Editor’s Notebook -- Danette Goulet
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I have some good news and some bad news.
Students -- after this spring you will no longer be made to take the
Stanford 9 test. As I’ve heard over and over, that test has been the bane
of your educational career for the last five years, that dreaded downer
that demands concentration when all you want to do is go enjoy the
beautiful weather and waves.
Now, it will be no more.
Alas, you are not off the hook. In it’s place educators will
administer the California Achievement Test, sixth edition.
The switch has school district administrators leery, at best.
The California Department of Education has assured educators, and the
public, that the new standardized test will be aligned with the
California State Standards that schools have used to design curriculum
over the past few years.
If this is the case, things should be OK. If not, this could throw
everything off.
The first and most notable concern is that student test scores could
suffer. It would then cause problems for teachers and schools because
they have material they are required to teach and standards they must
meet, but are also charged with making sure students do well on these
tests.
They have all worked diligently over the past few years to revamp all
their curriculum to ensure students all meet the new and rigorous
standards set for them by the state.
Finally this would fall on the shoulders of the districts as lower
test scores would be reflected in the Academic Performance Index that
grades California schools.
The folks at the California Department of Education would set fears to
rest. The main reason they gave for choosing this particular standardized
test is that it’s developed by the same company that is creating the
California Standards Test and already administers the high school exit
exam.
Despite those assurances, administers say they will make their
determination once they see more information about the new tests.
* DANETTE GOULET is the city editor. She can be reached at (714)
965-7170 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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