The politics of the Common Core assessments: why states are quitting the PARCC and Smarter Balanced testing consortia.
Jochim, Ashley ; McGuinn, Patrick
IN 2009, 48 states and the District of Columbia joined together to
launch the Common Core State Standards Initiative. Their mission: to
develop common academic standards in English and mathematics that would
help ensure that "all students, regardless of where they live, are
graduating high school prepared for college, career, and life."
It was a laudable goal, but one that 15 years of federal mandates
had failed to accomplish. Tasked by the federal government with bringing
all students to "proficiency," most states set undemanding
standards, and the quality of their assessments varied widely. The
Council of Chief State School Officers and the National Governors
Association set out to raise and unify K-12 standards through the Common
Core initiative.
Common standards call for common assessments. Late in 2009, the
Obama administration, through its Race to the Top (RttT) program,
announced a competition for $350 million in grant money to spur the
development of "next-generation" tests aligned to the Common
Core. Six consortia formed to submit applications for funding, but
mergers left just two seeking to develop the new assessments. The
government awarded four-year grants to the Smarter Balanced Assessment
Consortium (SBAC) and the Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for
College and Careers (PARCC).
Earlier in 2009, also through Race to the Top, the administration
had offered $4.35 billion in funding through a competitive grant program
designed to encourage states to enact the feds' preferred
school-reform policies--including the adoption of better standards and
assessments. Most states were willing to sign on to Common Core and the
aligned tests to improve their chances of winning a grant. By 2011, one
year after the standards had officially been released, 45 states plus
the District of Columbia had signed on to the standards and joined one
or both of the assessment consortia.
But as states moved to implement the new standards and assessments,
controversy began to swirl around the reforms. Although the Common Core
standards drew criticism from parents and pundits, from the right and
the left, most states stood firm in embracing them. Yet loyalty to the
consortia's assessments has proved much weaker. The number of
states planning to use the new tests dropped from 45 in 2011 to 20 in
2016.
This presents a puzzle: why have so many states abandoned the
consortia, even as the standards on which they are based continue to
live on in most places?
Consortia Beginnings
Proponents of the next-generation assessments argued that such
tests would enable educators to track progress toward the higher-order
thinking skills--such as critical thinking, communicating effectively,
and problem solving--that the standards emphasized. By collaborating
through a consortium, states would be able to produce a higher-quality
assessment, at lower cost, than what they could achieve on their own.
The Common Core-aligned tests would also allow policy-makers to use the
same measuring stick to evaluate student progress in different states.
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In 2010, the PARCC and SB AC consortia reported having 26 and 32
member states, respectively, representing diverse political
environments. Only Alaska, Minnesota, Nebraska, Texas, and Virginia
declined to join by the end of that year. Alaska, whose state standards
were closely aligned with the Common Core, affiliated with SB AC in
2013. Minnesota adopted only the English language arts standards and so
did not join a consortium. Nebraska, Texas, and Virginia never adopted
Common Core or affiliated with a consortium.
The two consortia took similar approaches to assessment design.
Both sought to develop state-of-the-art assessments that focused on
problem solving and the application of knowledge and moved away from
former tests' reliance on multiple-choice questions and the testing
of factual recall. The new tests would be administered by computer,
reducing the time needed to evaluate results and thus enhancing the
usefulness of this information for teachers and schools. And finally,
both consortia committed to transparent communication of
student-achievement data to stakeholders.
The consortia differed in a few particulars. SBAC adopted a
computer-adaptive test model, in which the difficulty of the assessment
would vary according to students' responses, and it made
high-school assessments optional for the states. PARCC required all
member states to use the same test vendor (Pearson) to implement the
assessments, while SBAC allowed its members to choose their own.
State Exits Increase
State participation in the consortia declined just as
implementation of the new standards and tests was set to begin. The pace
of withdrawals quickened over time, particularly for PARCC, which five
or six states left every year between 2013 and 2015 (see Figure 1). As
of May 2016, just six states planned to implement the PARCC-designed
assessment in the 2016-17 academic year. SBAC also faced attrition but
fared better and still retains 14 states that plan to use the full test.
(That figure includes Iowa, where a legislative task force has
overwhelmingly recommended the SBAC assessment, though as of early 2016
state officials had yet to formally accept the recommendation.) By May
2016, 38 states had left one or both consortia, short-circuiting the
state-by-state comparability that the tests were designed to deliver
(see Figure 2).
Political Resistance
Much of the opposition to the Common Core-aligned
assessments--particularly among parents--is related to a broader
backlash against the amount of testing students now undergo and a
perception that it diminishes instructional time and encourages
"teaching to the test." While proponents argue that the Common
Core standards and assessments represent an improvement over those most
states used under the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001, many have come
to see Common Core as simply NCLB 2.0.
Criticism from both ends of the political spectrum has buffeted
Common Core. On the right, many Tea Party adherents and others view the
initiative as a dangerous or even unconstitutional expansion of federal
control of education. It was not difficult for opponents to cast Common
Core as a federal initiative, given 1) the Obama administration's
use of RttT incentives (and later, waivers to NCLB requirements) to
encourage states to adopt the standards and 2) the administration's
funding of the consortia. While the Common Core initiative is actually a
product of state cooperation, the 2014 Education Next survey found that
64 percent of respondents who had heard of Common Core believed that
"the federal government requires all states to use the Common Core
standards" (see "No Common Opinion on the Common Core,"
features, Winter 2015). To many conservatives, the standards have become
a powerful and threatening symbol of big government, causing critics on
the right to dub it "Obamacore."
Furthermore, the Common Core assessments emerged onto the public
agenda in the wake of revelations of widespread privacy violations by
the National Security Agency, playing into heightened fears about data
mining. In this context, conspiracy theorists like Michelle Malkin could
whip up public fear with her March 2013 National Review column,
"Common Core as Trojan Horse: It's time to opt out of the
creepy federal data-mining racket." The 2014 Education Next survey
found that 85 percent of Americans who had heard of Common Core
erroneously believed that the federal government would receive detailed
data on individual students' test performance.
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On the left, some of the opposition to Common Core and its
assessments is related to broader resistance to high-stakes testing, the
linking of student scores to teacher evaluations, and other reform
measures such as school choice, which some see as "corporate school
reform." Diane Ravitch of New York University, a prominent critic
of Common Core, wrote in 2015, "The reason to standardize education
across the nation is to create an attractive business climate for
entrepreneurs." The business community has indeed been among the
most vocal supporters of Common Core, arguing that higher academic
standards are imperative to ensuring that the American economy has the
high-quality workforce necessary to compete in the global marketplace.
The association of big business with Common Core has fueled
Americans' long-standing antipathy toward the power elite. Some
have even argued that Common Core is a scheme intended to increase the
profits of large companies such as Pearson and Microsoft. Still others
see the initiative as part of an even larger conspiracy to dismantle
public schools and privatize education. In this view, public schools
will struggle to meet the higher standards--and not receive the
resources with which to do so--and this will open the door to the
expansion of charter schools, private-school voucher programs, and
online virtual learning. As Susan Spicka, a Pennsylvania parent, wrote,
"[H]igh stakes [tests] are being used as a tool by corporate school
reform advocates to put public schools in the hands of private
businesses, whose goal is to profitize our children, not to educate
them."
These criticisms from the extremes of the political spectrum have
not persuaded many states to drop Common Core, which is bolstered by a
large and bipartisan group of policymakers and other elites. The
consortia-designed assessments, however, have not fared so well, because
their implementation became intertwined with new, controversial teacher
evaluations and school accountability measures.
Assessments Meet Accountability
Proponents of Common Core made their case by arguing that the
standards would improve public education and eventually strengthen the
workforce: they would ensure that all high-school graduates were
"college and career ready," that America remained
"globally competitive," and that all students had access to a
rigorous education "regardless of where a child lives or what their
background is." But universal standards, on their own, accomplish
none of these goals. In order to effect change, they must be paired with
aligned testing that gives reliable information on which children are
making appropriate progress in school, and which are not.
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Standards coupled with assessments can thus provide the basis for
holding students, teachers, and schools accountable for student learning
in K-12 education. In the case of Common Core, the assessments were more
rigorous and established a higher bar than did most traditional state
assessments. Furthermore, the new assessments emerged at a time of rapid
upheaval for K-12 accountability, when school districts were introducing
enhanced consequences for teachers, principals, and schools that failed
to improve student achievement.
School administrators, teachers, and their unions were initially
quite supportive of the Common Core and its potential to improve
teaching and learning. The aligned assessments, however, became
politically charged, because they were introduced simultaneously with
new teacher-evaluation systems that used student-achievement data as a
significant criterion. Educators contended that states were tying the
employee-evaluation process to the new standards and assessments too
quickly, before teachers and students had been able to put the Common
Core into practice. Many feared that the new assessments would result in
arbitrary or unfair personnel decisions. Forty-three states, D.C., and
Puerto Rico had received waivers from NCLB requirements, however, and
had little choice: the waiver program essentially required them to
develop new teacher evaluations, even as they rolled out the new
standards.
A 2014 PDK/Gallup poll found that 76 percent of teachers continued
to support the goals of Common Core, but only 9 percent supported using
those test scores to evaluate teachers. As Sandi Jacobs, managing
director of state policy for the National Council on Teacher Quality,
said, "There wasn't enough concern about how these things [the
Common Core and teacher evaluation] were running down the path together
until the tests became an issue."
The unions, too, continued to support the standards but opposed the
consortium-designed assessments because of their link to teacher
evaluations.
Hindsight suggests that implementation of the assessments might
have been more successful, and politically sustainable, if the new
standards and tests had not been connected to states' K-12
accountability systems, and especially teacher evaluations, until key
stakeholders had become acclimated to them. But, under pressure from the
federal government, most states tied the new assessments to
accountability at a time when teachers' practice and local
curriculum had not yet become fully aligned with new expectations.
As backlash against the assessments has swelled, even support for
the Common Core standards has begun to dwindle. In 2013, the Education
Next poll showed 76 percent of teachers and 63 percent of parents
supported the standards. By 2015, the same poll found that just 40
percent of teachers and 47 percent of parents supported them.
Implementation Challenges
States varied tremendously in their readiness to implement the
consortia-designed assessments, which represented a significant shift
from most states' prior assessment systems. The new assessments set
forth more-challenging proficiency benchmarks for students and required
substantial investments in technology as well as increased testing time.
Lamenting schools' preparedness for the transition, one teacher
foreshadowed the implementation challenges ahead by tweeting, "We
start testing on standards we're not teaching with curriculum we
don't have on computers that don't exist."
State education agencies and districts struggled to finance and
manage the implementation of the new standards and assessments. The
American Association of School Administrators argued that states needed
to "slow down to get it right," while Dennis Van Roekel, then
president of the National Education Association, charged that
implementation had been "completely botched." Teachers
complained of insufficient professional development and lack of quality
curriculum. States and districts confronted massive technology failures,
owing to insufficient preparation and contractors who failed to deliver
the needed technology upgrades. Parents revolted as the consortia set
testing times and proficiency benchmarks that they viewed as
developmentally inappropriate and, in some cases, a waste of resources.
States also varied widely in how well they communicated with educators,
parents, and the general public about the new tests.
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Support from the Wrong Places
The Common Core standards and their aligned assessments drew many
supporters from the federal and state governments, from the
philanthropic community, and from reform advocates, but most members of
these groups do not have a personal stake--a vested interest--in what
happens in schools at the ground level. Therefore, their support alone
is not enough to sustain education reform over time. Federal and state
policymakers sometimes embrace high standards and quality assessments in
principle, but when they experience intense pressure from interest
groups and the public, their support is likely to falter. Indeed, many
former supporters of Common Core, including Republican governors Bobby
Jindal of Louisiana, Chris Christie of New Jersey, and Mary Fallin of
Oklahoma, have withdrawn support of the standards in the face of
political opposition from conservative interest groups, teachers unions,
and swarms of parents and other voters.
Advocacy organizations such as Achieve and the Collaborative for
Student Success can help build political support, but in the case of
Common Core, efforts have largely focused on lobbying policymakers, not
building the kind of broad-based coalitions needed to reengineer the
K-12 system around high standards, quality assessments, and
accountability for results. Parents and other community members were
often left to learn about the standards and assessments via their social
networks, where ill-informed but powerful negative interpretations of
the reforms circulated through social media and were passed along by
teachers, or at the dinner table. And the standards won few advocates
among the parents and guardians who struggled to help their children
navigate the new expectations with little guidance to support their
efforts.
Philanthropists who supported Common Core also underestimated what
would be necessary to support the transition to higher standards. The
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation invested $230 million in design,
implementation support, and advocacy. But, as Jay Greene of the
University of Arkansas argues, foundations can't compel change,
because the resources they invest are so small relative to the budgets
of the organizations they seek to affect, and any effort to impose a
solution will draw out opponents who are far more powerful and vested
than the foundations themselves. Greene finds that philanthropic
investments have the greatest impact when they create constituencies
that advocate for change, but this didn't happen in the case of
Common Core.
The lack of vested stakeholder support had particularly acute
consequences for the assessments. Standards for student learning are not
likely to draw many opponents when they are just words on a page,
because they threaten no one. But when policymakers seek to hold
students, teachers, and schools accountable for those standards using
aligned assessments, they are far more likely to stimulate opposition
from those who have much to lose.
Saving the Standards
In the wake of the political controversy over the Common Core and
its aligned assessments, policymakers faced intensifying pressure to
change or abandon them. Between 2012 and 2014, the number of bills
introduced in state legislatures that aimed to pause, review, or revoke
the standards or aligned assessments increased eightfold. Oklahoma and
South Carolina pulled out of the standards, while Tennessee and Arkansas
revised them through state reviews. Indiana also withdrew, though most
observers point out that its new standards are very similar to those it
had adopted through Common Core.
In many states, however, policymakers who supported Common Core
took a different tack: they sought to diffuse opposition to the
standards by withdrawing from the consortia-designed assessments,
perhaps the most visible and consequential elements of the new
accountability systems. As Mike Cohen, the president of the advocacy
organization Achieve, observed: "The new SBAC and PARCC assessments
have Common Core written all over [them]--federally funded, part of a
national effort... In many states where opposition to the Common Core
emerged, the compromise was to hold on to the standards and get rid of
the aligned tests." Mitchell Chester, commissioner of education in
Massachusetts, agreed, saying, "Often, as in Florida and Louisiana,
it was governors making a political calculus" and concluding that
the cost of staying in the consortia was too high.
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Abandoning the assessments did not change the opinion of the most
strident opponents of the standards. Indeed, critics of Common Core were
quick to point out that the compromise agreements negotiated in
Louisiana and Massachusetts did not stop the implementation of Common
Core (both states will continue to use some elements of the
consortia-designed assessments). But the moves may mollify more moderate
groups, whose commitment to the issue was never firmly rooted.
Looking Ahead
Sustaining voluntary multistate efforts like the consortia presents
considerable challenges. Faced with declining membership, both consortia
have contemplated changes to their assessments to manage the growing
political pushback against the Common Core and standardized testing in
many states. The two consortia have worked to address concerns expressed
by teachers, schools, and district administrators by reducing testing
time, shortening the time periods over which tests are administered,
limiting the number of units covered, and reducing the number of
required testing sessions.
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In late 2015, PARCC announced new flexibility for states, giving
them more control over test-vendor selection and the option of using the
complete assessment or specific items (or blocks of items) to customize
their own assessments. Massachusetts and Louisiana have both moved
forward with "hybrid" state tests that combine consortia- and
state-designed assessment items. Mitchell Chester believes such a hybrid
approach is likely to become more prevalent in the future, noting that
this model "addresses both the political problems and the
customization needs in states." The hope is that a block of test
items could be developed that all states could use for comparability
purposes--a "core of the Core." Can such an approach produce
assessments that adequately align with the Common Core? Can it provide
the kind of interstate comparability that proponents of the standards
envisage? The future will tell.
It is possible that these changes may stem the tide of consortium
withdrawals and generate new interest in the assessments from states
that have already withdrawn. As Louisiana superintendent John White has
noted, "[S]tates... want [test] results that are comparable with
other states, they want the cost savings that come with sharing
development of test questions across multiple states, but at the same
time they want to maintain control of their own test." Given more
flexibility to determine the content, length, and administration of
assessments, states could still achieve some of the benefits of
collaboration while preserving the ability to respond to local needs and
priorities.
The consortia may also emerge stronger as a result of surviving the
conflict that has surrounded them. The diversity and number of states
taking part in each consortium was always a challenge. As Bill Porter,
leader of the High Quality Assessment Project, noted, "It's
challenging to get 20 states around the table really trying to
compromise with each other on what to prioritize and how much money to
invest in assessments." With a smaller number of more like-minded
states, the consortia may be able to focus more deliberately on
improving implementation.
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At the same time, however, the consortia will face new competition
from other Common Core-aligned assessments. This year, the College Board
(which is headed by Common Core lead author David Coleman) rolled out a
new Common Core-aligned version of the SAT for high school students, as
did the ACT with the Aspire assessment system, which also offers
assessments for grades 3-8. Several states have already opted to use the
SAT and ACT in high school for federal accountability purposes, drawn by
the idea of using a college entrance test to assess student learning.
Whatever fate awaits the consortia, their work has resulted in new
opportunities and imperatives for states to work together on assessment
design and implementation. As former Maryland schools superintendent
Lillian Lowery noted, one of the chief benefits of the consortia was the
"communities of practice they generated and the pooled intellectual
capital of the states involved." And despite the problematic
implementation of the new assessments and the political controversy that
has swirled around them, evidence suggests that the consortia-designed
tests are a substantial improvement over previous state assessments. A
significant number of states are now engaged in unprecedented
collaboration around common standards and tests--and how to deliver
instruction to meet them--and these efforts are likely to live on, with
or without the consortia.
by ASHLEY JOCHIM and PATRICK MCGUINN
Ashley Jochim is a research analyst at the Center on Reinventing
Public Education at the University of Washington Bothell. Patrick
McGuinn is professor of political science and education at Drew
University and a senior research specialist at the Consortium for Policy
Research in Education.