Researchers Warn About Testing and Civil Rights
New Book from The Civil Rights Project Highlights the Limits of Test-Driven
Reforms
A new book from The Civil Rights Project at Harvard University finds
that the current overreliance on high-stakes testing threatens to deepen
America's educational inequities. The book, Raising Standards or
Raising Barriers?, is co-edited by Gary Orfield, co-director of The Civil
Rights Project, and Mindy L. Kornhaber, the project's research director
for elementary and secondary education. It is published by the Century
Foundation Press as part of a series called Civil Rights in a New Era.
The book makes clear the importance of high standards and accountability
systems. But support for standards and accountability systems should not
be equated with support for high-stakes tests. These are tests that are
used to determine whether a student graduates, gains access to challenging
curriculum, or is promoted, or whether schools or educators are rewarded
or penalized. Most of the contributors to the volume have found evidence
that policies that focus on high-stakes testing corrupt educational reform
and undermine achievement, especially for at-risk students. State and
federal policymakers are increasingly pushing such tests as a panacea
for the nation's educational concerns.
Orfield noted, "Congress has just voted to greatly expand mandated
state testing, requiring the development of 213 additional state tests,
the expenditure of billions of dollars, and the loss of a great deal of
instructional time in schools across the country. The time has come to
hold the testing industry accountable and to ask what do we really know
about the costs and benefits of testing. Too often we are getting poor
tests which are misused to test things not taught and to punish the children
attending inferior schools, violating basic concepts of fairness and civil
rights."
* Policymakers assert that testing will improve the national economy.
Yet, economist Henry Levin of Columbia's Teachers College writes
that test results "show only nominal statistical links to measures
of worker productivity." Given such weak links, an economic system
that depended on test results for job selection would be massively inefficient:
it would simultaneously reject many capable applicants and accept many
poor performers.
* Policymakers argue that high-stakes tests will improve motivation. Yet,
George Madaus and Marguerite Clarke, of Boston College, assert that policymakers
have paid little attention to "who will be motivated and who will
not?" Students at the margins of performance tend to "dismiss
the examination because they feel they lack the ability to do what is
necessary to pass." Despite much rhetoric, it is not evident that
testing motivates students who are already at risk.
* Policymakers claim that high-stakes testing will improve teaching and
learning. Yet, in their research on schools serving predominantly minority
and poor students in Texas, Linda McNeil of Rice University and Angela
Valenzuela of the University of Texas at Austin find that score-raising
tactics often replace sound teaching. For example, curriculum is reduced
to test preparation, funds are directed toward commercial test prep materials
instead of library books and laboratory equipment, and instruction in
untested subjects - including science and history - is minimized. In such
schools, researchers say, "even the most knowledgeable teachers
are asked to set aside their lesson plans and materials to teach to the
TAAS." While Texas has shown gains on the National Assessment of
Educational Progress (NAEP), it makes little sense to generalize from
Texas' policies to the nation as a whole. According to a nation-wide
analysis by Monty Neill, executive director of the National Center for
Fair & Open Testing (FairTest), states with high-stakes tests do not
show a clear pattern of improved performance on the NAEP relative to states
without such tests.
Alongside noting effects on teaching and learning, the contributors to
this volume illuminate other troubling consequences of high-stakes testing
policies.
John Bishop of Cornell University, a contributor and supporter of high-stakes
exams, nonetheless notes that dropout rates are likely to rise under New
York's new Regents exam policy. Gary Natriello and Aaron Pallas,
of Columbia's Teachers College, show that under high-stakes testing
policies in New York, Texas, and Minnesota poor and minority students
will be less likely to receive a high school diploma.
# Retention rates: The results of high-stakes tests are increasingly
being aimed at "ending social promotion." University of Wisconsin
Professor Robert Hauser finds that, "Test-based promotion policies
are likely to raise … costs of schooling without corresponding educational
benefit." Hauser's analyses show that retention rates are
already high, especially for male students and African Americans. At the
same time, retention is ineffective: students who are retained ultimately
learn less than students with similar test scores who are promoted. Being
left back also greatly increases the risk of dropping out of school.
# Test use should be guided by standards set forth by testing professionals.
Jay Heubert of Columbia's Teachers College asserts the need to incorporate
existing professional standards for testing into policies that call for
students to be tested. For example, the Joint Standards produced by the
American Educational Research Association, the American Psychological
Association, and the National Council for Measurement in Education, say
that a single test should never be the sole basis for making a high-stakes
decision. Linking professional testing standards into existing laws and
regulations governing civil rights and education would aid the enforcement
of appropriate test use.
# Test results should be put to constructive uses. Robert Hauser states
that test results should provide feedback that enables educators to discern
patterns of strengths and weaknesses in students' knowledge and
skill. Results for individual students should be used for early diagnosis
and intensive early intervention, rather than simple retention. For this
to happen, test data should yield clear and timely information. Test data
should also be linked to resources aimed at strengthening classroom instruction
and learning.
# Test results should reflect back on the entire system of education.
Gary Natriello and Aaron Pallas suggest that test scores should provide
policymakers with data for understanding educational processes and opportunities
and for making educational resources more equitable. Any stakes associated
with testing policies should be shouldered not only by students and educators,
but also by policymakers who have control over the educational systems
in which teaching and learning occur.
Raising Standards or Raising Barriers? has been published at a time when
the federal government is poised to embark on a massive expansion of student
testing. The U.S. House and Senate have just passed education bills that
incorporate George W. Bush's proposal of annual testing for all
students in grades 3 through 8. Because test scores will be used to penalize
low-scoring schools, they will act as high-stakes tests for teachers and
administrators especially in schools serving high proportions of poor
and minority students. "Unfortunately, there is simply no evidence
that efforts to raise test scores will provide poor, minority, and bilingual
students with the kind of high quality education that their more affluent
counterparts receive," said Mindy L. Kornhaber, the volume's
co-editor. "Instead of devising testing schemes, which commonly
lead to more retention and dropping out, policymakers should focus on
providing all students with appropriately certified teachers, challenging
curriculum, high quality facilities, and ample supplies of up-to-date
books and materials."
About The Civil Rights Project
The Civil Rights Project at Harvard University (CRP) is an interdisciplinary
think tank whose central mission is to mobilize the resources of Harvard
and the broader research community in support of the struggle for racial
and ethnic justice. By building strong collaborations among researchers,
community organizations, and policy makers, CRP hopes to reframe the tone
and content of many of the current legal and political debates, and to
support the work of others around the country. Since its founding in 1996,
CRP has commissioned over 75 studies related to civil rights and educational
reform.
For More Information
Contact Christy Hicks at the Century Foundation, 212-452-7723