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Standards & Accountability

Measuring New Science Standards Is Hard. These Projects Aim to Change That

By Stephen Sawchuk 鈥 April 10, 2018 2 min read
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About 18 states have adopted the Next Generation Science Standards. And although these shared science expectations have been out for about five years, testing models that fully capture students鈥 grasp of them have lagged far behind. (So far, only a handful of states have updated their science tests to match.)

The NGSS poses some big technical challenges for the smarty-pants who develop student tests. For one, the NGSS expects students to learn primarily by interacting with phenomena and recording and analyzing data. That鈥檚 basically the inverse of how most of us learned science, in which a teacher explained a new concept and, if we were lucky, illustrated it through a lab.

New tests also needs to match the standards鈥 crosscutting concepts, such as being able to recognize patterns and understand scale and proportion.

Naturally, this all begs for some testing innovation, which is expensive and difficult work. Now, the American Association for the Advancement of Science has begun

The project, funded by a $1.4 million grant from the U.S. Department of Education鈥檚 Institute for Education Sciences, will involve the creation of 鈥渟cenario based鈥 tasks that illustrate the concepts of the transfer and conservation of energy, thermal energy transfer and dissipation, and energy and chemical reactions. Each scenario will require students to interact with a phenomenon, answering both multiple-choice questions and questions that require students to respond to prompts.

It鈥檚 an evolution of sorts for the AAAS, which had already . This earlier project, which was funded by both the IES and the National Science Foundation, focused only on multiple-choice items.

Creating New Science Assessment Tasks

Right now, the group is in the beginning stages of thinking through what these scenarios might look like and how students will interact with them鈥攆or example, by drawing or modeling, graphing, or writing a paragraph. Ultimately, the tasks could help influence how states approach their own testing programs.

鈥淭he new assessments are trying to do more than understand what students know; it鈥檚 to see how well they can use what they know to explain and make sense of phenomena,鈥 said Cari Herrmann Abell, a senior research associate at the the AAAS.

AAAS is not the only group experimenting in this area. There鈥檚 Next Generation Science Assessment, a collaborative of scholars from several universities and research organizations, who are also designing innovative science assessment tasks for teachers to use. (You can sign up to see some examples on their website.)

The AAAS already has about 200 teachers signed up to help pilot the tasks it develops with their students, and give feedback on how they worked in the classroom.

鈥淚 think what it says is that teachers have an interest in helping to better assessments. They care about this,鈥 said Herrmann Abell. 鈥淭his is an opportunity for teachers to influence future assessments and for them to have some input into how they are formatted and used in the future, and I think that鈥檚 an opportunity they don鈥檛 get all that often.鈥

The first assessment tasks should be released publicly later this year, so stay tuned.

Image: Getty

A version of this news article first appeared in the Curriculum Matters blog.