NECAP is inappropriate graduation
requirement, Providence school leaders tell legislators
STATE HOUSE – Providence’s school leaders told a group
of legislators last week that while they support rigorous graduation requirements,
the New England Common Assessment Program (NECAP) is not only an inappropriate
measure of a student’s readiness, but is in fact hindering their education.
Providence Supt. Susan Lusi and School Board President
Keith Oliveira told the lawmakers that having to help students who must retake
the test with such high stakes and few opportunities to retake it has made it
difficult for high schools to devote the necessary time to teaching the Common
Core standards, and that its administration in the fall causes additional
problems.
They argued the test is inappropriate in several ways as a
requirement for graduation, and that schools were not able to prepare students
in part because the significance of the test, and the rules connected to it,
have changed so much, and without enough notice.
Rep. Teresa Tanzi invited Lusi and Oliveira to the State
House to elaborate upon comments Lusi made about the NECAP Feb. 26 at a House
Health, Education and Welfare Committee meeting.
Rep. Maria Cimini (D-Dist. 7,
Providence), Rep. Donna Walsh (D-Dist. 36, Charlestown, Westerly, South
Kingstown, New Shoreham), Sen. Adam J. Satchell (D-Dist. 9, West Warwick), Rep.
Marvin L. Abney (D-Dist. 73, Newport, Middletown), Rep. William W. O’Brien
(D-Dist. 54, North Providence), Rep. Gregg Amore (D-Dist. 65, East Providence),
Rep. Spencer E. Dickinson (D-Dist. 35, South Kingstown), Rep. Frank Ferri
(D-Dist. 22, Warwick), Rep. Joseph M. McNamara (D-Dist. 19, Cranston, Warwick)
and Rep. Joy Hearn (D-Dist. 66, Barrington, East Providence) also joined the
discussion.
“This year’s 9th, 10th and 11th
graders have been taught the Common Core for two, three or four years, but are
being tested by the NECAP because of our state’s failure to align the
graduation requirement with the curriculum. We’ve been rigid in our
over-reliance on testing as a graduation requirement and at what cost?” said
Representative Tanzi (D-Dist. 34, South Kingstown, Narragansett). “There’s no
sensible reason that our state has insisted on the NECAP as a graduation
requirement, and our students are paying the price.”
Lusi and Oliveira said that in the time since the NECAP
began developing, Rhode Island went from using it to measure schools’ and
systems’ improvements under No Child Left Behind policies, to a graduation
requirement whose failure to meet could not be forgiven even if a potential
graduate had done well on all of the other multiple measures that are expected
of him or her. Rhode Island, they said, is the only state in the NECAP
consortium that uses the test as a graduation requirement.
Additionally, Rhode
Island will replace the NECAP next year in favor of another test that measures
Common Core learning, so the rules will continue to change for Rhode Island
high schoolers.
Among the NECAP’s flaws, said Lusi, is that it is
administered to juniors in the fall, when many are still catching up on what
educators call “summer learning loss.” Evidence has shown that disadvantaged
students – special education students, English language learners and the poor –
suffer the most summer learning loss, which compounds the disadvantages they
already have. English language learners alone constitute at least 19 percent,
but as much as 25 percent of Providence students, she said.
And unlike the
Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System (MCAS), which is a graduation
requirement in our neighboring state, the NECAP offers next to no help – other
than the general directions, such as the necessity of using a No. 2 pencil – in
any language but English.
While the MCAS was designed as a student proficiency
measure, the NECAP wasn’t, and only in 2011 did this year’s seniors learn that
it would be used as a graduation requirement, Lusi argued. The first class that
had to pass the MCAS to graduate had a decade’s notice, during which time the
test was adequately studied, and the students took it several times.
Other rules also keep changing, but without enough
notice for students to necessarily take advantage, she said. For example,
partway through this school year, the Department of Education announced that
students who fail the NECAP but are accepted by a non-open enrollment college
or programs like Americorps or City Year can graduate.
But had they known with
enough notice, many of the 605 Providence seniors who haven’t met the NECAP
requirement yet would have applied to more or different colleges to increase
their chances, she said. And while the Department of Education keeps adding
more alternative tests that students can use to meet the requirement if they’ve
still failed to pass or make enough progress on the NECAP, those who took the
last retest won’t know whether they’ve passed it until April.
Lusi said the
result is her district is trying to get them to take alternative tests in the
meantime to cover their bases, even though it might be unnecessary.
The fact that more and more alternatives are necessary
is a red flag, said Oliveira.
“If we’re building all these exemptions to the policy,
isn’t that evidence that the policy is flawed?” said Oliveira.
He added that another problem is that seniors who
know they’ve failed to meet the NECAP’s requirements and know they won’t get a
diploma have no motivation to continue attending school for the rest of the
year. The result, he believes, will be more dropouts