State Leaders Said ILEARN Scores Would Be Lower And They Were Right

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INDIANAPOLIS – State leaders warned the first year of the new ILEARN test would show lower scores. Now we know how much lower: more students failed Indiana’s new basic skills test than passed it.

The Indiana Department of Education says just 37-percent of Hoosier third-through-eighth graders passed both the English and math portions of the test. On both the English and math exams, just over half the test-takers flunked.

Just over half Indiana students passed the final year of ISTEP, with nearly 60-percent passing math and nearly two-thirds passing the English section. All those figures were down by a hair from 2017.

Locally Vigo County students performed a little below the state average on overall ILEARN English/language arts and math scores, but performed well in comparison other systems of comparable size.

In the Vigo County School Corp., 44.3% of test-takers were proficient in math, and 43.1% in English/language arts.

The district finished above the state average in fourth grade science and fifth grade math.

A statewide nosedive in 2019 wasn’t completely unexpected, due to the transition from one test to a new one. Governor Holcomb asked legislators last week to give schools a one-year mulligan from the accountability grades they receive based on the scores. Getting an F too many years in a row opens a school up to potential state intervention or takeover. He’s asking for a similar suspension of the test’s role in determining teacher pay.

State school superintendent Jennifer McCormick and House and Senate leaders in both parties have endorsed the “hold harmless” proposal, and the State Board of Education on Wednesday voted to hold off assigning grades until the legislature acts next year. Legislators granted a similar exemption in 2016 after significant changes to ISTEP. But House Minority Leader Phil GiaQuinta (D-Fort Wayne) says the state should really be asking why the test is used to determine accountability grades or teacher pay at all. He says the test should be a tool for teachers and parents to discuss students’ progress. He argues pinning higher stakes on the test distorts the curriculum, with teachers sacrificing creativity to “teach to the test.”

GiaQuinta blames Republicans for what he complains has been continual fiddling with the test, confusing teachers and muddling the usefulness of the scores.

Third-graders did the best on ILEARN, with a 41-percent passing rate — nearly three out of five passed the math test. Fewer than two in five eighth-graders did.