Is NAEP Really a Benchmark?
The recent Achieve study (the one with the Honesty Gap) is just the most recent example of someone using the NAEP (National Assessment of Educational Progress) as a benchmark test, as the gold standard of Sorting Students Out.
But not everybody agrees that the NAEP (aka "the nation's report card) is a good measure of, well, anything. Google "NAEP fundamentally flawed" (people seem to love that Fundamentally Flawed verbage when discussing NAEP) and you'll find lots to chew on.
Most debate centers around the leveling of the test. Folks don't care for how they're set. Many critics find them to be irrationally high. In 1999, the National Academy of Sciences released Grading the Nation's Report Card. I can't direct you to a free copy of that to read, but I can summarize second-hand the basic arguments brought against the NAEP.
1) The results don't match the results of AP testing, finding fewer top students than the AP test does.
2) The NAEP gives more weight to open-ended questions.
3) The cut score lines are drawn in vague and hard-to-justify ways. NAS specifies this down to "You can't tell whether a kid just over the line will or won't answer a particular question correctly.
These arguments are not perfectly convincing. The Center for Public Education found, for instance, that NAEP's people had a pretty clear idea of how they were setting achievement levels.
A more damning report came from NCES way back in 2007, in turn looking back at students and test results in the nineties. That time span allowed researchers to do what folks looking at PARCC or SBAC still have not done-- follow up on later successes from the students. Here's a look at what the class of 1992 had done by the time eight years had passed.
NAEP Score | No Degree | Certificate | Assoc. Degree | Bachelor’s degree or higher |
Below Basic | 61.6 | 9.9 | 10.5 | 18.0 |
Basic | 37.7 | 3.8 | 9.0 | 49.5 |
Proficient | 18.1 | 0.4 | 2.5 | 79.0 |
Advanced | 7.5 | 0.2 | 1.3 | 91.1 |
Note that 50% of students judged Basic went to college and earned a degree. It's almost as if they CURMUDGUCATION: Is NAEP Really a Benchmark?: