deal: Ill evaluate you in a favorable way and you do the
same in return. So the portfolios include peer evaluations
and self evaluation by the students.
Some actual portfolio documents that I have in
my possession include the following: lists of student-selected
goals, photographs of students work, poetry, reactions to group
activities whatever that means), explanations of political
cartoons, and lists of books. The lists are supposed to show all
the books the students have read. Students dont have to do
papers about any of the books. They merely list the authors and
the publishers, which supposedly demonstrates that they have read
the books. Other portfolio documents include holistic writing
assignments. I dont know what that means. Ive been in
education for 10 years and I still cant understand half the
terms used. Very few portfolio items are objective measurements.
Other parts of the Performance test have to do with group
activities; the group is graded rather than the individual.
Now let me quote from some of the actual
ways that Performance tests are graded. This is all taken
from actual test documents. Does a student participate in
class discussions? Does the student share opinions? Does the
student value other perspectives? Does the student respect other
class members? What is the degree to which the writers response
reflects personal investment and expressions? Does the student
work well in groups? This goes on and on and on, and it has
very little to do with academic performance.
There are several obvious problems with
Performance-Based tests, and some are very practical. College
admission officers have told me theyre having great
difficulty in judging whether or not a student is ready for
college work based on the results of Performance-Based tests
because theres a complete lack of any objective
measurements. They specifically cite peer evaluations and the
groups collaborative exercises. They are very suspicious of these
tests as a way of determining whether or not someone is ready for
college work.
There are also some legal issues. Believe it
or not, one of the federally funded regional laboratories, the
North Central Regional Laboratory, recently published a paper
detailing the susceptibility of Performance-Based tests to
lawsuits by parents who claim their child was downgraded due to
bias. Its clear that when you have so many subjective
testing factors involved, its easy for parents to file a
lawsuit claiming that the teachers personal bias was the
reason their student was graded in a certain way.
Its harder to have grounds for a lawsuit
if the test is objective. Apparently, lawsuits are springing up
around the country as a result of Performance-Based tests. There
are more practical reasons why Performance-Based tests are a
failure. Supposedly, they are designed to help employers.
Yet most employers Ive talked to about
portfolios and Performance-Based tests tell me that they are too
complex for them to understand; they dont have the time to
read through a big portfolio of the students work. They want to
know whether or not the student can read, write, compose a
paragraph, and understand the rules of grammar. Instead,
busy employers are given a stack of documents and asked to read
through all this material to determine whether or not a person
should be hired. It just wont work.
Let me give you some examples of what has
happened around the country with Performance-Based tests. Vermont
in 1993 was one of the pioneer states to use Performance-Based
tests. The whole education establishment was excited about the
Vermont portfolio test, the Performance-Based test, that went
into effect there. A few years after it was instituted, it
created a large amount of controversy and an outcry from parents.
Eventually, Vermont contracted with the Rand
Institute to evaluate the test. Heres what the Rand
Institute concluded: The reliability of portfolio scoring
was so low that most of the planned uses of performance data had
to be abandoned. There is limited evidence from other programs
that reliable scoring of writing portfolios is practical.
Accountability was difficult to obtain. Our efforts to assess
validity for the 1991-92 program was hindered by a variety of
factors including the low reliability of scores. The panel
of experts at the Rand Institute recommended a return to
traditional tests.
Since that time, Vermont has partially backed
away from Performance-Based tests and has put a multiple-choice
test back into the package, but Performance tests are still a
part of the package. In Kentucky, the same thing happened. Again,
the education establishment wildly applauded Kentucky for being
on the cutting edge of education reform when its Outcome-Based
Education package was passed. Part of the package was a
Performance-Based test called CIRIS. Everyone was told that
the students were doing great because the results from the CIRIS
test, the Performance-Based test, showed dramatic improvements in
academic performance by Kentucky students.
But then something happened. The NAEP
(National Assessment of Educational Progress) scores came out,
and, even though the NAEP test has some elements of
Performance-Based testing, it is still a lot more academic-based
than the tests I am describing. The NAEP scores showed that
Kentucky scores had dropped. This made it clear that the CIRIS
test was basically useless in determining where Kentucky students
scored in academic performance.
As a result of the outcry from Kentucky
parents, a panel of six nationally renowned testing experts was
assembled in 1995. Their report accused CIRIS of misleading the
public into believing that students were doing well. They said
that CIRIS is seriously flawed and that open-ended tests such as
CIRIS would not be a good way to measure student achievement,
that scoring of portfolios remained too flawed for use in
assessment, and that group work with other students and teachers
undermined the validity of the test. The panel recommended a
return to multiple-choice tests.
That same year, the CLAS test came out in
California. Again, there was a mass outcry and lawsuits filed by
parents. This same pattern has happened in state after state. The
education establishment takes a step backwards, temporarily puts
the test on hold, or perhaps keeps the Performance test but adds
some traditional test questions. They do not care how many Performance-Based
tests have generated failure and controversy.
Performance-Based testing continues to be promoted by all
elements of the education establishment, from the National
Education Association to the U.S. Department of Education to
every state department of education to all the major think tanks
and foundations and, more importantly, to the New Standards
Project.
Marc Tucker is one of the co-founders of
the New Standards Project, which is the nations leading
advocate of Performance-Based tests. He has had more impact
and influence on education policy than any single individual I
know of. The New Standards Project, a private organization, is a
spinoff of the National Center for Education and the Economy
(NCEE), which has been in the forefront of criticizing
traditional tests and has long been emphasizing Performance-Based
tests as a means of changing curriculum and methodology. This is
openly admitted in NCEE documents, which state that the three
Ps of assessment are (1) performance tasks, (2) projects,
and (3) portfolios. No mention is made of academic skills.
NCEE has assumed the role of creating national standards to
comply with national assessments because the Federal Government
does not yet do exactly what NCEE wants.
(More on Marc
Tucker and his "VISION" on education and labor).
NCEE has assumed the role of national
clearinghouse for assessment tests and is under contract with
over 20 states. NCEEs goal is to implement the same
standards and the same kind of performance assessments in every
state through their contracts. NCEE was the contractor in the
CLAS test in California, the IPASS test in Indiana, the Vermont
assessment test, and the Kentucky assessment test. All these
states had the National Standards Project as the main contractor
to design the test.
You would think that, with all the controversy
and failure, these people would change their goals, but they have
not. Theyve actually accelerated the number of states under
contract with the New Standards Project. Their documents openly
admit that their standards and Performance tests will be aligned
with the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics and the
National Council of Teachers of English. Those are the two major
professional associations of math teachers and English teachers
and, of course, those organizations are dominated by the New Math
and Whole Language crowd. The alignment of assessments and
standards with those two organizations tells you where the New
Standards Project is heading.
Let me quote from the federal Office of
Research and Education Improvement (OERI): Performance
assessment is part of a model of schooling which emphasizes a
constructivist approach to teaching and learning [thats
Whole Language and Whole Math] and cooperative and collaborative
learning [thats group learning]. The same
document also states, Performance tests will drive teachers
to change their instructional practices to place greater emphasis
upon high order cognitive skills.
That may sound good, but the Whole Language
movement, which has destroyed American reading capabilities and
put us almost last in the industrial world in that area, was also
considered a move toward higher order thinking skills, as was the
new math approach. Every time we hear about higher order
thinking skills, we should recognize this is usually code for
shifting to a methodology that undermines the teaching of basic
academic skills, even after the failures of Performance-Based
testing in so many states.
In California, we already suspect another test
is coming up. Weve already filed a public records act
request because of leaks to my office about education bureaucrats
working on another Performance-Based test in California. This
will be one of the main battles because the testing area drives
many parts of the Outcome-Based Education agenda.
One California school district document
stated, Assessment is the Trojan horse of
restructuring. That statement probably summarizes what
so-called school reform is all about.
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