Transcript Document

Accommodations in
Testing: A National
Perspective
Blue Ribbon Panel Meeting
June, 2002
Overview
The Context: Participation of Students
with Disabilities in Standards-Based
Reform
 What Other States are Doing Now
 Predictions About the Future
 Identify Key Resources for Committee
While Addressing Three Topics Above

Standards-Based
Reform
Important Resource: National
Academy of Science/National
Research Council Reports
 Why pay special attention?

– Participants
 First
two studies
– Process
 Report
review
 Role of sponsor
Access to Report

Read it online for free at:
– http://www.nap.edu/catalog/5788.html
– Order from National Academy Press
(www.nap.edu)
Standards-Based
Reform

Definition
– Improve education by setting high content
standards that define what should be
taught and learned, and by holding
educators and students accountable for
attaining ambitious performance
standards that define expected
proficiency.
Reform

Four common elements:
– 1. Student achievement is primary measure of
school success.
– 2. Adopt challenging content and performance
standards.
– 3. Extend standards to all students, including
those for whom expectations have been low
historically.
– 4. Use assessment to spur reform and monitor
its impact.
Reform

Impact on Students with Disabilities
– Profound
 Until
recently, legal framework under which
students with disabilities have been educated
emphasized:
– Individualized goals for instruction rather than
common standards.
– Accountability was for procedural compliance
rather than student achievement outcomes.
Reform

Impact Has Been A Mixed Blessing
– Positives
 Raised
level of expectations.
 Accountability for outcomes extended to both
regular and special educators.
 Greater access to rich curriculum.
 It’s where the action and dollars are.
Reform

Negatives



Existing standards limited to subject matter content to
exclusion of vocational and independent living skills.
A diverse group, but in general, students with
disabilities fare worse with respect to achievement,
graduation, enrollment in postsecondary education,
and employment.
Accountability consequences of failing to achieve are
likely to fall disproportionately on students with
disabilities and the educators who serve them.
A Clear Psychometric
Definition

An accommodation represents an alteration to
standard test conditions that neutralizes
extraneous sources of difficulty that result from
an interaction between standard administration
and the student’s disability while preserving the
measurement goals of the test.
The Bad News

“However, research on alterations of
assessments for elementary and
secondary students is extremely sparse
and provides only limited guidance for
policy makers and educators.” (Educating
One and All, p. 171)
Effects of Extra Time
on Timed Test


Studies of Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT)
and Graduate Record Exam (GRE)
Although some disabilities and
accommodations slow down examinee,
for these speeded tests, individuals with
disabilities did not require more time on
average.
– Reason may be they ran into ceiling—items
too difficult to answer.
Effects of Extra Time
on Timed Test


Providing additional time on these speeded
tests reduced validity to some degree, due to
overprediction for relatively high-scoring
students with learning disabilities.
Best solution is to provide an “accommodated
test” to all by giving everyone a generous
amount of time (switching from “speeded” to
“power” tests).
NRC Report

Recommendations:
– 1. Content standards, performance standards,
and assessments should be designed to
maximize participation of students with
disabilities.
– 2. Presumption should be that each student
participates in common standards and
assessments; alterations must have a
compelling justification and be made on an
individual basis.
NRC Report

Recommendations (cont.)
– 3. States should revise policies that
discourage maximum participation of
students with disabilities in common
accountability system, and should provide
incentives to encourage maximum
participation.
NRC Report

Recommendations (cont.)
– 4. When standards or assessments are
altered for a student with disabilities:
 The
alternate should be challenging yet
potentially achievable.
 It must reflect the full knowledge and skills
necessary to live a productive life.
 Parents should be involved in these
decisions, and informed of any consequences
of alterations.
NRC Report

Recommendations (cont.)
– 5. Assessment accommodations should
be used only to offset the impact of
disabilities unrelated to the knowledge
and skills being measured.
– 6. Even if accommodations or alternate
assessments are needed, all students
should be counted in a universal, public
accountability system.
What Other States Are
Doing Now

Key resource: National Center on
Educational Outcomes (NCEO)
– http://education.umn.edu/NCEO/
– Charged with providing national
leadership on the participation of students
with disabilities in national and state
assessments, standards-setting efforts,
and graduation requirements.
Other States

Two useful publications:
– 2001 State Special Education Outcomes: A
Report on State Activities at the Beginning of a
New Decade.

http://education.umn.edu/NCEO/OnlinePubs/2001State
Report.html
– A Self-Study Guide to Implementation of
Inclusive Assessment and Accountability
Systems: A Best Practice Approach

http://education.umn.edu/NCEO/OnlinePubs/workbook.
pdf
High Stakes Testing


Student Accountability – students are held
responsible and consequences are assigned to them
(e.g., must pass test to graduate or move to next
grade)
20 States
System Accountability – educators, schools, or
districts are held responsible and consequences are
assigned to them (e.g., schools rated according to
test scores, teachers receive rewards for student
performance)
38 States
Participation
Requirements
Florida is a leader in being one of 10
states that do not routinely exclude
students from assessment
participation.
 Most frequent reasons allowed for
exclusion in other states are limited
English proficiency, parent refusal, or
judgment of student’s IEP team.

14 states disaggregated data on the participation of
students with disabilities
17 states disaggregated data on the performance of
students with disabilities
2001 State Directors Told Us:
All Students with Disabilities are Included in All
Components of the Accountability System in 25
States
Accommodation Use
Is on the rise
 About 50% of the LD students
accommodated
 Most common accommodations are:

– small group administration
– read-aloud
– extended time
Alternate Assessment
A substitute way of gathering
information about the performance
and progress of students who
cannot not participate in typical
state assessments even with
accommodations.
Alternate Assessments
Are used in place of general state and
district wide assessments
 Serve as an index of student progress
toward meeting standards held for all
students

Alternate Assessments
are Performance Based

Data are collected through:
– Observation
– Recollection (checklist/interview)
– Record Review
– Testing (Performance events)
Alternate Assessment
Approaches Selected by
States
Portfolio/body of evidence
 Checklist/Rating scale
 IEP analysis
 Other
 Uncertain or not reported
states

28 states
4 states
5 states
6 states
7
Out of Level Testing



Addresses problem that many current
assessments do not provide reliable or valid
measurement of gains for students who are
well below high proficiency.
Stop-gap solution to problem of no data
available on whether very low students are
improving.
Use of out of level testing is increasing
rapidly.
Predictions About
Future

Common problems:
– 1. Current assessments do not provide
useful information about growth of very
low performers.
Less Precision in the Tails
Predictions (cont.)
– 2. Extensive research is not available on
effects of accommodations on the validity
of assessments, nor of the comparability
of alternative assessments or of out-oflevel assessments.
Predictions About
Future


Solution to common problems requires
investing in a new generation of
assessments that reduces the need for
accommodations.
Important advances in psychometrics (the
science of measurement) and in the
cognitive science of learning point the way
to the next generation of assessment.
Access to Report

Read it online for free at:
– http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10019.html
– Order from National Academy Press
(www.nap.edu)
Two Last Resources
Me with more time to prepare.
 Florida Center for Reading Research.
