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8/6/2019 Epidemic of Teachers Changing Student Test Scores in America http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/epidemic-of-teachers-changing-student-test-scores-in-america 1/3  HOT TOPICS: BARACK OBAMA RUPERT MURDOCH NEWS OF THE WORLD CHINA NFL NASA N EW S CO RP ORAT ION CON GRE SS NEWS OPINION SPORTS BOOKS LIFE BLOGS COMMUNITIES PHOTO S VIDEO  Search POLITICS NATIONAL WORLD NATIONAL SECURITY ECONOMY D.C. LOCAL In si de the Be ltw ay I ns id e t he Ri ng P rud en on Pol it ic s HOME NEWS NATIONAL SUBSCRIBE CLASSIFIEDS E-EDITION RSS Culture of cheating breeding in schools across U.S. Poor test scores risk teachers’ jobs |Tweet Share ||Email |More  By Ben Wolfgang - The Washington Times 9:08 p.m., Thursday, July 14, 2011 Those sneaky students in the back of the classroom aren't the only cheaters. Teachers and school leaders are getting in on the scams by boosting test scores not through better instruction, but by erasing wrong answers, replacing them with the right ones and hoodwinking parents in the process. Nowhere was the corruption more widespread than in Atlanta, where a recent probe found that 44 schools and 178 teachers and principals had been falsifying student test scores for the past decade. Suspected cheating also is under review in the District, and the Department of Education's inspector general is assisting with the investigation. In Pennsylvania, reports that surfaced this week show suspected cheating in at least three dozen school districts. State Education Secretary Ronald Tomalis on Thursday ordered those districts to investigate the suspicious scores and report back within 30 days. He also asked a data company to analyze 2010 scores, according to the Associated Press. Similar charges of cheating have been discovered in Baltimore, Houston and elsewhere. Although the details differ, education specialists think each scandal has a common denominator. "There's a very simple cause: consequences," said Gregory Cizek, a professor of educational measurement and evaluation in the School of Education at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. "Any district where you've got kids who are at risk of not succeeding ... there are problems as big as Atlanta, as big as D.C., as big as Philadelphia. The more stakes there are involved, the more you're going to see it." The Atlanta probe found that "cheating occurred as early as 2001," the year the No Child Left Behind Act was enacted. Mr. Cizek and others argue that the greater accountability schools face, the more likely that teachers and administrators are to, at best, turn a blind eye to cheating. At worst, they encourage it. Former Atlanta Superintendent Beverly Hall was named superintendent of the year by the American Association of School Administrators in 2009. She retired last month and told USA Today on Wednesday that she "did not know about the cheating." STORY TOPICS Education Department Of Education Gregory Cizek Robert Schaeffer Ronald Tomalis FOLLOW US ON FACEBOOK FOLLOW @WASHTIMES Is the 'Gang of Six' plan the right approach to the deficit dilemma? Yes No Undecided Other View results  QUESTION OF THE DAY n m l k  j n m l k  j n m l k  j n m l k  j  Reversing course, Obama now backs short-term debt patch House ethics panel hires outside lawyer for Waters case Former NSA official says mismanagement continues at spy agency FEATURED By David Boyer and Sean Lengell - The Washington Times By Chuck Neubauer - The Washington Times By Shaun Waterman - The Washington Times  WOLF: Barack Obama's pants on fire By Dr. Milton R. Wolf President told us a whopper about his mother's health care Published 7:26 p.m. July 19, 2011 KELLNER: Is Murdoch the last newspaper mogul?  KUHNER: Humbling Hanoi Jane  EDITORIAL: Cain calls out teleprompter president  MILLER: Gang of squish  COMMENTARY TALK OF THE WEB Comment(s) Print Generated by www.PDFonFly.com at 7/20/2011 4:20:41 PM URL: http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2011/jul/14/culture-of-cheating-breeding-in-schools-across-us/print/ 

Epidemic of Teachers Changing Student Test Scores in America

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HOME NEWS NATIONAL SUBSCRIBE CLASSIFIEDS E-EDITION RSS

Culture of cheating breeding in schools across U.S.Poor test scores risk teachers’ jobs

|Tweet Share | |Email |More  

By Ben Wolfgang - The Washington Times 9:08 p.m., Thursday, July 14, 2011

Those sneaky students in the back of the classroom aren't the only

cheaters.

Teachers and school leaders are getting in on the scams by boosting

test scores not through better instruction, but by erasing wrong answers,

replacing them with the right ones and hoodwinking parents in the

process.

Nowhere was the corruption more widespread than in Atlanta, where a

recent probe found that 44 schools and 178 teachers and principals had

been falsifying student test scores for the past decade. Suspected

cheating also is under review in the District, and the Department of

Education's inspector general is assisting with the investigation.

In Pennsylvania, reports that surfaced this week show suspected

cheating in at least three dozen school districts. State Education

Secretary Ronald Tomalis on Thursday ordered those districts to

investigate the suspicious scores and report back within 30 days. He also

asked a data company to analyze 2010 scores, according to the

Associated Press.

Similar charges of cheating have been discovered in Baltimore, Houston

and elsewhere.

Although the details differ, education specialists think each scandal has

a common denominator.

"There's a very simple cause: consequences," said Gregory Cizek, a

professor of educational measurement and evaluation in the School of

Education at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. "Any district

where you've got kids who are at risk of not succeeding ... there are

problems as big as Atlanta, as big as D.C., as big as Philadelphia. The

more stakes there are involved, the more you're going to see it."

The Atlanta probe found that "cheating occurred as early as 2001," the

year the No Child Left Behind Act was enacted. Mr. Cizek and others

argue that the greater accountability schools face, the more likely that

teachers and administrators are to, at best, turn a blind eye to cheating.

At worst, they encourage it.

Former Atlanta Superintendent Beverly Hall was named superintendent

of the year by the American Association of School Administrators in

2009. She retired last month and told USA Today on Wednesday that

she "did not know about the cheating."

STORY TOPICS

Education  

Department OfEducation  

Gregory Cizek  

Robert Schaeffer  

Ronald Tomalis  

FOLLOW US ON

FACEBOOK

FOLLOW @WASHTIMES

Is the 'Gang of Six'

plan the right

approach to the deficit

dilemma?  

Yes

No 

Undecided 

Other

View results  

QUESTION OF THE DAY

nmlk j

nmlk j

nmlk j

nmlk j

 

Reversing course, Obama

now backs short-term

debt patch  

House ethics panel hires

outside lawyer for Waterscase 

Former NSA official says

mismanagement continues

at spy agency  

FEATURED

By David Boyer and Sean Lengell - The Washington Times

By Chuck Neubauer - The Washington

Times

By Shaun Waterman - The Washington Times

 WOLF: Barack Obama's pants on fire 

By Dr. Milton R. Wolf

President told us a whopper about his mother's health care

Published 7:26 p.m. July 19, 2011 

KELLNER: Is Murdoch the last newspaper mogul?  

KUHNER: Humbling Hanoi Jane  

EDITORIAL: Cain calls out teleprompter president  

MILLER: Gang of squish  

COMMENTARY

TALK OF THE WEB

Comment(s)

Print

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Under No Child Left Behind guidelines, schools can be labeled "failing" if

student test scores don't meet state benchmarks. Poor results are

embarrassing for teachers and often cost principals, superintendents

and school board members their jobs. By contrast, high scores on

reading and math tests equal praise for those in charge.

In the face of such pressure, teachers and administrators sometimes go

with their "natural reaction," said Robert Schaeffer, public education

director of the National Center for Fair and Open Testing.

"The teachers and principals who changed test scores did something

unethical and probably illegal, [but they were] caught between a rock and a hard place," he said."We've created a climate that corrupted the educational process. The sole goal of education ...

became boosting scores by any means necessary."

The Education Department has estimated that more than 80 percent of schools could be labeled as

"failing" this year under No Child Left Behind, and congressional leaders are working on overhauling

the law.

The House Committee on Education and the Workforce has passed the first three pieces of its five-

step reform process, and Rep. John Kline, Minnesota Republican and committee chairman, has said

the final legislation will change the accountability process and free schools from the testing mandates.

"One of our primary goals is to put more control in the hands of state and local education officials whocan properly monitor and address situations like this to ensure students are not being cheated out of

a quality education," Mr. Kline said.

Investigations of suspected violations often move slowly.

Until recently, education officials in Pennsylvania apparently were unaware of a 2009 analysis of the

Pennsylvania System of School Assessment that identified "testing irregularities" at schools in

Philadelphia, Hazleton, Lancaster and elsewhere. Former Education Secretary Gerald Zahorchak,

who served under Gov. Edward G. Rendell, has denied seeing the 44-page document, the

Associated Press reported.

"It's in nobody's interest ... to really do a searching, thorough investigation," Mr. Cizek said.

"Vigorously pursuing an allegation is just a lose-lose-lose situation" for students, teachers, districts

and parents, none of whom wants to admit wrongdoing or, in the students' cases, face the reality that

they didn't score as well as they thought.

As a result, those students "are left even further behind," Mr. Schaeffer said, by not getting the

remedial education they need.

Some fear the worst is yet to come. Mr. Schaeffer said the District could be "the next Atlanta, only

bigger," when the investigation is complete, but D.C. officials have welcomed federal involvement.

"I actually think that it is a huge step in ensuring that we have a thorough and serious investigation,"

D.C. Public Schools Chancellor Kaya Henderson said last week. "My hope and my expectation is that

the U.S. Department of Education will be able to lend significant capacity to ensuring that we have a

top-notch investigation."

Although the federal government is helping with the D.C. case, Mr. Schaeffer argues that federal

awmakers largely caused the cheating scandals by forcing schools to focus time, effort and money

on standardized assessments.

"It's harder and harder for politicians with a straight face to say high-stakes testing is improving

education," he said.

© Copyright 2011 The Washington Times, LLC. Click here for reprint permission.  

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COMMENTS

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Ben Wolfgang  Ben Wolfgang is a national reporter for The Washington Times. Before coming to the Times, he spent four years as a political

reporter in Pennsylvania. His focus is on education and science policy. Ben lives in southeast D.C. and has played guitar in several

bands while still in Pennsylvania. He can be reached at [email protected] .

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