Channeling innovation in the anti-testing fervor

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Dec 4, 2015

You don’t have to look far to find controversy regarding standardized testing.

Federally mandated testing has been one of the major points of discussion in Congress’s efforts this year to reauthorize the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA). Last spring, the press was full of headlines about families opting out of state testing in protest to current testing policies.

Opponents of standardized testing raise a number of legitimate issues that education leaders and policymakers ought to address. But getting rid of standardized tests would be a major mistake, especially considering the important role these test play in shedding light on achievement gaps between advantaged and disadvantaged students. Instead of retreating from the idea of testing, we need to learn from the flaws of our current assessment system and take advantage of new ideas and technologies. This way, we can ultimately improve how assessments support progress for our students and our schools. Below are a few ideas for how we might do this.

Use adaptive assessment
One of the problems with traditional standardized assessments is that, in order to keep the tests from becoming unrealistically lengthy, most paper-based assessments do not measure the understanding of students who are far ahead of far behind the average level of achievement. Fortunately, as states increasingly move to computer-based assessments, they are also able to take advantage of adaptive assessment technologies. These assessments can adjust the test items as the student takes the test and tailor the assessment items to each students’ current level of understanding. Such adaptive assessments provide a much more accurate measure of the strengths and learning needs of both advanced and struggling students.

Embed assessment into the learning experience
One of the biggest critiques of current tests is that they take time and focus away from learning. But testing does not have to be a distraction from learning. With blended learning, assessments can be integrated into online practice activities and checks for understanding, making them part of the learning and feedback process, rather than an onerous activity that is separate from learning. Additionally, some of the latest innovations in computer-aided assessment are increasingly able to gather deeper insights about students’ learning through interactive simulations. For example, a recent TechCrunch article explains that as students play SimCityEDU, “the system is capturing their actions—such as the sequence of what they do or requests for help—and interprets patterns in data to assess how well the player understands important concepts. This helps teachers better evaluate how a student solves problems, rather than just the final product of their work.”

Measure growth, not just proficiency
Another one of the flaws of current tests is that they often fail to recognize teachers’ and students’ hard work. If a student starts the school year two years behind and then works hard with his teacher to finish the school year only two months behind, this is a major accomplishment. But unfortunately, tests that only report on students’ performance at the end of the year relative to state-determined benchmarks do not recognize the hard work of such students and teachers. To address this flaw, states should instead administer assessments at multiple times throughout the school year in order to measure students’ learning growth over the course of a year. Additionally, assessments administered during the school year would give teachers important feedback as they teach, rather than after the school year is over, in order to help them improve their practices.

Use multiple measures
One of the critiques that resonates with many people—especially those who have gone on to succeed in life despite the fact that they didn’t perform well on standardized tests—is that traditional standardized tests don’t measure all the things that matter in education. Unfortunately, when we rely heavily on traditional assessments for evaluating students and holding school systems accountable, we inevitably neglect or ignore other important aspects of education such as deeper learning, creativity, social skills, and non-cognitive skills. The solution: First, states need to adopt better assessments that can capture more of what matters. For instance, one reason why some testing critics have been in favor of new Common Core-aligned tests is because they are designed to be better measures of deeper learning. Second, states need to use other measures to evaluate students and schools. California is making major strides in this regard.

A new day for assessment
Fortunately, Congress’s draft bill for reauthorizing the ESEA offers great promise for improving current assessment policies and practices. The current version of the bill allows new leeway for states to measure individual student growth, use multiple measures of student learning, move away from end-of-year assessments, use data from multiple points in time to calculate summative scores and growth, and use adaptive assessments that measure the student’s actual achievement level. Additionally, the bill establishes an Innovative Assessment Pilot program that will allow a handful of states to be forerunners in developing innovative approaches to assessment.

Hopefully, as education leaders and state policymakers continue their efforts to improve our education system, they will have the wisdom take advantage of the opportunities afforded in the ESEA reauthorization bill. This means they will need to see testing critiques not as justifications to back away from assessments and transparency, but instead as sources of impetus for progress and innovation in assessment.

This post also appeared on EdScoop

Thomas Arnett is a senior research fellow for the Clayton Christensen Institute. His work focuses on using the Theory of Disruptive Innovation to study innovative instructional models and their potential to scale student-centered learning in K–12 education. He also studies demand for innovative resources and practices across the K–12 education system using the Jobs to Be Done Theory.