Achieving testing for English Language Learners, ready or not?.

School reform efforts across the US have focused on creating systems in which all students are expected to achieve to high standards. To ensure that students reach those standards and to document what students know and can do, schools collect assessment information on students' academic achieve...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sau-Lim Tsang, Anne Katz, Jim Stack
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Arizona State University 2008-01-01
Series:Education Policy Analysis Archives
Subjects:
Online Access:http://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/26
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spelling doaj-c17ae96330d74ecca6881d86704a8bb02020-11-25T03:08:09ZengArizona State UniversityEducation Policy Analysis Archives1068-23412008-01-01161Achieving testing for English Language Learners, ready or not?.Sau-Lim TsangAnne KatzJim StackSchool reform efforts across the US have focused on creating systems in which all students are expected to achieve to high standards. To ensure that students reach those standards and to document what students know and can do, schools collect assessment information on students' academic achievement. More information is needed, however, to find out when such assessments are appropriate for English learners and can provide meaningful information about what such learners know and can do. We describe and discuss a study that addresses the question of when it is appropriate to administer content area tests in English to English learners. Drawing on the student database of San Francisco Unified School District, we examined the effect of language demands on the SAT/9 mathematics scores of Chinese-speaking and Spanish-speaking students. Our results showed that while the English language demands of the problem solving subscale affect all students, they have a larger effect on English learners' performance, thus rendering the tests inaccurate in measuring English learners' subject matter achievement. Our results also showed that this effect gradually decreases as students become more proficient in English, taking five to six years for students to reach parity with national norms. These results have important implications for the design of school accountability systems and policies with high-stakes consequences for English learners such as high-school graduation requirements based on standardized tests. http://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/26bilingual studentshigh risk studentshigh stakes testslanguage proficiencylimited English speakingstandardized tests.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sau-Lim Tsang
Anne Katz
Jim Stack
spellingShingle Sau-Lim Tsang
Anne Katz
Jim Stack
Achieving testing for English Language Learners, ready or not?.
Education Policy Analysis Archives
bilingual students
high risk students
high stakes tests
language proficiency
limited English speaking
standardized tests.
author_facet Sau-Lim Tsang
Anne Katz
Jim Stack
author_sort Sau-Lim Tsang
title Achieving testing for English Language Learners, ready or not?.
title_short Achieving testing for English Language Learners, ready or not?.
title_full Achieving testing for English Language Learners, ready or not?.
title_fullStr Achieving testing for English Language Learners, ready or not?.
title_full_unstemmed Achieving testing for English Language Learners, ready or not?.
title_sort achieving testing for english language learners, ready or not?.
publisher Arizona State University
series Education Policy Analysis Archives
issn 1068-2341
publishDate 2008-01-01
description School reform efforts across the US have focused on creating systems in which all students are expected to achieve to high standards. To ensure that students reach those standards and to document what students know and can do, schools collect assessment information on students' academic achievement. More information is needed, however, to find out when such assessments are appropriate for English learners and can provide meaningful information about what such learners know and can do. We describe and discuss a study that addresses the question of when it is appropriate to administer content area tests in English to English learners. Drawing on the student database of San Francisco Unified School District, we examined the effect of language demands on the SAT/9 mathematics scores of Chinese-speaking and Spanish-speaking students. Our results showed that while the English language demands of the problem solving subscale affect all students, they have a larger effect on English learners' performance, thus rendering the tests inaccurate in measuring English learners' subject matter achievement. Our results also showed that this effect gradually decreases as students become more proficient in English, taking five to six years for students to reach parity with national norms. These results have important implications for the design of school accountability systems and policies with high-stakes consequences for English learners such as high-school graduation requirements based on standardized tests.
topic bilingual students
high risk students
high stakes tests
language proficiency
limited English speaking
standardized tests.
url http://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/26
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