California Launches New ELL Assessment
Ed Week March 28, 2007 Published: March 28, 2007
English-Learners & Immigrants
http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2007/03/28/29ell.h26.html
California schools began this month to administer a new
assessment in Spanish for English-language learners, but the
test will not be used for accountability purposes under the No
Child Left Behind Act.
Deb Sigman, the assessment director for the California Department of
Education, said the state board of education would have to authorize
the state to use a Spanish-language test to calculate adequate
yearly progress for some English-language learners under the federal
education law.
“It’s kind of up in the air because the No Child Left Behind Act
will be reauthorized at some point,” she said. “We don’t know what
that reauthorization will look like and what will be called for in
terms of native-language assessments.”
Jan Chladek, the administrator for standardized assessment and
reporting for the state education department, said the new
test—called the Standards-based Test in Spanish—assesses students in
reading, language arts, and mathematics and replaces an
off-the-shelf test, Aprenda III, that is not aligned to California
standards. The new test is being given only to English-language
learners who have attended U.S. schools for less than a year or who
are receiving instruction in Spanish. This spring, more than 102,000
students in grades 2, 3, and 4, are expected to take the test.
Eventually, it will be phased in for students in grades 2-11.
Under the NCLB law, all states must test English-language learners
in reading, writing, listening, and speaking in English.
California has an oral-skills test for all grades, but hasn’t
yet developed a test that assesses the reading and writing skills of
children in kindergarten and 1st grade.
Ms. Sigman said the state legislature, concerned about what it views
as an added burden on children, twice has rejected bills that would
permit the education department to create such a test.
The federal government has put special conditions on its grant money
for English-language learners, said Cathy George, a consultant for
English-learners for the state education department.
Vol. 26, Issue 29,
Page 11
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