Wisconsin's Latest State K-12 Test Results, and Related Criticism
Gayle Worland:
Across Wisconsin, educators like Hensgen are part of a growing chorus to reassess the way the state assesses students. Currently, teachers and districts wait five months for WKCE results, so they have little time to react to the findings and adjust their curriculum. The tests eat into a week of class time and are based on standards that, critics say, are too low to give parents and teachers a clear picture of how students measure up globally.
"It's widely agreed that the WKCE is a really lousy test that measures lame standards," said Phil McDade, a departing member of the Monona Grove School Board. "The bigger issue to me in Wisconsin is that there's a sense of self-satisfaction with our school districts, that we're doing fine, that we're Lake Wobegon, that everybody here's above average."
The Department of Public Instruction commissioned a state task force on the issue last fall and is reviewing the group's recommendations, said Michael Thompson, executive assistant to the state superintendent of schools. The state's current testing contract lasts at least another two years.
Alan Borsuk has more.
"Schools should not rely on only WKCE data to gauge progress of individual students or to determine effectiveness of programs or curriculum"
The ACT Explore test was mentioned in Gayle Worland's article.
Posted by Jim Zellmer at April 28, 2009 6:13 AM
Subscribe to this site via RSS/Atom: Newsletter signup | Send us your ideas