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National News See other National News Articles Title: Schoolhouse Limbo: How Low Will Educators Go To Better Grades? Authored by Vince Bielski via RealClearEducation, Marylands new education chief, Carey Wright, an old-school champion of rigorous standards, is pushing back against efforts in other states to boost test scores by essentially lowering their expectations of students. States, including Oklahoma and Wisconsin, are making it easier for students to demonstrate on annual assessments that they are proficient in math and English after a decade of declining test scores nationwide. By redesigning the assessments and lowering the so-called cut scores that separate achievement levels such as basic, proficient, and advanced, several states have recently posted dramatic increases in proficiency, a key indicator of school quality. Wright warns that lowering the bar on proficiency can create the public impression that schools are improving and students are learning more when, in fact, thats not the case. You can make yourself look better to the public by lowering your cut scores, Wright, the Maryland state superintendent of schools, told RealClearInvestigations in an interview. But then you are not really measuring proficiency. My position is no, no, no. Parents and teachers need to know if their children are proficient or not. As most public schools continue to deal with the related crises of learning loss and chronic absenteeism years after COVID, Wright says now is the worst time to lower expectations of students, which can stifle the impetus to improve. In other moves to accommodate struggling students, districts and states have reduced graduation requirements and inflated grades with policies that ban failing marks. The best evidence comes from studies in Washington and North Carolina showing that grades have held steady at their pre-pandemic levels even though students are learning much less. With grades and assessments, the education system seems to be sleepwalking into a policy of ratcheting expectations down to better reflect what today's students can do, rather than doubling efforts to help get students to where they need to be, said Michael Petrilli, president of the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, which advocates for high academic standards. Wright, who took over Maryland schools this summer, is refusing to backpedal on standards in a state that plunged from the top to the bottom in U.S. performance over the last decade. The superintendent says she aims to improve Marylands declining proficiency rates the hard way by making academic standards more rigorous in all content areas. As students learn more in class, the theory goes, they should become more proficient on state tests. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread
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