Governor's panel backs more student testing

Published: Friday, Aug. 8, 2008 12:09 a.m. MDT
E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
Though educators and parents statewide have been concerned about the large amount of time students spend being tested, the Governor's Blue Ribbon Panel on Assessment is recommending even more testing.

The idea is to eliminate not-as-valuable testing time and put it toward formative testing — ongoing testing in the classroom that gives teachers immediate feedback and tells educators where the students are academically, said Judy Park, Utah State Office of Education associate superintendent of data, assessment and accountability.

Yes, the testing time will be increased. But it's more "productive time," Park said.

This idea may not sit well with some teachers.

"Every time we do hours and hours and hours of testing, it definitely impacts classroom instruction time," said Jane Lindsay, principal of Pleasant Green Elementary School in Granite School District.

The panel is gathering opinions on their testing proposal during the next two weeks.

The first of six public hearings Thursday evening brought about 100 people to the auditorium in Granite District offices.

The panel will come up with a formal proposal and pitch it to the governor in early September. The 35-person committee includes USOE officials, legislators, parents, teachers and administrators.

Story continues below

The panel's plan calls for eliminating three tests: the Criterion-Referenced Test (CRT), which is an end-of-level exam used for supplying data for the federally mandated No Child Left Behind; the Utah Basic Skills Competency Test (UBSCT), which students are to pass before graduation or face receiving a diploma which indicates they did not pass the exam; and the Iowa Test of Basic Skills, which shows educators how Utah students are doing as compared nationally.

The Panel is recommending a variety of other tests instead:

• Computer adaptive testing for K-12 on reading, language arts, math and science, three times a year;

• Directed Writing Assessment Using Computer-Driven Assessment for grades 4 to 12 three times each year;

• Annual testing of basic and academic English for students who are English Language Learners;

• Ongoing reading assessments in grades K-12 using locally selected but state-approved interim assessment types;

• Kindergarten assessment using locally developed assessment;

• EXPLORE in eighth grade for all students to measure preparedness for high school and to prescribe high school coursework;

• PLAN in 10th grade for all students to measure high school performance and to prescribe further coursework for preparedness for post-secondary education training;

Recent comments

We don't need more testing. How are we supposed to teach the...

Why more? We don't need it. | Aug. 9, 2008 at 11:56 a.m.

Testing has replaced teaching!

QOTU | Aug. 8, 2008 at 10:38 p.m.

Formative testing (if you want to call it that) is already part of...

Teacher | Aug. 8, 2008 at 6:23 p.m.

Latest comments

Utah Utes basketball: Tigers tamed by Utah

Right On Mr. Reilly at ESPN. I sent this post to him from the article. Here...

We have a scene of a skier stopped at the entrance to a bar in Park City. I...

No shock: We're last in per-pupil spending

Our state legislature has tried for years to destroy public education. The...

I imagined Utah to be higher. Most of these girls receive very little sex...

Boylen has a highly regarded recruiting class coming in next year. What do...

Rant: Why do utes always think BYU is "crowning themselves national...

As a fanatical BYU fan may I thank Utah for one of the best and most...

Oklahoma and Florida State are going to want to show the MWC that our...

Wouldn't an animal control officer convicted of animal cruelty be fired or at...

"How many of those people in other states will read far enough to see that...

Advertisements