State: No cheating on tests at Middle School
Published 5:31 pm Friday, November 4, 2011
By CHRIS COLLINS
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ccollins@bakercityherald.com
Oregon Department of Education officials have determined that there was no cheating on state tests at Baker Middle School in 2009-10.
The ruling is based on information provided to the state by C.J. Gray, the Baker School District’s testing coordinator.
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She investigated allegations of cheating on eighth-grade Oregon Assessment of Knowledge and Skills (OAKS) reading/literature tests.
Although the ODE investigation has been concluded, an ongoing investigation regarding allegations of cheating against BMS Principal Mindi Vaughan is being conducted by the state Teacher Standards and Practices Commission (TSPC).
TSPC will consider that case, which involves the same test results, in February, said Superintnendent Walt Wegener.
“As far as the Oregon Department of Education, it is a done deal,” he
said. “TSPC is looking into the same issue from a different perspective
– professional licensure as opposed to the fidelity of the test.”
The ODE asked Gray to investigate as required by its protocol after
Baker City resident Christopher Christie brought the issue to the
agency’s attention, said Crystal Greene, Oregon Department of Education
(ODE) spokeswoman.
Christie said Thursday that while he did not file a formal complaint,
he had asked for copies of student test scores after receiving an email
from an anonymous source. The email pointed out apparent anomalies in
the middle school’s 2009-10 state reading/literature test results for
eighth-graders.
The Baker City Herald received the same information.
In an Oct. 28 letter responding to Gray’s investigation, Doug Kosty,
ODE assistant state superintendent, stated “Upon review of this report,
ODE accepts the district’s conclusion that no test impropriety occurred
and the district’s recommendation that no further action from ODE is
warranted.”
In his letter, Kosty outlined action taken by Gray to investigate the matter:
She interviewed 18 middle school employees who were asked to respond to
the same interview questions in order to determine whether proper
testing procedures were followed.
According to Kosty, Gray reported that all BMS employees confirmed that
none of the students used “non-allowable resources.” Those resources
include cell phones, class notes or other material brought to the test
site. Staff members also told Gray that all test materials were
collected and secured before and after each testing session, Kosty
wrote.
And Gray reported that staff members said students were spaced
appropriately while taking tests, and that none of the students was
“instructed to print reading passages, provided an instruction or given
any suggestions, or had a test administrator read any reading items
aloud to them.”
Had an impropriety been found, there would have been no further action,
however. Action is taken only during the current or most recent school
year and in that case tests of students involved in any irregularities
are invalidated.
According to ODE statistics over the past five years, the Baker School
District has had three student tests invalidated, Greene said.
A third-grader’s test was invalidated in 2008-09, and tests of a
third-grader and a sixth-grader were invalidated in 2009-10. Two tests
were thrown out because the test administrator read sections of the
test that were not allowed to be read to students, and in the other
case the student brought a dictionary to the test site, she said.
The Baker City Herald, in response the partial test results supplied by
the anonymous source, has asked ODE to release a copy of all 2009-2010
Oregon Statewide Assessment Reading/Literature records for individual
BMS eighth-graders, with names redacted for students’ privacy, but
identified by number so the newspaper can track test results over time
for each student.
The anonymous source provided a sampling of irregular test results. Here are four:
andbull; Student A, who took the test three times, scored in the 25th
percentile in November 2009. The student’s test score dropped to the
14th percentile in January 2010. Four months later, in April 2010, the
student scored in the 91st percentile.
andbull; Student B, who also tested three times, scored in the 29th percentile
in November 2009, the 14th percentile in January 2010, and in the 91st
percentile in April 2010.
andbull; Student C scored in the 25th percentile in January 2010; in the 22nd
percentile in March 2010; and in the 82nd percentile in April 2010.
andbull; Student D scored in the 19th percentile in January 2010; in the 22nd
percentile in March 2010; and in the 79th percentile in April 2010.
Wegener believes the low scores show a lack of student motivation
rather than cheating. He reviewed the entire academic history of six
students with anomalous test results and found that the high scores
were more typical for those students.
It’s not unusual for middle school students’ scores to fluctuate widely, he told the school board at its September meeting.
Scores as low as the 14th percentile would indicate that the student is
guessing at the answers, he said. And a score of the 29th percentile by
a student who has performed well on earlier tests shows low student
motivation, Wegener said
Vaughan, the BMS principal, said her students’ scores have improved not
because of cheating, but because of increased emphasis on the
importance of doing well and incentives such as Dilly Bars for students
who meet standards.
Wegener said the letter from Kosty indicates that Gray’s investigation
and findings were a “fair and reasonable response by the district.”
“The information and data would indicate there was no cheating,” he said.
In the meantime, the Baker City Herald is continuing to pursue release
of all Baker Middle School eighth-grade test results for 2009-10.
ODE granted a portion of the newspaper’s request earlier by releasing
the highest scores of each student for 2009-10 (with names redacted and
numbers included to allow tracking of individual students).
Christie, a Baker City blogger, said his request for test results was
denied. Once the newspaper became involved he said he gave up his
investigation to turn his attention to enjoying the summer.
“It had been exposed and people were aware of the issue,” he said.
“I wish I’d taken the time to follow up on it but it would have taken a
lot more time and money than I had,” he said. “I just wish Mr.
Anonymous had not been so anonymous.”
Christie said he was not surprised that Gray’s investigation found no wrongdoing.
“I think it was a forgone conclusion,” he said. “When people
investigate themselves … they’re going to end up with the very
conclusion they ended up with.”