Are you familiar with a recurring
anxiety dream where you are taking an important examination on material you are
not familiar with, have not been able to study carefully, and feel you will
most certainly fail? Well, students studying to become teachers in New York
State are living this dream as reality. In what is clearly an intentional
effort to produce higher failure rates on licensure exams, the New York State
Education Department has rushed to implement new, harder tests and to make the
edTPA a certification requirement as part of a political agenda backed by
Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, Governor Cuomo, and former Commissioner
John King.
Teacher education programs are
frantically scrambling to accommodate students who are in a full-blown panic and
understandable confusion over the sudden change in regulations. Even the Board
of Regents is attempting to reduce the disastrous effects of this completely
bungled roll out, perhaps making things worse. Meanwhile, the public is in the
dark about what is happening in part because of the technical nature of teacher
licensure, and in part because of a lack of attention to teacher education in
journalism.
What is so terrible about these
certification exams? Overall, there are six issues in my opinion that top the
long list. I’ll start with that overview, and then I’ll get into specifics
about each of the exams. Consider this my attempt at a 101 course on what it
takes to become a teacher in New York State, besides getting a masters degree
from a college or university.
TIME AND TIMING
Each of
these tests is timed, with the exception of the edTPA, although that must
usually be completed within the one semester of student teaching in the vast
majority of programs. No one reports having leftover time, they work right up
to the last minute. The timing of when you must take the tests is dictated by
individual programs. Some are required for admission, some after a certain
number of credits, some prior to student teaching. The problem is if you fail,
you are likely to be derailed from your progress in the program, which costs
you more than just a retake. There are time limits on when you can retake the
exams. Some students are also taking CLEP exams to compensate for missing
undergraduate course requirements. Let’s just say that throughout your time in
a teacher preparation program you are worrying about certification exams.
COSTS
The new
exams are computer based, and cost more than the old exams. You will easily
spend upwards of $1,000 on these exams. Even practice tests cost you $30. There
were a handful of vouchers distributed to colleges for some exams, but not
nearly enough to meet demands of those with financial aid. If you schedule an
exam and need to cancel, you only get a partial rebate. If you want to contest
your edTPA score, you must pay $200, which does not entitle you to a new
evaluation, only to an internal investigation of the scoring process. It’s half
as much to do a one-task retake, so that’s the likelier choice in the event you
don’t have a passing score.
QUANTITY
There are
now four exams required for initial certification. It seems they want to cover
all the content of the preparation program, maybe so that eventually someone
can circumvent a masters program altogether. The state says the tests measure “knowledge and skills that are necessary for service in the state’s schools.” The type of knowledge that can be measured in multiple choice and short essay
questions is quite limited, and I think to assume the tests measure skill level
accurately is really a stretch. There’s certainly no shortage of the
encyclopedic factoids to invent as essential for teachers to know, so they will
probably continue to invent new tests and questions ad infinitum.
VALIDITY AND TRANSPARENCY
Teacher
educators would like to know what makes these tests valid, what research has
been done to show that those who pass are better teachers than those that
don’t. Good luck Googling that! There is virtually no transparency regarding
who designed and developed the exams, how and when they were piloted and
normed, and zero studies on their validity.
The state provides vague details on the “standard setting committees” and cut score processes, claims they were field tested, and that individuals on
the committees are qualified to make these important determinations. Even
without expertise in psychometrics, it’s easy to see that someone is trying to
hide something.
FORMAT
In order to
be inexpensive to score, the format of the exams tends to be all about one
right answer. Even in the edTPA, supposedly the most holistic of the exams, the
rubrics and scoring guides are so rigid that there is virtually no room for
human interpretation. Those exams that claim to measure writing skills are
actually asking for robotic 5-paragraph essay style answers that having nothing
to do with real writing. On multiple-choice questions, how is it possible to
differentiate between a right answer and a good guess? It isn’t. It might just
be a lucky guess.
BIAS
At least
two of the exams are racially discriminatory, as Peter Goodman showed with data
that was not made publically available back in November on his blog. “The pass rate for White
test takers on the EAS was 82%, Non-White test takers 74%. The pass rate for
White test takers on the ALST was 74%, Non-White test takers 55%.” You’d think
that losing prior civil rights lawsuits over the old certification exam would prevent the state from continuing to take
actions that reduce the diversity of the teacher workforce. You’d be wrong.
The
Academic Literacy Skills Test (ALST)
In my opinion, this is the absolute
worst test on the planet. Touted by Governor Cuomo as the equivalent of an 8th
grade reading and writing test (he should try taking my version), this new test has virtually no relationship to the previous test with the
same letters in the acronym, the LAST, which attempted to measure liberal arts
knowledge gained in college years. Instead, in 3.5 hours, you must answer 40
selected-response questions pertaining to reading passages, write two
focused-response 200 word essays and one extended-response 400 word essay
pertaining to pro/con reading passages and a graph or chart. Topics for the
essay portion seem to have been selected by someone searching the tax code for
the dullest “controversies” swimming in economic and legal jargon. Here’s a sample of
two focused-responses and an extended-response to give you an idea. The state describes this as “complex and nuanced writing” but I think it could
be used to cure insomnia. Results from the first 11,371 test takers were just what the politicians hoped for: only 68% passed, and only 7% at the
“mastery” level. Look at all those illiterate wanna-be teachers who can’t pass
a middle school test!
The Educating All Students Test (EAS)
At least the content of this 90 minute selected-response and
constructed-response test pertains to something teachers care about – their
students. Five areas are tested, but the two types of responses pertain to the
three most important (according to the test creators): diverse student
populations, English language learners, and students with disabilities
and special learning needs. There are a few multiple-choice questions on
teacher responsibilities and home-school relations. I fear that this test
contributes to problematic notions that students who are multilingual or have
disabilities should be flagged as potentially students of concern. Sample
questions contain oversimplifications of classroom contexts as having a
majority of students from “one culture” with a new minority “immigrant
population” and use in-vogue terminology such as “culturally responsive” with
little to no depth. Again, initial results from over 10,000 test takers had 77%
passing, only 3% at the “mastery” level.
Content Specialty Tests (CSTs)
These are meant to cover all of the certification areas to
ensure that physical education teachers, for example, know enough about
physical education to teach it. The new versions of these tests are so new that
there are people still waiting for their score results, promised in early 2015,
because the state “standard setting committees” haven’t worked out the harder
cut scores yet. You can’t make this stuff up. The latest information says
scores will be released in spring. Sample multiple choice questions on the arts and sciences portion of the four multi-subject
tests taken by early childhood through high school teachers include a few
doozies such as:
Running repeated sprints at maximum speed would be the most
appropriate way to develop the endurance needed for successful participation in
which sport? Choices are: American football, cross-country, basketball, and
soccer. The correct answer is supposedly football, because “players undergo
repeated bursts of intense activity…involving running short to medium distances
at high speeds.” I don’t know much about football, but from what I have seen,
linebackers seem to just block the opposing team’s linebackers. The best way to
pick the football answer is actually to notice that the other three choices all
obviously involve a considerable amount of running and therefore cancel each
other out. Therefore the question is measuring test-taking knowledge rather
than content knowledge.
Teacher Performance Assessment (edTPA)
I have previously written extensively about problems with
the Stanford’s SCALE developed/Pearson scored monster test that is taking over teacher education curriculum like an out-of-control garden weed. As one of
two “edTPA Coordinator” faculty at Mercy College, I am increasingly convinced
this belongs in induction, when teachers are not guests in another teacher’s
classroom, because it is simply too burdensome and time-consuming to complete
in a semester of student teaching. Two semesters of student teaching are not an
option for most programs due to cost and working students who can ill-afford to
give up employment for that length of time. Tales from the field include such
horror stories as student teachers being told to complete TWO edTPAs so the
best can be submitted, videos coded as unscoreable because of sound quality
issues or even students’ full names visible on desks, complex classroom
arrangements to obtain optimal video (how about the book storage closet?),
confusion over the difference between language functions and forms, and a
nightmare over official retake policies that, heaven forbid, might require
additional classroom placements after student teaching is over and graduation
requirements have been met. I’m sure college lawyers are on the phone right now
comparing insurance policies and trying to figure out if non-matriculated
students are covered or not.
In my statement during yesterday’s UUP press conference in
Albany, I tried to convey the stark difference between what my students know, do, and
write thoughtfully about and what is measured (supposedly) by these exams. I
included the essay written by Sami-Beth Cohen who is currently student teaching
in an excellent public school in Manhattan to share her rage and frustration
with these policies and the inflammatory rhetoric of Governor Cuomo. Please add
your voice to ours. Now that you’ve had my 101 course, I promote you to the
next level: concerned citizen.