Testing the Limits: The Purposes and Effects of Additional, External Elementary Mathematics Assessment
Issue Date
2011-05-31Author
Lombardi, Karen Ann
Publisher
University of Kansas
Format
163 pages
Type
Dissertation
Degree Level
Ph.D.
Discipline
Educational Leadership and Policy Studies
Rights
This item is protected by copyright and unless otherwise specified the copyright of this thesis/dissertation is held by the author.
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
This mixed-methods case study focuses on the third through fifth grade classrooms at a public elementary school in a Midwestern urban school district where the Northwest Evaluation Association's (NWEA) Measures of Academic Progress (MAP) assessment is being implemented. According to the school district, the goals of these tests are: to show student growth in meeting the state benchmarks, to identify student strengths and weaknesses, and to provide teachers with information to direct content and pedagogy. Unofficially, another goal seems to be to hold classroom teachers accountable for the progress of their students by providing them with data on student concept attainment and measuring student improvement over the year. Since the district and the NWEA stress the importance of utilizing these test results at the classroom level, the purpose of this research is to identify how MAP testing and the application of the test results are (or are not) utilized to inform mathematics instruction at the classroom level and to explore the effects of additional, external testing, particularly the effects on the teachers and students. Additionally, while the schools in the district do not have the option to exclude themselves from participation in this mandated testing program, a summative question as to the actual value of (or need for) the information provided by MAP testing will also be explored. Based on the results of this study, a more generalized understanding of the effects of additional, external standardized tests is also discussed. This study, in particular, adds a unique perspective to the current literature on external testing because, unlike previous studies that have focused on state-mandated standardized tests, this study focuses on a district-mandated test that is used in addition to the state-mandated testing. Along with the current body of literature on assessment, this study can inform educational policies that challenge the culture of testing - the culture of data, pressure, and confusion - that is present in classrooms and schools throughout the country.
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