Eliminating Tests Through Continual Assessment
     by 
We’re at an inflection point with our approach to testing and measurement …
“Common Core was such a good idea,” remarked a middle school 
administrator I recently spoke with. “But then the testing ruined it.” 
My colleagues and I at Edulastic hear this all the time, as we continue 
to provide teachers, administrators, and school districts a free, 
easy-to-use online assessment platform for K-12 teachers that allows 
them to track student’s progress toward Common Core State Standards as 
well as giving teachers access to create and share fully customized 
assignments.
Educators have been working on the transition to the new Common Core 
State Standards over the past 4-5 years. But last year’s final 
implementation step – administering the standardized tests meant to 
ascertain whether students met the more rigorous standards – has caused 
enough controversy to undo that work, overturning the standards 
themselves in some states. To date, at least 10 states have abandoned 
Common Core or have announced intentions to do so. President Obama concurred
 with the test critics, saying,
“Learning is about so much more than 
just filling in the right bubble. So we’re going to… make sure that 
we’re not obsessing about testing.’’
So what went wrong? Besides the wholesale change in the test content 
and delivery, the primary mistake was placing such a large bet on the 
outcomes. Results could affect federal funding. Teachers and 
administrators could be fired and “failing” schools taken over or 
closed. With these types of penalties, testing changed completely from a
 vital part of teaching and learning into a ruler to rap knuckles.
The Upside of Tests
Good teachers have been giving tests for centuries to understand what
 students know and what they still need to learn. Such so-called 
“formative” tests vary widely in method and definition – from students’ 
reflecting on their work to a quiz on last night’s reading – but they 
nevertheless provide essential information to teachers and students 
about what to cover next.  In fact, recent research shows that formative assessment actually helps students retain what they learn.
While it’s a bit Pollyannaish to propose replacing standardized tests
 with formative ones, we could eliminate the most negative effects by 
doing more formative assessments.
Following are some of the biggest testing pain points and ways to alleviate them through low-stakes, continual assessment:
In a survey Edulastic conducted last 
summer, we found that educators’ top concern with the new tests was the 
time required of students: 70% were somewhat or very concerned about it.
 Unlike formative assessments, which provide immediate data on 
understanding so that teachers can adjust instruction, educators do not 
get results from standardized tests until it’s too late to do anything 
about them. A recent study
 on testing released by the Council of the Great City Schools found that
 39% of school districts had to wait 2-4 months to get test results, 
often not arriving until after school was out for the year. This is 
where new products such as Edulastic come in—allowing teachers to save 
time and instantly see each student’s areas of security and struggle, 
automatically grading and producing reports.
Having just one chance to show what you 
know, with stiff penalties for failure, increases anxiety for teachers 
and students. In contrast, formative techniques like pre-tests and 
post-tests help students focus on and practice the most important 
concepts. Continual assessment reduces anxiety because it’s designed to 
reveal what a student has learned and has yet to learn, as opposed to 
whether the student has succeeded or failed.
Perhaps the most discouraging thing about
 our current standardized testing scheme is the scarcity of data it 
produces on student learning. Continual formative assessment produces 
thousands of time-series data points, allowing educators to say with 
confidence that a student has mastered a standard or skill. To get this 
level of confidence from a single, comprehensive test, students would 
need to answer dozens of questions for each standard, requiring hours of
 testing (see pain point #1).
Clearing Roadblocks to Change
Historically, standardized tests aimed to easily compare student 
performance (and by proxy teacher competency). Unfortunately, they are 
simply inadequate for this task. But how might we answer vital questions
 like, “How are our schools doing?” and “What do we need to adjust?”
To answer these questions at all levels – from individual students to
 whole states – we need more formative assessment practice and better 
data collection systems. Many teachers and schools already make 
formative and common assessments part of their curriculum. Grade level 
teachers review results together to figure out what’s working and what 
needs to be revised or redone. We need more support for this type of 
professional development, and programs like Edulastic provide insight 
into student understanding through webinars, DIY training materials, and
 in-personal professional development sessions.
Second, we need better, more standardized data collection systems. 
Providing teachers banks of high-quality assessment items to include in 
their continual assessment mix will yield comparative data on student 
performance while promoting learning. Aligning teacher-created formative
 assessments with standards allows for standardized data collection – 
instead of standardized tests – to exponentially expand the number of 
data points available on student proficiency.
We’re at an inflection point with our approach to testing and 
measurement. Educators have access to tools, providing them better 
research, technology and data to create a new, more efficient system of 
comprehensive assessment. If we can’t eliminate standardized tests, we 
can at least reduce their downside. And spend the time and money saved 
on assessment practices that promote learning and get us closer to the 
answer to “How are we doing?”

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