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Rural schools gain clout

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Wednesday, May 13, 2015 7:28 PM

DENVER - Rural schools in Colorado that want to opt out of Common Core-linked tests can pilot their own assessments under a proposal passed in the waning hours of the state legislative session.

Elliott Asp, who is a special assistant to the state-education commissioner, said Friday he expects more details to emerge when rural school leaders address the state board of education next week.

The plan was part of a measure developed after tough discussions that lasted months. While many lawmakers, parents and educators agreed that students were spending too much time on too many tests, they disagreed - sometimes bitterly - on how to lighten the load without undermining a system designed to ensure all schools were meeting students' needs.

The bill ended some mandatory testing in early grades and late in high school but retained language arts and math tests in the third through ninth grades.

For this first time this year in Colorado and many other states, those language arts and math assessments were aligned with the Common Core standards. That led to debates that were less about the quantity and quality of tests than whether local control over education was being lost.

The Common Core initiative originated with the states, though it does have federal backing. It does not outline content or curricula but sets year-to-year goals aimed at ensuring young people head to college or the workplace with a sophisticated grasp of language and math. To assess whether students were meeting Common Core goals, the states established two consortia to develop tests. Colorado is part of the consortium known as the Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers.

Rural districts are concerned about the impact on their budgets of the technology for PARCC tests, which are administered on computers, and of curricula required to meet Common Core's heightened standards.

They also question whether it's fair to judge teachers on how students do when their sample sizes are so small and worry that results from the new tests are scheduled to come too late to be useful in shaping a school's curriculum or a child's study plan.

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