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Standardized Testing Focus May Be Pushing California Teachers To Cheat

Standardized Test

First Posted: 11/08/11 11:49 AM ET Updated: 11/08/11 12:05 PM ET

From Georgia's southern charm to California's golden beaches, the east and west coasts boast cultures of their own. But one particular culture -- one in the nation's public schools -- has proven to infiltrate school districts spanning Connecticut, Pennsylvania, California and more.

The uncovering of a cheating scandal that plagued Atlanta Public Schools this year unveiled a widespread and deeply embedded culture of cheating, fear, intimidation and retaliation among the district's educators. The teachers were afraid, reports showed, to be held accountable for students who performed poorly on standardized tests and subsequently be evaluated poorly, miss out on bonuses or contribute to their school and district's inability to receive funding for meeting or exceeding federal benchmarks.

But this culture of fear and the constant pressure on teachers to produce high-scoring students isn't unique to Atlanta -- it's driven educators across the country, including those in California, to take measures that falsely inflate standardized test scores.

"One teacher has personally confided in me that if her job was on the line, she indeed would cheat to get the higher test scores," a Los Angeles-area instructor told the Los Angeles Times. "The testing procedures haven't been secure over the past 10-plus years. Some of the 'most effective' teachers could be simply the 'most cunning.'"

School districts across the state are taking closer looks into allegations of dishonest testing practices among teachers, including prompting students during tests and later changing students' wrong answers to correct ones. In Atlanta, nearly 80 percent of the district's schools were named in the cheating scandal. In California, those accused come from 23 schools and 21 districts across the state, the LA Times reports, but the number of teachers who allegedly cheated is still small in relation to the state's 300,000 educators.

In Los Angeles, a science teacher at one of the country's top charter schools is accused of correcting answers on 148 of 604 student exams. Two other Los Angeles-area schools did not receive Academic Performance Index Scores this year because three teachers were accused of correcting answers or instructing students toward correct answers.

Educators in the state, and elsewhere, argue that while teachers face systemic pressure to produce students who do well on standardized tests, the same system doesn't provide or support them with resources that can help boost those scores.

And while school officials look to crack down on instances of cheating to diminish the culture that has permeated districts across the country, California faces a resource shortage of its own. Monitoring test score data and analyzing erasures on answer sheets is a costly operation. The California Department of Education would regularly monitor both -- until the forensic team lost $105,000 in funding in 2009, according to a California Watch report.

Now, the state relies on local districts to voluntarily report instances of cheating, which isn't enough to expose a systemic issue like that in Atlanta. And parents are worried.

According to the LA Times, area parent James Zucker said at a school district meeting, "There is a risk right now that we are going to lose everything."

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From Georgia's southern charm to California's golden beaches, the east and west coasts boast cultures of their own. But one particular culture -- one in the nation's public schools -- has proven to in...
From Georgia's southern charm to California's golden beaches, the east and west coasts boast cultures of their own. But one particular culture -- one in the nation's public schools -- has proven to in...
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11:34 AM on 11/10/2011
I know several teachers - creative, caring, skilled people - who have quit teaching in public schools because of the pressure to "teach to the test." They couldn't conduct their classrooms, their class plans, the way the felt was best for the students, because the schools' administrations forced them to conform to a state-wide "standard".

The schools lost some really talented teachers.
tazmodious
Left Hand of Darkness
12:27 PM on 11/10/2011
Teaching has become the first profession where you are not allowed to be a professional.
10:35 AM on 11/10/2011
Nothing forces the teachers to cheat, they should lose their job and pensions if they choose to cheat.
tazmodious
Left Hand of Darkness
12:33 PM on 11/10/2011
The options are becoming, Lose your job because your being evaluated on the performance of others who are not being held accountable to that performance or Lose your job because you are practicing CYA.

Just to clarify the first part. There is no student accountablility in State Standardized testing because these tests cannot be used as a grade that effects their GPA or ability to graduate. In fact parents can opt students out of the test, which subsequently counts against the school's overall performance score.
12:45 PM on 11/10/2011
Are students employee? No, Are students being paid with taxpayer money? No. Cheating teachers have breached their union contract and should lose all benefits for life and banned from teaching. Teachers have only one person to blame if they cheat, themselves. The teachers that try and make everything someone elses fault are pathetic.
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Kache
Toodlum, wake up, I hear a prowler downstairs
12:15 AM on 11/09/2011
Standardized testing actually gives teachers a WAY to cheat. "How is my kid doing?" "Well, look at the test scores", but please don't ask me if they're learning anything, I"m not paid for that and I don't have the time left after teaching them how to pass the test.
09:22 PM on 11/08/2011
"Educators in the state, and elsewhere, argue that while teachers face systemic pressure to produce students who do well on standardized tests, the same system doesn't provide or support them with resources that can help boost those scores."

That's not so much a claim or an argument as it is the unvarnished truth. Teachers are held accountable for the test scores, but most of the factors that affect the scores are (counterintuitive as it may seem to the uninformed) outside of the teachers' control, as they exist outside the school. Parents are much more responsible for kids' test scores than schools, and though we as a society seem to have forgotten it, the students themselves are the most responsible.

Holding people responsible for something over which they have little or no actual control is a recipe for trouble.
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A George
!#$! to the left of me, ?!$# to right
09:42 PM on 11/08/2011
Teachers are no different than the private sector where you held accountable for your performance. Your post is hogwash. If you can't meet the standards you go down the road, just like the private sector. What makes you think that teachers and other public service sector jobs are sacrosanct and immune from performance standards?
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Kache
Toodlum, wake up, I hear a prowler downstairs
12:26 AM on 11/09/2011
1) Students are not widgets on an assembly line.
2) Back to eceresa's point - how many grocery checkout clerks do you know who are evaluated on the freshness of the potatoes in the produce section.
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frdafury
There's no kill switch on awesome!
03:25 AM on 11/09/2011
Ah, but one of the major differences is that in the private sector, you don't have to have integrity to get your job done, you are to just get it done...bankers and wall street are the perfect example. They do things short term to get the bonus but don't have to have integrity in the process where as we hold teachers up to a sterner level of control. You believe we have control yet you resent us for having the little control you think we have which is wrong since it is not the control we actually have. This may sound confusing but no more than explaining a credit default swap from your friendly broker who just lost your retirement and bought himself a new yacht. Now, since I know you didn't understand a thing I said since you ignored the teachers you had that taught critical thinking, why don't you just put a sock into it till you really know what is going on in the world by walking in that person's shoes. Oh, and as far as teachers being immune to performance standards or that ours and police and fire and DMV workers jobs are sacrosanct, no, people with your sanctimonious attitudes have made sure of that.
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ironicisntit
08:21 PM on 11/08/2011
When one test, administered once a year, designed so that a certain percentage must fail, that does not take into consideration a students over growth, is the only benchmark used to judge how the teacher is doing.
When there are absolutely no repercussions on the student or parent if the student does not perform well ( as there are none now with NCLB) and all responsibility for success or failure falls on the teacher, admin and school. When teachers and admin face losing their jobs over factors they cannot control...then, yes, some will resort to cheating.
tazmodious
Left Hand of Darkness
05:31 PM on 11/09/2011
Annual standardized tests do not count as a grade, do not effect students' GPA nor have any bearing on graduation. In fact parents can opt their students out of the annual standardized test which then counts negatively against the school.
06:33 PM on 11/28/2011
In CA parents are allowed to opt their children out of taking the test BEFORE it is administered in May. However, this option is told to the parents in microscopic print at the bottom of the parent letter (sent home in only three languages--most of the districts in CA have 30 or more languages spoken at home) and as a teacher, I am not allowed to point out that law. Besides, why would I, if we don't test 95% of our students, we can't pass with our scores and are penilized even if our scores go up. It makes me angry that we have the option to assist parents but then we are docked if we do...
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quillerm
04:09 PM on 11/08/2011
Cheating is far better than doing their jobs. They were getting paid way to much anyway, so fire the whole bunch and get teachers that do their jobs.
09:23 PM on 11/08/2011
Whether or not the teachers do their jobs has little effect on student test scores. This is well established. The test scores are much more affected by student and parent factors than by anything that goes on in the schools.

The teachers could teach perfectly, or horribly, and it would have relatively little effect on the test scores.
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A George
!#$! to the left of me, ?!$# to right
09:43 PM on 11/08/2011
Where do you get this crap?
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frdafury
There's no kill switch on awesome!
03:27 AM on 11/09/2011
If you are applying then I hope you like the outcome. I'm sure you would do much better work than the current teachers at a much lower salary. OH, and when you figure out that teaching and teaching well is actually work, don't bother whining, no one will listen.
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elblanc0
Whatever good things we build end up building us.
03:01 PM on 11/08/2011
NCLB is broken. Flush it or quit expecting different results from it. It is the reason we've slipped behind and continue to slip.
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frdafury
There's no kill switch on awesome!
03:29 AM on 11/09/2011
Those people who keep expecting different results are like heroin addicts, they keep doing the same thing over expecting something different to happen and recovering addicts and alcoholics will tell you that that is just the definition of insanity. I think we have proven sufficiently that the path that NCLB has carried us along is definitely insanity.
tazmodious
Left Hand of Darkness
02:41 PM on 11/08/2011
"Monitoring test score data and analyzing erasures on answer sheets is a costly operation. The California Department of Education would regularly monitor both -- until the forensic team lost $105,000 in funding in 2009, according to a California Watch report."

What we have here is probably the only way anymore that teachers can stage an effective enough protest to get education out of the hands of policy wonks, corporations and politicians.

Every teacher nationawide should refill in the correct answers for every single test, flooding this sham of a system to the point of total breakdown.

Education has been hijacked by people who know nothing about education and only want to line the pockets of major corporations with our education tax dollars. Just look at how much school districts have to pay, with your tax dollars, towards private testing companies in my quote above and that's just the tip of the iceberg. Money that could be used for all those programs that had to be cut and schools closed.

Wise up.
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gsocratesasks
Dammit Gumby!
02:42 PM on 11/08/2011
yes..it became a political entity who's goal is electing people to give them money. Education is at best, a second...
12:59 PM on 11/08/2011
Tests are an incredible waste of time! Who wants to be a teacher???
http://www.e-forwards.com/2011/03/who-wants-to-be-a-teacher/
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Dede Eagleburger
well behaved women rarely make History...
03:50 PM on 11/08/2011
I agree, but I still want to be one, and so do lots of people!!
tazmodious
Left Hand of Darkness
03:21 PM on 11/09/2011
Don't do it! I am a teacher and had I known, I would have not changed careers to become one.

Teaching is the only profession where it is common place to be treated unprofessionally by the system and the public. Furthermore, you will never have autonomy and the capacity to make decisons because teachers no longer get to make decisions. I don't have the autonomy I used to have as Geologist to be trusted to make decisions based on my performance and experience.

Sorry, to be so negative, but if you have another passion in life, do that instead.
12:16 PM on 11/08/2011
Its not at all an excuse, teacher's shouldn't cheat regardless, but you're setting them up for failure by backing them into this corner. Think its just California? Take a look at GA and their cheating scandal.
tazmodious
Left Hand of Darkness
02:44 PM on 11/08/2011
We have very few options anymore and it is starting to get pretty desperate. About the only thing you can count on in education year after year is more and more unfunded mandates that are destroying people's livelihoods.

Word of advice, don't go into teaching.
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elblanc0
Whatever good things we build end up building us.
03:02 PM on 11/08/2011
I think that's some pretty bad advice.
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Dede Eagleburger
well behaved women rarely make History...
03:57 PM on 11/08/2011
too late for me...! And I can't do anything else...
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quillerm
04:10 PM on 11/08/2011
Lazy, ineffective, cheating Union teachers are the problem. Get rid of them and hire competent people.
05:46 PM on 11/08/2011
Except I thought Georgia was a right to work state with little to no union powers...
09:25 PM on 11/08/2011
Union teachers tend to be the more effective ones, actually. One can argue about why that's true, but unionized systems tend to have better schools.

The problem that's confusing you is that test scores don't accurately reflect individual teacher competence or performance. You might think they do, but that's just because you haven't bothered to find out what you're talking about before voicing an opinion.