Washington State House of Representatives Office of Program Research |
BILL ANALYSIS |
Education Committee | |
HB 1068
Brief Description: Eliminating mandatory norm-referenced student assessments.
Sponsors: Representatives Quall, McDermott and Haigh; by request of Governor Locke and Superintendent of Public Instruction.
Brief Summary of Bill |
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Hearing Date: 1/24/05
Staff: Susan Morrissey (786-7111).
Background:
Norm-referenced Tests
By law, public school students in the third, sixth, and ninth grades must take norm-referenced
achievement tests that assess the students' basic skills in reading, language arts and mathematics.
The two assessments used are the Iowa Test of Basic Skills (ITBS) and the Iowa Test of
Education Development (ITED). The scores are reported as percentile points, meaning students
perform as well as or better than a certain percentage of other students in the nation. The
national average score is 50, and is based upon a national sample selected from 1995.
The ITBS is a norm-referenced test given to third- and sixth-grade students in our state. Students
demonstrate their grasp of foundational skills (reading, mathematics and language arts) by
responding to a series of multiple-choice questions. During the 2003-04 school year, on average,
the state's third grade students scored in the 58th percentile in reading and the 67th percentile in
math. Sixth grade students scored in the 55th percentile in reading and language arts and the
58th percentile in math on the ITBS.
The ITED has been given to Washington ninth-graders each spring since 2000. Through a series
of multiple choice questions, the assessment measures a student's understanding of fundamental
skills in reading, quantitative reasoning (mathematics) and expression (language arts). During
the 2003-04 school year, on average, the state's ninth grade students scored in the 53rd percentile
in reading, the 54th percentile in expression, and the 59th percentile in quantitative reasoning.
The ninth grade scores have not increased over the five year period in which the ITED was
administered in the state.
The ninth grade assessment also includes an inventory of a student's interests that can be used for
counseling and high school planning. Schools may use the interest inventory with eighth grade
students as well.
Other Required Assessments
By state and federal law, Washington assesses students in elementary, middle, and high school in
reading, writing, and math and science. The assessments are "criterion-referenced" or designed
to determine the extent to which students have met the state's standards in those content areas.
Under the federal "No Child Left Behind" Act, by the end of the 2005-06 school year, the state
must add additional criterion-referenced tests in reading and math in the 3rd, 5th, 6th, and 8th
grades.
Executive Request Legislation
Former Governor Locke and the Superintendent of Public Instruction have proposed the
elimination of these required assessments. Former Governor Locke's budget proposal for the
2005-07 biennium assumed that no school district would continue offering these
norm-referenced assessments. His budget assumed a savings of $645,000 for the biennium. The
Superintendent of Public Instruction's budget request made a different assumption, that
one-fourth of the state's school districts would continue to offer the assessments. The
superintendent's budget assumed a savings of $484,000 for the biennium.
Summary of Bill:
The requirement that each public school student in the third, sixth, and ninth grades take a
norm-referenced achievement test is repealed.
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Available.
Effective Date: The bill takes effect 90 days after adjournment of session in which bill is passed.