New test looming for local students
Danette Goulet
NEWPORT-MESA -- Fed up with the inefficiency of California’s
Stanford 9 test, district officials will introduce an additional
standardized test in Newport-Mesa this year that, they say, will better
track the progress of students.
The test, which will be piloted at five schools by 2,000 students, is
an hour long and will be taken twice a year.
It allows parents to receive results in a mere two weeks, said Peggy
Anatol, director of assessment and secondary curriculum for the district.
“It’s a standardized test developed with our teachers and a company in
Oregon [North West Evaluation Assn.],” Anatol said. “It tests reading,
math and language and is given twice a year to help measure growth.”
All students at Rea, Victoria and Wilson elementary schools will take
the Comprehensive Objectives for Reaching Excellence, or CORE test this
year, as will select classes at Mariners Elementary School and TeWinkle
Middle School.
Next year, all students in second through eighth grades in
Newport-Mesa will be taking the test.
While making students take two more standardized tests a year may seem
cumbersome, school officials don’t expect it to be viewed as such once
parents understand what it will mean in the long run.
“I don’t think it will be viewed as a burden by anyone -- not when
they realize it will make instruction more valuable,” said Ken Killian,
principal at Rea. “It’s a pretty good investment.”
While parents are still mostly in the dark about the new test, some
said the idea does have its merits.
“There’s so much pressure on that one test, [the Stanford 9], that
taking this may help prepare them so that they will do better on that,”
said Jill Money, past president of the Harbor Council PTA. “Also when you
take [the Stanford 9], you take it in April you don’t get your results
until the end of June. So, if there was something where you could get
more immediate results that would good.”
Unlike the Stanford 9, which is given once a year in the spring, the
CORE test will be given in the fall and then again in the spring. This
will allow teachers, parents and administrators to gauge what a child has
learned during the school year.
“By a student taking the test in the beginning of the sixth grade and
then in the spring be tested again, we will have a much better picture of
what they learned while in the sixth grade,” Killian said.
This information can be used to help each individual student and to
improve upon instruction, Killian said.
In each grade level there will also be different levels of tests so
each student’s progress can be more closely monitored, Anatol said.
Another huge advantage to this new test, she added, is the two-week
return on test scores, compared to the four-month turnaround on Stanford
9 scores, which are released in the summer.
Down the road, teachers will also be given a child’s score from the
previous year with their roster.
All these aspects of the new test will allow teachers to tailor the
curriculum to the needs of the students.
“I am absolutely thrilled,” said school board member Martha Fluor.
“It’s a recognized testing program that allows almost immediate feedback
to teachers at the time of the test so they can more clearly identify the
strengths and weaknesses of a child in class, so they can gear their
curriculum and determine skill levels.”
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