National Institute for Literacy
 

[Assessment] To fudge or not to fudge

Marie Cora marie.cora at hotspurpartners.com
Wed Mar 8 12:08:31 EST 2006


That is the question...

Hello all! Not too long ago, I received an email question regarding
submitting accurate data to the states and the Feds. It appeared that
the person was being pressured to make up data (assessment scores) so
that the outcomes of the program looked better.

I bet this story is not new to you - either because you have heard about
it, or perhaps because it has happened to you.

So I have some questions now:

If programs fudge their data, won't that come back to haunt us all?
Won't that skew standards and either force programs to under-perform or
not allow them to reach their performance levels because they are too
steep? Why would you want to fudge your data? At some point,
most-likely the fudge will be revealed don't you think?

We don't have nationwide standards - so if programs within states are
reporting data in any which way, we won't be able to compare ourselves
across states, will we?

Since states have all different standards (and some don't have any),
states can report in ways in which it makes them appear to be out-doing
other states, when perhaps they are not at all?

I'm probably mushing 2 different and important things together here:
the accurate data part, and the standards part ("on what do we base our
data") - but this is how it's playing out in my mind. Not only do we
sometimes struggle with providing accurate data (for a variety of
reasons: it's complex, it's messy, we feel pressure, sometimes things
are unclear, etc.), but we do not have institutionalized standards
across all states for all to be working in parallel fashion.

What are your thoughts on this?

Thanks,
marie cora
Assessment Discussion List Moderator

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