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FEATURES: Keeping an Eye on State Standards
By Paul E. Peterson and Frederick M. Hess
A race to the bottom?
While No Child Left Behind (NCLB) requires all
students to be “proficient” in math and reading by 2014, the
precedent-setting 2002 federal law also allows each state to determine its
own level of proficiency. It’s an odd discordance at best. It has led
to the bizarre situation in which some states achieve handsome proficiency
results by grading their students against low standards, while other states
suffer poor proficiency ratings only because they have high standards.
A year ago, we first sought to quantify this
discrepancy (“Johnny Can Read … in Some States,” features, Summer 2005), showing which states were upholding rigorous
standards and which were not.
We return to the subject now, with the latest
available data, to update our ratings. The standard we again use is the
National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), the nation’s
“report card,” and still the only metric that allows strict
comparisons between states. For each state where both NAEP and state
accountability measures were available, we computed a score based on the
difference between the percentage of students said to be proficient by the
state and the percentage identified as proficient on the NAEP in years 2003
and 2005.
We are not evaluating state tests, nor are we
grading states on the performance of their students. Instead, we
are checking for “truth in advertising,” investigating
whether the proficiency levels mean what they say. We are thus able
to ascertain whether states lowered the bar for student proficiency
as the full panoply of NCLB provisions took effect.
When we conducted the first of our checkups on
the rigor of the standards, we gave each state the same kind of
grade students receive. Where the requisite information was
available, states with the highest standards were given an A; those
with the lowest standards, an F. Last year, the requisite data were
available for only 40 states. This time around, 48 states have been
graded, including nine “new” states providing the
necessary information for the first time (see Figure 1). While the
fact that these nine are now in compliance with NCLB is a laudable
accomplishment, it is not clear how committed they are to the
enterprise: among the nine, only the District of Columbia and New
Mexico scored a grade higher than C, and Nebraska, Utah, Iowa,
Oregon, and Nevada could do no better than a mediocre C or D. The
first grades garnered by Alabama, Nebraska, and West Virginia were
D minuses. Clearly, student proficiency has entirely different
meanings in different parts of the country.
Grading Procedure
In 2003 and 2005, both state and NAEP
tests were given in math and reading for 4th and 8th-grade students. The grades reported
here are based on the comparison of state and NAEP proficiency scores
in 2005, and changes for each are calculated relative to 2003. For each
available test we computed the difference between the percentage of
students who were proficient on the NAEP and the percentage reported to
be proficient on the state’s own tests for the same year. We also
computed the standard deviation for this difference. We then determined how
many standard deviations each state’s difference was above or below
the average difference on each test. As with last year, the scale for the
grades was set so that if grades had been randomly assigned, 10 percent of the states would earn As, 20 percent Bs, 40 percent Cs, 20 percent Ds, and 10 percent Fs. Each
state’s grade is based on how much easier it was to be labeled
proficient on the state assessment as compared with the NAEP. For example,
on the 4th-grade math test in 2005, South Carolina reported that 41 percent
of its students had achieved proficiency, but 36 percent were proficient on
the NAEP. The difference (41 percent – 36 percent = 5
percent) is about 1.4 standard deviations better than the average
difference between the state test and the NAEP, which is 31 percent.
This was good enough for South Carolina to earn an A for its
standards in 4th-grade math. The overall grade for each state was
determined by taking the average for the standard deviations on the tests
for which the state reported proficiency percentages.
— Paul Peterson and Frederick Hess
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Meanwhile, five states that previously had
their accountability systems in place are letting their standards
slide. The biggest decline was in Arizona, with significant drops
also found (in order of magnitude) in Maryland, Ohio, North Dakota,
and Idaho. If parents in these states read that students are making
great strides on state proficiency tests, they would be advised to
consider the message with a healthy dose of skepticism. At least some of the reported
student gains appear to be the product of gamesmanship.
In addition, states with already low standards
have done nothing to raise them. Oklahoma and Tennessee once again
share the cream puff award, with both states earning Fs because
their self-reported performance is much higher than can be
justified by the NAEP results. States with nearly equally
embarrassing D minuses included Mississippi, Georgia, and North
Carolina. Once again, we discover that Suzy could be a good reader
in North Carolina, where standards are low, but a failure in
neighboring South Carolina, where standards are higher.
Still, there are happier stories to tell.
Montana is the most improved state. Others that have significantly
boosted their proficiency standards relative to the NAEP include
Texas, Arkansas, and Wisconsin.
Best of all, a handful of states continued to
impress for a second consecutive year, grading their own
performance on a particularly tough curve. Massachusetts, South
Carolina, Wyoming, Maine, and Missouri all once again earned As.
Shining a light on the standards that states
set is crucial, as it helps remind state officials that there is a
right way and a wrong way to ace a test. Of course, having high
standards is not enough. It is the crucial first step, but the
next, and more difficult one, is to make sure that a high
percentage of students reach that standard. In that regard, all
states need to do much better, if no child is to be left behind.
Paul E. Peterson and Frederick M. Hess are
editors of Education Next. Mark Linnen provided research assistance.
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