Assessment in California: An End to NCLB?
Assessment
Again this year California SBE requested and received a waiver
from the federal government regarding the NCLB requirement to use
new test scores for Annual Yearly Progress accountability.
(EdSource provides an excellent summary on this
topic, here.) The
state received the exemption
letter from Assistant U.S. Secretary of Education Deborah
Delisle on May 19th. The letter listed six
conditions with the one-year waiver.
But what will the actual impact of these conditions be on
assessment and accountability in California? The Cabinet
Report assessed the latest waiver and the impact it may have
on California’s on NCLB requirements. Previously, California was
the largest state still working within the NCLB mandates.
However, in light of this new waiver the state is essentially
free to ignore test scores when specifying Annual Yearly
Progress.
What does this mean for assessment and accountability at a
national level? The article quotes Jack Jennings, an education
policy expert in Washington D.C. and past president and CEO of
the Center on Education Policy: “I think each state will end
up defining for itself what accountability will look like,” he
said. “That’s what I’ve seen with the waivers I’ve read. There
are no national standards – the waivers have allowed that and I
think if reauthorization comes about, the legislation will
confirm that.”