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Monday, November 2, 2015

How daylight saving time explains standardized test scores - The Washington Post

How daylight saving time explains standardized test scores - The Washington Post:

How daylight saving time explains standardized test scores





“Cut scores,” according to the Educational Testing Service, are “selected points on the score scale of a test,” points that “are used to determine whether a particular test score is sufficient for some purpose.” In education today, of course, the purpose for which cut scores are set is to separate student test-takers into categories — those who do badly on a test, or average, or well, or really well. So how are cut scores set?
You can read this 2014 post about  the scary way the cut scores were set for New York’s Common Core tests. And you can read the brief post below, which succinctly explains the problem with cut scores in general. It was written by Peter Greene, a veteran teacher of English in a small town in Pennsylvania, who initially published this on his Curmudgucation blog.

[Teacher: Why the ‘rich student data’ we get from testing is actually worthless]
By Peter Greene
The afternoon is only half over, but the sun is riding a little low in the sky. Within a few hours, it’s going to get dark outside. That’s because we just switched the clocks back an hour, and it’s no longer daylight saving time.
Here’s the thing– it will get precisely as dark as it got yesterday, just as the sun rose just as high today as it rises every single day. The distribution of light and dark through the day, the distribution of the sun’s high points and low points– it will be pretty much the same today as it was yesterday.
What changed is not the distribution of light and dark, but the labels that we put on it. Saturday we labeled this position of the sun 4:00. Today we are labeling it 3:00.
This is a fine way to explain cut scores. The distribution of student scores, the How daylight saving time explains standardized test scores - The Washington Post: