Quick Nav

Categories

Quick Search

PUBLISHED

TAGS

SHARE IT

Post
Tweet
Pin it
Share
Email
Print

Over the past two decades we have invested substantial public resources and engaged in seemingly endless discussion and debate over academic standards. No Child Left Behind and the Common Core State Standards are two of the most visible and hotly debated recent examples. However, largely lost in this debate is whether raising academic standards leads to increases in student learning. It may seem obvious that if we hold students to higher standards, they will perform at higher levels.

Yet reality is not always reflective of what we assume or believe should be true. One of the first examinations of the impact of raising standards on academic performance was reported in 2012 by Tom Loveless, a researcher at the Brown Center on Education Policy at the Brookings Institution in Washington, D.C. Loveless (2012) concluded that there is no consistent evidence that raising academic standards lifted academic performance on a large scale. Recall that at the time Loveless conducted his study we had just concluded the decade of No Child Left Behind and there was significant criticism of the initiative and doubts about major aspects of the approach.

Fast forward to 2018. A study by Hamlin and Peterson (2018) found an absence of a relationship between higher academic proficiency standards and growth on test scores between 2005 and 2017. This study compared trends in state standards and student performance on the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), a test often referred to as the nation’s report card. Researchers found that states with higher academic standards tended to have test results that more closely mirrored the NAEP results, while states with lower academic standards demonstrated larger gaps. Stated another way, states with lower academic standards showed more academic success in relation to their standards, while states with higher academic standards showed lower proficiency rates on their standards. Meanwhile, academic performance was not necessarily higher or lower when compared to an external measure, in this case the NAEP. In short, researchers found no significant relationship between how high states set their standards and how well students performed.

So what should we take away from these findings? The most obvious conclusion is that raising academic standards alone is not a very effective way to increase academic performance. Raising and lowering standards can increase or decrease proficiency rates, but do not necessarily drive changes in learning.

Additionally, academic standards should reflect consensus about the essential knowledge and skills learners need to develop to become successful, productive, contributing members of society. A collective focus on what students need to learn and why they need to learn it appears to hold more promise than debating how high standards should be in isolation of their content.

Further, standards can serve a useful purpose as a focus for learning and teaching, and guide alignment of resources to support learning outcomes. Using academic standards in this manner appears to be a better bet to make a difference than focusing on raising or lowering standards alone.

Maybe most important, we can use academic standards to help students to understand where their current performance or proficiencies are relative to what is expected. In this context, academic standards can be guideposts and provide benchmarks for progress. Standards can serve as a focus for feedback along student learning journeys, inform students about how good is good enough, and suggest what still needs to be learned.

The argument should not focus solely on how high standards should be. Rather, we need to be clear about what is important to learn, help students to know where they are and what to do to move closer to agreed upon standards, and regularly review what level of knowledge and skill is required. Only then does it make sense to consider and adjust the level of challenge standards reflect.

 

 

Sources:
Loveless, T. (2012, February). The 2012 Brown Center report on American education: How well are students learning? Retrieved from https://www.brookings.edu/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/Brown-Center-Report-2016.pdf

Hamlin, D., & Peterson, P. E. (2018). Have states maintained high expectations for student performance? An analysis of 2017 state proficiency standards. Retrieved from https://www.educationnext.org/have-states-maintained-high-expectations-student-performance-analysis-2017-proficiency-standards/

Thought for the Week

We need to remember that what others say and do is less important than how we choose to respond.

Share Our Page

We're in your corner!

Sign up to have the weekly publication
delivered to your inbox.

"*" indicates required fields

Name*
This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Share Your Tips & Stories

Share your story and the tips you have for getting through this challenging time. It can remind a fellow school leader of something they forgot or your example can make a difficult task much easier and allow them to get more done in less time. We may publish your comments.

Sign up for our Newsletter

"*" indicates required fields

Name*
This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.