Characteristics of the opt-out movement: Early evidence for Colorado
Testing and accountability measures have continued to expand since the passage of the No Child Left Behind Act in 2001. In addition to school and district accountability, student test scores increasingly formed the foundation of teacher performance metrics. State participation rates exceeded the 95%...
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Arizona State University
2019-04-01
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doaj-dde6bba09dcc468d9e83ca48210384652020-11-25T03:33:44ZengArizona State UniversityEducation Policy Analysis Archives1068-23412019-04-0127010.14507/epaa.27.41261896Characteristics of the opt-out movement: Early evidence for ColoradoGrant Clayton0Andrea J. Bingham1Gregory B. Ecks2University of Colorado- Colorado SpringsUniversity of Colorado- Colorado SpringsUniversity of Colorado- Colorado SpringsTesting and accountability measures have continued to expand since the passage of the No Child Left Behind Act in 2001. In addition to school and district accountability, student test scores increasingly formed the foundation of teacher performance metrics. State participation rates exceeded the 95% minimum prescribed by law despite increasing opposition to many testing requirements. However, the rollout of the Common Core aligned PARCC tests in 2015 marked the start of a backlash against state mandated testing. The movement, commonly called opt-out, encouraged families not to participate in required tests. We use pooled OLS regression on statewide panel data from Colorado schools to examine school-level characteristics in one of the states with the largest declines in test participation. We find the prevalence of opt-out is largest in charter schools, suburban and rural areas, higher performing schools, and schools with a higher proportion of White students.https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/4126accountabilityeducation reformpolitics of education |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Grant Clayton Andrea J. Bingham Gregory B. Ecks |
spellingShingle |
Grant Clayton Andrea J. Bingham Gregory B. Ecks Characteristics of the opt-out movement: Early evidence for Colorado Education Policy Analysis Archives accountability education reform politics of education |
author_facet |
Grant Clayton Andrea J. Bingham Gregory B. Ecks |
author_sort |
Grant Clayton |
title |
Characteristics of the opt-out movement: Early evidence for Colorado |
title_short |
Characteristics of the opt-out movement: Early evidence for Colorado |
title_full |
Characteristics of the opt-out movement: Early evidence for Colorado |
title_fullStr |
Characteristics of the opt-out movement: Early evidence for Colorado |
title_full_unstemmed |
Characteristics of the opt-out movement: Early evidence for Colorado |
title_sort |
characteristics of the opt-out movement: early evidence for colorado |
publisher |
Arizona State University |
series |
Education Policy Analysis Archives |
issn |
1068-2341 |
publishDate |
2019-04-01 |
description |
Testing and accountability measures have continued to expand since the passage of the No Child Left Behind Act in 2001. In addition to school and district accountability, student test scores increasingly formed the foundation of teacher performance metrics. State participation rates exceeded the 95% minimum prescribed by law despite increasing opposition to many testing requirements. However, the rollout of the Common Core aligned PARCC tests in 2015 marked the start of a backlash against state mandated testing. The movement, commonly called opt-out, encouraged families not to participate in required tests. We use pooled OLS regression on statewide panel data from Colorado schools to examine school-level characteristics in one of the states with the largest declines in test participation. We find the prevalence of opt-out is largest in charter schools, suburban and rural areas, higher performing schools, and schools with a higher proportion of White students. |
topic |
accountability education reform politics of education |
url |
https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/4126 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT grantclayton characteristicsoftheoptoutmovementearlyevidenceforcolorado AT andreajbingham characteristicsoftheoptoutmovementearlyevidenceforcolorado AT gregorybecks characteristicsoftheoptoutmovementearlyevidenceforcolorado |
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