ROANOKE TIMES 
                      Copyright (c) 1996, Roanoke Times

DATE: Thursday, October 10, 1996             TAG: 9610100093
SECTION: VIRGINIA                 PAGE: C-3  EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: MATTHEW BOWERS LANDMARK NEWS SERVICE


NEW STATEWIDE TESTS SET FOR SPRING

OK, Virginia Board of Education. Clear your desks, take out two sharpened No.2 pencils, open to the first page of your choosing-a-consultant booklet, and pick the creator of the state's new batch of standardized tests.

That's today's mission for the board, which is meeting at 4 p.m. in Richmond, in House Room 4 of the state Capitol.

The consultant hired by the board will develop the new statewide written examinations, which will be given in grades three, five, eight and 11 beginning this spring. The tests are intended to determine how well Virginia's 1.1 million students and 1,700 public schools are performing under the state's new, tougher Standards of Learning, adopted in 1995.

``If you don't have good, valid, solid information on how schools and students are doing, then you don't have a way of holding them accountable,'' said Margaret Roberts, director of community relations for the state Department of Education.

``The difference in the testing on our own standards, is these are our standards'' and not national norms, added Michelle Easton, president of the Board of Education. ``You can look, for example, at fifth-grade history, and you know that's what it's going to be on.''

The board meets privately today to consider a review committee's recommendations, and after will publicly announce any decision. Whoever wins the bid will have to hustle to get the two-part Virginia Assessment System ready by spring.

One part, a nationally standardized or ``norm-referenced'' test, will replace the Iowa Tests of Basic Skills given to the state's fourth- and eighth-graders for more than a decade, and the Tests of Achievement and Proficiency given to high-school juniors.

``What that says is how Virginia's students are doing measured against their peers across the nation,'' Easton said.

The second and larger part will be a ``criterion-referenced'' test measuring how well Virginia students are meeting the new standards in English, math, science and history and social science. Ultimately, it will determine whether they're allowed to graduate from high school.

The first run of the assessment test measuring how well students are mastering the new content-based state standards will be a ``dry run,'' with the scores being used only to validate the test - ``a test of the test,'' Roberts said. The scores will start going on students' records in spring, 1998.

Requests for bids were ``sent far and wide,'' Roberts said. The General Assembly this year budgeted up to $12 million for the first two years of developing and administering the tests, and the contract will run a total of six years, through the 2001-02 school year.

The new tests will reflect the heavier emphasis on content or facts included in the new state-education standards, Easton said. ``This is one of the key components for our plan for reform,'' the board president said.

For example, the old third-grade social studies standard focused on learning about students' communities, the interdependence of people and groups, and map and calendar skills. Objectives included ``the student will demonstrate courtesy in social interactions'' and ``the student will recognize the shape of the United States and Virginia, and that most other states have distinctive shapes.''

In contrast, the new third-grade history and social science standard begins by requiring students to ``explain the term `civilization' and describe the ancient civilizations of Greece and Rome, in terms of geographic features, government, agriculture, architecture, music, art, religion, sports, and roles of men, women, and children.''


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