Report: Test-based incentives don’t produce real student achievement – The Answer Sheet – The Washington Post

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Incentive programs for schools, teachers and students aimed at raising standardized test scores are largely unproductive in generating increased student achievement, according to a new report researched by an expert panel of the National Research Council.

The report said that standardized tests commonly used in schools to measure student performance — including high school exit exams and tests in various grades mandated by former president Bush’s No Child Left Behind law — “fall short of providing a complete measure of desired educational outcomes in many ways,” according to a summary of the lengthy document.

The report, together with a number of other studies released in the past year, effectively serve as a warning to policymakers in states that are moving to implement laws, with support from the Obama administration, to make teacher and principal evaluation largely dependent on increases in students’ standardized test scores.

via Report: Test-based incentives don’t produce real student achievement – The Answer Sheet – The Washington Post.

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About Damien Riley

I'm a guy born in south Orange County who wanted to be a professional singer/songwriter but somehow ended up in a career teaching. I started in 1997. Currently I teach 4th grade. I have three kids and a lovely wife. Contributor to Blogcritics. I'm rileycentral on Twitter.