- Home
- Commentaries and Reports
- Lake Wobegone, Texas - Accountability tests are reversing strides made towards more transparency
Lake Wobegone, Texas - Accountability tests are reversing strides made towards more transparency
- By Goldwater Institute
- Published 03/5/2007
- Commentaries and Reports
-
Rating:




- Accountability tests are reversing strides made towards more transparency Lake Wobegone, Texas
by Matthew Ladner, Ph.D.
net%2Fmodperl%2Fachievement%2Ftx%2F2208">Bridge Point Elementary near Austin. The results are similar to other reasonably high- performing elementary schools across the state, that is student passing rates cluster near 100%.States are racing to the bottom. As federal "proficiency requirements" approach 100% in 2014, the correct number of questions required to score proficient on state education tests like AIMS is getting lower and lower.
In the process, we are losing transparency in public schools. This phenomenon can be seen in the birthplace of NCLB: Texas. Below are the scores on the Texas version of AIMS, TAKS, from
Can Bridgepoint administrators use this information to assess the effectiveness of new learning programs? No. Can parents in this district discriminate between the relative effectiveness of the schools? Not likely. Are these kids maximizing their potential? Who can say? The only information given is that these kids are all proficient at very basic skills.
We are heading towards a future where all students pass absurdly easy exams, a return to an information dark age. In the new Lake Wobegone, every child won't be just above average, but also "proficient." To avoid this train wreck, Congress needs to amend No Child Left Behind to allow states to design their own accountability system.
Matthew Ladner is vice president for research at the Goldwater Institute.

