In other districts, support for the portfolio process is not readily available causing some students to fall through the cracks. In some districts, students must give up an elective during their senior year to take a portfolio preparation course. Portfolio appeals are a time-consuming process requiring sustained assistance from staff for students who have yet to meet the exit test requirement. The NJDOE also projected that if the State Board retains the 750 cut score, the class of 2024 could generate an astounding 40,000 “portfolio appeals” for English Language Arts and 22,000 for Math. Department data showed that aligning scores on the substitute tests with the 750 NJGPA level would reduce passing rates on the alternatives by one-third to one-half. The Board will also vote to set cut scores for the “substitute assessments” that students who don’t pass the NJGPA can use to satisfy the testing requirement. “The decision will have a huge impact on approximately 100,000 students in the class of 2024, who took the NJGPA in March, and who, by law, must satisfy the testing requirement to graduate” said Stan Karp, Director of Education Law Center’s Secondary Reform Project. All eyes will be on the Board during the May meeting when members vote on where to set the score for this year’s exam. The NJDOE repeated the 725 recommendation during the April meeting, but the Board appeared divided during a long, rambling discussion. On the Math portion, the Board’s higher cut score reduced passing rates from 56.5% to 50%. Eighty percent of students would have passed if the 725 cut score had been adopted. The field test results showed that the 750 level doubled failure rates on the English Language Arts portion of the test. Results of the New Jersey Graduation Proficiency Assessment (NJGPA) “field test.” Last year, the Board set the NJGPA passing score at 750, instead of the 725 recommended by both the Department and the test vendor. Discussion at the Board’s April 5 meeting indicated they may be headed for disaster.Īt the State Board’s April meeting, New Jersey Department of Education (NJDOE) officials presented On May 3, the New Jersey State Board of Education will again vote to set passing scores on the tests high school students must pass to receive a diploma. NJ STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION TO VOTE AGAIN ON GRADUATION CUT SCORES BOARD'S HIGHER SCORE DOUBLED FAILURE RATE ON 2022 FIELD TEST
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