The frustrations are palpable: hours sucked out of classroom instruction time to prepare for multiple statewide assessments; school facilities unavailable for use due to reserved test taking; anxiety weighing on students subject to an average 10 standardized tests a year.
Many teachers across Hawaii contend the number of statewide assessments given to their students, as early as the first grade, detracts from instruction, provides little valuable feedback and puts kids from a lower socioeconomic rung at a disadvantage.
The Hawaii State Teachers Association is pushing聽聽that would limit the number of statewide assessments given to students to four per year. The only exceptions would be tests required under the federal Every Student Succeeds Act and tests for disabled students or English language learners.
The measure is scheduled for a full Senate vote on Tuesday.
The bill would also require the state to conduct a survey to determine how much classroom time is devoted to test prep.
A Legacy of No Child Left Behind
Hawaii’s current testing culture traces back to the era of the federal No Child Left Behind law, when Hawaii won a 聽that established performance outcomes tied to test scores.
Although No Child Left Behind last year was replaced by ESSA, which gives states broader leeway in determining how to measure student achievement, testing requirements weren’t shed.
鈥淭he culture hasn鈥檛 changed,鈥 said HSTA president Corey Rosenlee. 鈥淚f your school failed (at these tests), it creates this atmosphere where the principals are being told, 鈥榊ou鈥檙e not doing a good job, you have to raise your test scores.鈥欌
鈥(Federal) legislation created this mess, and it鈥檒l take Hawaii legislation to reverse it.鈥
Some longtime educators concur there may be too much standardized testing in Hawaii, but that legislation is not the way to address the issue.
鈥淚鈥檓 in agreement we鈥檙e over-testing in some areas, but what I鈥檇 want to look at is if all the tests being done are mandated by board policy, or are they done by the school,鈥 said incoming state Board of Education chairwoman Catherine Payne. 鈥淚t鈥檚 easy to say, 鈥楾oo much testing,鈥 but that has to be really looked at.鈥
鈥淚鈥檓 not sure a law is the best way to do this… I believe this is something that can be done through collaboration between the board and teachers.”
Hawaii principal evaluations are partly tied to student test achievement. Schools may also administer optional tests beyond what is minimally required, causing a wide discrepancy among schools across the state.
In written testimony, the Hawaii Department of Education has requested HB 2117 be deferred, saying it has reduced state-mandated tests to the federal minimum and started working with the complex area superintendents to 鈥渆nsure that the appropriate number and types of tests are administered to students.鈥
“The Department recognizes the value of standardized testing as a valid, reliable, and efficient means to ensure that students graduate equipped for college and career success,” it wrote in one comment. “Outside of standardized test results, no objective measure exists for policymakers to identify student academic achievement.”
Another education board member, Margaret Cox, a former teacher, also as an individual in opposition to the bill. She said standardized tests, unlike other kinds, “are not for learning” and that a statewide cap “inappropriately lumps all testing together.”
“Other types of testing, like diagnostic, formative, and end-of-unit assessment are for student learning and individual schools should have control over these types of testing,” Cox wrote.
How Many Tests Are Too Many?
In testimony to the Legislature this session, teachers across Hawaii offered a glimpse into how statewide assessments have impacted their classrooms.
Jensen Hirayama, an elementary school teacher on Oahu, said he鈥檚 seen 鈥渨ay too many students suffer from test-taking anxiety.鈥
Alan Isbell, a fourth-grade teacher at Wailuku Elementary and president of the Maui chapter of the HSTA, said, 鈥淲e spend an appalling amount of time on the standardized testing, not only proctoring but preparing, and facilities are taken away for the whole school to have done it.鈥
As a test proctor, Isbell said he saw students worn out from the frequent test-taking. 鈥淭hey鈥檒l show up, take the test 鈥斅燽ubble, bubble, bubble 鈥斅燼nd not read the questions,鈥 he said.
Here is what is mandatory: the Smarter Balanced Assessment in third through eighth grades and 11th聽grade in math and English Language Arts.
There is also a Hawaii State Assessment in Science given to fourth- and eighth-graders and an end-of-course Biology I exam required of high-schoolers to measure proficiency in state science standards.
Beyond these required exams, there鈥檚 a variety of optional assessments. Those include STAR Literacy and Math, a computer-based assessment done three times a year; Dynamic Indicators of Basic Early Literacy Skills; and Dolch Sight Words, which measures reading proficiency.
Jennie Hancock told legislators she has to give all of those tests to her first-graders. Hancock, who teaches at Waikoloa Elementary & Middle on the Big Island, said she spends 鈥渉ours each quarter鈥 giving the tests.
鈥淢y students are 6 and 7 years old,鈥 Hancock wrote in testimony. 鈥淭hey developmentally cannot handle the hours of formal assessments I鈥檓 forced to perform on them. I鈥檓 changing my verb from 鈥榓dminister鈥 to 鈥榩erform鈥 because seriously, it鈥檚 a dance getting all of this done.鈥
Of the 1,764 teachers who responded to a teachers’ union survey in February, nearly two-thirds said they used regular classroom time to prepare kids for standardized tests. More than half said standard instruction in subjects like art, music or social studies were reduced as a result.
The HSTA鈥檚 survey found that an average of 10 tests were given annually to any one student in the 2016-17 school year, with some teachers saying they administered as many as 30 such tests that same year.
Additionally, 82 percent of teachers surveyed said they didn鈥檛 feel 鈥渋nvolved in decision-making processes about how tests are used at their schools.鈥
鈥淭eachers in our survey feel that most of the tests were not beneficial, that they were not giving them valuable feedback,鈥 Rosenlee said.
Hawaii has to revise its state testing portfolio. A new version of the SBA this year reduced the average test-taking time by one and half hours. Hawaii also ended the voluntary assessments of the National Assessment of Education Progress tests, though mandatory versions of that test are given to fourth- and eighth-graders in odd-numbered years. It also made the ACT college admissions exam for Grade 11 optional this year.
Hawaii initially expressed interest in applying this year for that allows some states to revamp testing frameworks and base it around a more inquiry- or project-based learning. But a DOE spokeswoman said the department would delay submitting its application until 2019.
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