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Does Diagnostic Math Testing Improve Student Learning?

By Julian Betts, Andrew C. Zau, Youjin Hahn

Available to all math teachers in the state, the Mathematics Diagnostic Testing Project (MDTP) offers course-specific assessments that give teachers timely feedback on their math students’ strengths and weaknesses. This report examines San Diego’s use of MDTP test results to guide the placement of students into appropriate classes or summer school. San Diego’s experiment had positive effects and could provide lessons for other districts in the state.

This report was supported with funding from the Donald Bren Foundation. The California Academic Partnership Program also provided support to the authors for related research.

blog post

Standardized Testing and College Eligibility

By Courtney Lee, Jacob Jackson

Many states are encouraging more students to attend college by changing how they use entrance exams such as the SAT and ACT. Where does California stand?

blog post

No-Stakes Testing

By Patrick Murphy

March 18, California’s schools will pilot a new type of standardized test for students in grades three through eight and grade eleven.

Report

Are California’s Schools Ready for Online Testing and Learning?

By Niu Gao

In addition to the Common Core State Standards (CCSS), California is implementing a new, online assessment system: the California Assessment of Student Performance and Progress (CAASPP). Field tests were conducted last spring and the system is being rolled out this year, amid concerns about whether schools are technologically prepared. Using survey data from the California Educational Technology Professionals Association (CETPA), this report examines school districts’ technology infrastructure and assesses their readiness for online testing. Three findings emerge. First, school districts express confidence in the quantity and quality of their hardware and network capabilities but remain concerned about software and training of instructional and IT staff. Second, there is sizable variation in readiness across districts, linked mainly to student enrollment and district expenditure levels. Third, a clear majority of the state’s onetime CCSS Implementation Fund is going into non-technology spending such as instructional materials and teacher training. Regardless of their current readiness, districts will need targeted and ongoing support to upgrade and maintain their technology infrastructure. In the longer term, virtually all schools will need to upgrade their technology infrastructure in order to adopt and benefit from digital learning.

blog post

The Virus Detectives: Tracking COVID-19 in Bay Area Wastewater

By Lori Pottinger

Public health officials are struggling to keep up with testing and monitoring of COVID-19. Wastewater can provide a window into outbreaks. We talked to Eileen White of EBMUD about the agency’s role in tracking the spread of the virus.

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