RI's Flawed PARCC Test Cost Millions

Kate Nagle, GoLocalProv News Editor

RI's Flawed PARCC Test Cost Millions

The state of Rhode Island spent nearly $2 million to administer the PARCC test, which appears to have at least one reporting error that could impact the overall results.

The cost to administer the tests was $24.97 per student, according to the Rhode Island Department of Education, for a total of at least $1.8 million for the approximately 75,000 students tested— and results showed that only a third of Rhode Island students in grades 3-10 met expectations for both math and English. 

The number called into question was the total number of students reported for Scituate Middle School, which was flagged by GoLocal. Scituate School Department Assistant Superintendent Lawrence Filippelli told GoLocal he is waiting to hear from RIDE why it reported only half (178) of the student body (360) as the middle school total — claiming 92% had taken the test. 

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URI Professor of Economics Len Lardaro acknowledged that if the numbers are in fact changed by RIDE to reflect a mistake and the participation drops, it would then affect the statewide average reported — but that was not his biggest concern. 

“I could understand a glitch with a new test, but if this is mostly online, what was the issue?” asked URI economics professor Len Lardaro.  “If they have to change the participation number for that school, that will be small percentage of the total. However, for me with looking at the numbers participating -- why did we get such horrible results?”
On Wednesday, GoLocal reported that Rhode Island performed 40% worse than neighboring Massachusetts.  

Scituate Middles School is at the core of a result dispute
Scituate in Focus

Statewide the participation rate was posted as 90% — and Scituate High School has the highest opt-out rate, with only 27% taking the assessment for graders 9 and 10.
The PARCC result listed Scituate Middle School as having a 92% tested rate for 160 students — when the RIDE website shows that the student body for the middle school is 360 students, and all other middles schools reported had the RIDE number as their total number.

"I'm as stumped as you are," said Scituate Assistant Superintendent Lawrence Filippelli told GoLocal on Wednesday.  "But I can tell you I'm getting hit by parents, board members who are asking about this, and I just want to know what kind of clarification or redaction there will be given publicly.  I mean, this is out there, and it's wrong.  What else is wrong?”

Questioning Results of State Spending

URI’s Lardaro, who writes a monthly economic outlook for the state, said he found the PARCC results “disturbing.”
“Remember, our most glaring weakness is lack of skills in on our labor force,” said Lardaro.  “It’s not like we don't pay much money in K-12 -- we spend mountains of money on K-12, we have evaluation instruments, then they postpone them, postpone the results."

"Our quality is in higher education and we've been grossly underfunded," said Lardaro. "We get people from these high schools that need a lot of work, and we're among the highest in student debt.”
Lardaro acknowledged the state had to continue to “adhere to standards” despite the results — and issues with the PARCC.

“We have to shake things up from the bottom up.  We have to adhere to standards,” said A lot of our unemployment, this shows that RI has some structural long-tern secular issues to deal with, you can't do it by tinkering around the edges.”
 


Top High Schools in Rhode Island 2014

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