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4 equity ideas for revamping testing post-COVID

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Like many educators, you are likely coming to recognize that the disruptions of COVID have thrown into sharp relief the need to assess students more equitably.

Any you may be among the many administrators now working to develop a fuller picture of how students, educators, and schools are doing more than a year after COVID shut down the education system.

District leaders are looking for strategies for using assessment results more effectively to improve outcomes, provide interventions and distribute resources as schools recover from the pandemic.

One solution will be for federal and state officials to prioritize local context and need when supporting district leaders who are targetting resources toward students who have been most impacted by COPVID, says .

This highly-impacted group includesstudents of color, students from low-income backgrounds, English learners and students with disabilities, says the report released by, a nonprofit that advocates for underserved students, and the testing organization NWEA.

Here the three more challenges and solutions detailed in the report:

遺鞄温鉛鉛艶稼乙艶:油How to reenvision accountability systems so the data helps educators develop high-quality and effective learning opportunities and resources that improve student outcomes

Solution: Recalibrate accountability and assessments systems so they place more emphasis on growth and the narrowing of gaps in

遺鞄温鉛鉛艶稼乙艶:油ESSA focuses on the changesschools can make, even though systemic state and district and policiessuch as funding formulas, staffing and allocations of other resourcesare most in need of reform.

皆看鉛顎岳庄看稼:油The U.S. Department of Education, Congress, and education stakeholders should work together to develop a stronger feedback loop between schools, districts and states. This can lead to a more effective distribution of resources and the implementation ofevidence-based policies that drivestudent success.

遺鞄温鉛鉛艶稼乙艶:油Annual statewide assessments were established to determine whether students are receiving high-quality education and to identify schools most in need of support. However, struggles to close gaps in many states suggesting that assessment datamay not be as actionable or culturally relevant as intended.

皆看鉛顎岳庄看稼:油Develop assessments that provide students with more equitable opportunities to show what they know and produce results that are more timely and actionable for policymakers, educators, families, and students.

Matt Zalaznick
Matt Zalaznick
Matt Zalaznick is the managing editor of District 91心頭istration and a life-long journalist. Prior to writing for District 91心頭istration he worked in daily news all over the country, from the NYC suburbs to the Rocky Mountains, Silicon Valley and the U.S. Virgin Islands. He's also in a band.

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