Lessons of APS scandal: Overuse, misuse of testing fuels cheating

Robert Schaeffer is public education director of the National Center for Fair & Open Testing (Fair Test).

He wrote this piece for the AJC.

By Robert Schaeffer

The sad story of educators caught manipulating standardized exam scores

has focused attention on one type of "fallout" from the testing explosion that has swept across the nation's classrooms in the past decade. Federal and state lawmakers are scrambling to incorporate lessons from Atlanta as they work to overhaul testing policies in the face of an increasingly powerful assessment reform movement.

A new study finds 28.3 percent of teachers in traditional public schools miss 11 or more days of school for illness or personal reasons. In contrast, the figure for teachers in charter schools is 10.3 percent. (AJC File)

Credit: Maureen Downey

icon to expand image

Credit: Maureen Downey

So far, policymakers have grasped only the most basic message from the Atlanta scandal: Sharp score gains may not be what they first appear to be. Most state departments of education have hired "data forensics" firms to examine test answer sheets. Using computers, they now search for unusual numbers of erasures or odd patterns of score gains.

The ensuing investigations confirmed cases of cheating in 40 states, the District of Columbia, and schools run by the U.S. Department of Defense. Adults manipulated test scores in more than 60 ways, from shouting out correct answers to barring likely low-scorers from enrolling. Atlanta's scandal is just the tip of a cheating "iceberg."

In the wake of Atlanta, many jurisdictions stepped up test security. However, tougher exam policing has not made test cheating disappear. In just the past few months, new examples have surfaced in Pennsylvania, New Mexico, Ohio, Louisiana and other states.

Understanding the widespread "gaming" of standardized exam results requires addressing its root cause. Nearly four decades ago, social scientist Donald Campbell forecast today's scandals. He wrote, "(W)hen test scores become the goal of the teaching process, they both lose their value as indicators of educational status and distort the educational process in undesirable ways." The horror stories in Atlanta and many other communities are case studies of what is now called Campbell's Law.

Many policymakers still ignore the most important lesson to be learned from Atlanta. Cheating is an inevitable consequence of the overuse and misuse of standardized exams. Federal, state and local testing policies put intense pressure on teachers, principals and other administrators. They create a climate in which educators believe scores must soar "by whatever means necessary, " as the GBI concluded.

It is hardly surprising that more school professionals cross the ethical line. Across the nation, strategies that boost scores without improving learning are spreading rapidly. These include changing answers, narrow teaching to the test and pushing out low-performing students. These practices are immoral, unethical and, in many cases illegal. But completely understandable.

The test score fixation takes time away from broader and deeper learning, leaving students inadequately prepared for college or careers. Simultaneously, it inflates test results by making it appear as if there is real academic growth when there may be none.

To eliminate cheating, reliance on standardized exam results for high-stakes educational decisions must end. Test-driven schooling cheats students out of a high-quality education. At the same time, it cheats the public out of accurate information about public school quality.