CONSERVATIVE RESEARCHER, SCHOOLS CHIEF DEBATE STANDARDIZED TESTS
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By JONATHAN J. COOPER
Cronkite News Service
PHOENIX (Thursday Nov. 8) _ Arizona’s student testing model is flawed, and the state’s top education official is exaggerating student success on standardized tests, a conservative researcher charged Thursday.
“It’s a bit like watching Barry Bonds and Sammy Sosa beating these baseball records,” said Matthew Ladner, vice president of research at the Goldwater Institute. “It could be that they’re just better baseball players. Or it could be that the ball is juiced or the players are taking steroids.”
Ladner debated Tom Horne,
Horne called Ladner a “demagogue” and said the Goldwater Institute is selective with facts and spreads false information as a scare tactic.
“They can’t stand the idea that there could be anything good in public education,” Horne said.
The Goldwater Institute is a Phoenix-based think tank advocating limited government and individual responsibility.
Ladner said Horne uses questionable statistics to claim that
He pointed to a letter in the Arizona Daily Star in
“Parents are out there making very important decisions based on these data,” Ladner said. “I can no longer be certain my decision is based on data I can rely on.”
Horne later said Arizonans score about 1.9 percent above the national average on TerraNova.
Ladner didn’t dispute the number but said the TerraNova exam is an imprecise method for comparing students nationally.
He said
“If there’s teaching to the test going on with AIMS, that would inflate TerraNova scores,” Ladner said.
Horne responded with a graph showing relatively consistent results between students who took the TerraNova test and those whose scores were estimated from AIMS.
Ladner advocated another exam, the National Assessment of Educational Progress.
Congress created the Report Card in 1969 to measure student performance over time. It tests a representative sample of students in all 50 states and is often used to compare results between states.
Horne has been a sharp critic of the test, saying
He said it’s not a measure of student achievement, but rather “a measure of how well as state has aligned its standards” with the test.
“We’d like to see the Diamondbacks win the World Series,” Horne said. “But that’s not going to happen if people falsely think they’re in ninth place.”
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CAPTION FOR BC-CNS-EDUCATION DEBATE: Tom Horne, Arizona’s superintendent of public instruction, makes a point during a debate Thursday, Nov. 8, 2007, at Arizona State University’s Downtown Phoenix Campus. Horne and Matthew Ladner, vice president of research at the Goldwater Institute, discussed standardized tests and other subjects at an annual meeting of education researchers. (Cronkite News Service Photo/Stephanie Sanchez)