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The reader of this book will gain a greater understanding of
contemporary equity issues in educational testing and assessment
and to learn to examine these issues in the context of educational
reform. The book focuses on the following four issues: (1) the
growing prominence that educational testing and assessment are
playing in American education; (2) the effect that current testing
and assessment policies and practices are having upon minority and
disadvantaged students and school systems; (3) the new and
innovative approaches to testing and assessment and their prospects
for promoting educational equity, educational reform and
accountability; and (4) the actions that need to be taken in order
to achieve equity in testing and assessment in the nation's
schools. The goal is to identify and begin addressing some of the
disadvantages faced by many Americans in their pursuit of
high-quality education and training. The book explores some of the
factors that contribute to the gaps in student achievement along
racial and social class lines, and offers ideas for improving the
measurement of America's diverse population of students. Some of
the chapters focus on how the field of educational testing is
changing to include new types of assessment practices and policies,
and new types of testing and assessment instruments. Innovations in
educational testing and assessment include student exhibitions,
portfolios, performance tasks, and essay writing, all of which are
being advanced both for in-classroom and in-school use as well as
for purposes of public accountability. Some of the public policy
innovations include the following: awarding federal funding and
recognition based upon studentperformance on tests and assessments;
national government approval of the assessments that states, school
districts, and schools use; and national approval and sanctioning
of the standards that will be measured by educational tests and
assessments.
Measuring Up revisits vital issues of equity and assessment through
the research efforts and insights of many of the nation's most
prominent educators and assessment experts. As its most urgent
purpose, the publication aims to sensitize readers to the
unfairness and inappropriate uses of testing instruments which
under optimal circumstances have the potential to benefit all
students. With America fervently espousing both national and state
testing, the differential performance by race and social class
raises the specter of tests as barriers to life milestones such as
promotion, graduation, and college admissions. In response to such
punitive testing, the papers included here explore a host of models
and practices that are currently being piloted both in America and
abroad as educators grapple with the effects the assessment is
having on minority and disadvantaged students and school systems.
In the process, outcomes of innovative portfolio and authentic
assessments are weighed against important standards and principles
of validity and consequences. As the various authors probe the gap
between African-American and White test scores, they raise
important questions of resources, family background and educational
opportunity. Beyond their value of their recommendations to
educators, their papers help to identify causes of pupil
deficiencies in ways that can be addressed by policymakers. To
reinforce the emphasis on equity, several authors present a
definitive defense of affirmative action as a critical
counter-measure to the lack of fairness in school quality, family
and social supports, and educational resources.
Measuring Up revisits vital issues of equity and assessment through
the research efforts and insights of many of the nation's most
prominent educators and assessment experts. As its most urgent
purpose, the publication aims to sensitize readers to the
unfairness and inappropriate uses of testing instruments which
under optimal circumstances have the potential to benefit all
students. With America fervently espousing both national and state
testing, the differential performance by race and social class
raises the specter of tests as barriers to life milestones such as
promotion, graduation, and college admissions. In response to such
punitive testing, the papers included here explore a host of models
and practices that are currently being piloted both in America and
abroad as educators grapple with the effects the assessment is
having on minority and disadvantaged students and school systems.
In the process, outcomes of innovative portfolio and authentic
assessments are weighed against important standards and principles
of validity and consequences. As the various authors probe the gap
between African-American and White test scores, they raise
important questions of resources, family background and educational
opportunity. Beyond their value of their recommendations to
educators, their papers help to identify causes of pupil
deficiencies in ways that can be addressed by policymakers. To
reinforce the emphasis on equity, several authors present a
definitive defense of affirmative action as a critical
counter-measure to the lack of fairness in school quality, family
and social supports, and educational resources.
5 TABLE I Average Reading Proficiency and Achievement Levels by
RacelEthnicity Grades 4 8 and 12 1992 Reading Assessment Percentage
of Student At or Above Percentage of Average Proficient Basic Below
Basic Advanced I Students Proficiency I Grade 4 White 71 226 6 31
68 J2 69 16 193 0 Black 7 31 Hispanic 9 202 2 13 41 59
Asian/Pacific Islander 2 216 2 21 55 45 American Indian 2 208 2 15
50 50 Grade 8 70 White 268 3 34 77 23 Black 16 238 0 8 44 56
Hispanic 10 242 I 13 49 51 AsianlPacific Islander 3 270 6 38 77 23
American Indian 1 251 I 18 60 40 Grade 12 White 72 297 4 43 82 18
Black 15 272 0 16 54 46 9 277 Hispanic 1 21 61 39 Asian/Pacific
Islander 4 291 4 39 74 26 American Indian 0 272 I 24 S2 48 Source:
National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), 1992 Reading
Assessment. Reprinted from "NAEP 1992 Reading Report Card for the
Nation and the States. " l be reading at the advanced level . A
much higher percent of White Americans are performing at the
proficient and advanced levels.
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