Rhode Island is Last State to Release PARCC Scores

Kate Nagle, GoLocal Contributor

Rhode Island is Last State to Release PARCC Scores

Rhode Island is scheduled to release its PARCC assessment scores from last year this coming week — and will be the last participating state to do so, following the revelations of the controversial test scores by the 11 other participating states that have already been made public. 

SLIDES: See Coverage of How PARCC States Scored Below

Headlines from coverage in other states have included, "Should N.J. worry about PARCC results? 'Yes and no,' testing expert says" (NJ.com) and "Most Illinois students fall short on new PARCC tests" (Chicago Tribune), among others of the "Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers" assessment. 

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The test was met with controversy in Rhode Island last year, with NYU Education Professor Diane Ravitch having told GoLocal that families opting out of the test would be an issue when it came time for assessing the results. 

"I posted yesterday a short piece by the eminent education researcher Gene V.Glass, who said that it would not take large numbers of opt outs to disrupt the testing machinery," said former U.S. Assistant Secretary of Education and historian Ravitch last March.  "Even 10%, he said, would invalidate the tests for its main uses."

Opponents to the PARCC test in Rhode Island, who had been vocal during the last school year, pointed to neighboring Massachusetts as being a state to watch, for how it moves forward — or not — with the standardized test. 

“Watch Massachusetts.  They are collecting signatures to get a question on the ballot to abandon Common Core.  That may be the tipping point,” said Rhode Island parent and PARCC opponent Don Allen. “Massachusetts had the gold standards for education.  If they get rid of Common Core, let's hope the rest of the nation will garner the courage to do the same.  This is such a disservice to our teachers, our children and our future.”

Parsing the PARCC

Diane Ravitch
While some states are wrestling with sub-par scores, some media outlets are taking the opportunity to point out that the results are necessary to turn around underperforming schools.

An editorial in the Baltimore Sun "embraced" the state's low scores. 

"PARCC results reveal a sobering truth," wrote the editorial board on October 27. "Low scores are no reason to back away from PARCC. They are reason to embrace it."

Last May, RIDE — under the direction of then-Commissioner of Education Deborah Gist -- acknowledged testing time would be reduced this year. 

“The Rhode Island Department of Education announced...that the Governing Board of the Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers (PARCC) voted Wednesday to use only one testing window and to reduce total testing time by 90 minutes in the coming school year (2015-16).”

Jean Lehane, a parent and organizer in Rhode Island of the group "Stop the Common Core" on Facebook, warned that school districts were trying to use “scare tactics” to make schools — and families — participate in PARCC, and not opt-out.

“From what I know, many of the higher scoring students opted out, so the scores could be lower. By the same token, we have a lot of special needs students that dropped out, so I'm not sure how that argument will play out,” said Lehane.

“The one thing that's interesting, is that we’re being pushed to have this 95% participation rate,” continued Lehane. “We’ve been told that if your school doesn't have that 95% rate you can lose your 'commended status' -- they said it was federal guideline.”

“What that’s telling us then is that this [commended] rating is essentially meaningless,” continued Lehane. “You’re going to penalize a school by taking away their [commended] status - for the Constitutional right for a student and family to opt out?”

Looking Ahead

What Rhode Islands results will show -- and how they compare to the other participating states -- remains to be seen. 

“I was at a School Committee meeting last Thursday in Barrington about starting school later, for [student] health,” said parent and activist Joel Hellman. “The students who spoke didn't want to start school later. What they wanted was a reduction in stress. Too much homework, too many extracurriculars and too much testing."

“PARCC is being reduced to 29 hours. REDUCED! With prep and recovery time that is about 4 weeks of school,” said Hellman. “And with that test being bandied about as a graduation requirement how much stress is that? My sophomore daughter is taking US history this year - they no longer cover the Revolutionary War because there isn't enough time. Why? PARCC testing, and History isn't on the test."


National PARCC Test Results Fall 2015

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