Appendix A:
TESTING CODE OF ETHICS FOR NORTH CAROLINA TESTING PERSONNEL, TEACHERS AND
SCHOOL ADMINISTRATORS
(1st Edition)
INTRODUCTION
The Testing Code of Ethics addresses the special concerns that have
surfaced in recent years regarding appropriate professional practices within the
Statewide Testing Program. This document is intended to serve as a general
guide for experienced as well as new testing personnel, teachers, and school
administrators. These standards are consistent with the ethics practiced by the
education profession and considered a part of functions reviewed in the
performance appraisal instruments for public school employees issued by the N.C.
Department of Public Instruction. More importantly, failure to adhere to this
code will result in less reliable data to use in decision making. The intention
of state uniform testing is to enable schools to extract the most reliable
information attainable. Test data that are unreliable can lead to
misunderstanding and unwise decisions about schools, programs, personnel and
students.
Testing is an integral part of the educational experience of North Carolina
students. When administered, interpreted and used properly, uniform test
results offer schools a good independent source of information. The North
Carolina Statewide Testing Program is designed to:
- help schools evaluate programs and make curricular decisions;
- provide schools with information necessary to plan instruction;
- help teacher identify strengths and weaknesses of students and offer them
a measure to chart student growth; and
- give parents an independent measure of their child's relative success in
school.
The importance of commitment and adherence to this code by those associated
with testing cannot be overstated.
The intent of this code is to enhance the awareness of school personnel
regarding proper testing procedures, and stress the unrelenting attention
necessary to provide accurate test data for decision making.
TESTING STANDARDS
Following are aspects of the North Carolina Statewide Testing Program that
are essential to fulfilling the testing mandate.
TEST SECURITY
- School personnel responsible for the testing program should develop
appropriate local policies and procedures to ensure maximum test security.
- Test materials must be stored in a secure place, preferably under lock and
key, prior to and following administration.
- Only school personnel who have a legitimate need should have access to test
materials. Test booklets or questions are not to be copied or paraphrased in
any way for any reason without permission of the test publisher.
- School personnel responsible for the testing program should be properly
instructed in test administration procedures and know the importance of strictly
following the directions as outlined by the test publisher.
- Before test administration, materials are to be carefully counted and
distributed in an orderly fashion according to instruction provided with the
test. After testing, all test booklets and answer sheets should be accounted
for and returned to a secured facility or forwarded for scoring.
- Any breach of security, loss of materials, failure to account for
materials, or other deviation from acceptable security procedures should be
reported immediately to the principal, local test coordinator and the local
school superintendent.
TEST ADMINISTRATION
- The person responsible for the school testing program must have formal
training in the area of measurement and testing. It is this person's
responsibility to instruct test administrators, proctors and others involved in
the testing program on proper test administration procedures.
- Administrators of standardized tests must rigorously follow the
administrative procedures established by the publisher. Responsibilities
include establishing a positive environment, reading the directions word for
word (without modification), and strictly adhering to time schedules. Providing
verbal and non-verbal clues, rephrasing directions, teaching items on the test
of stopping in the middle of a test to teach something unfamiliar to students is
not permitted. Any deviation from stated directions will make the sessions a
non-standard administration and may result in sessions being declared a
misadministration. Unless non-standard procedures are approved in advance, any
divergence from the directions must be documented and reported to the principal,
local test coordinator and local school superintendent.
- Students and/or parents are to be given proper notification before testing
and provided information on the purposes of a test and intended uses of the
results.
- Coaching of students on specific test content or dissemination of test
materials (including reproductions or modifications) prior to testing is not
permitted. Such procedures will make the results invalid. However, it is
desirable to teach students general test-taking skills in order to make them
aware of strategies that could enhance their performance on tests.
- Students are not to be coerced or made to feel uncomfortable about a test.
Such is likely to produce stress in some students, and may negatively influence
their performance.
- The testing environment is to be reasonably comfortable and well-lighted.
There should be minimal opportunity for distraction. All materials to be used
by students should be readable and understandable. Testing sessions must be
monitored to ensure students' comfort, as well as to maintain proper
administrative procedures.
SCORING
School personnel in charge of scoring must maintain the highest ethical
standards. They must follow the scoring directions and routinely check results
for accuracy. Scorers should be trained to recognize inappropriate or
impossible scores. All score reports must be carefully labeled and dated.
STANDARDS FOR TEACHERS AND SCHOOL ADMINISTRATORS
Teachers play an important role in preparing students for standardized
testing. As a result, student performance or reaction to testing is greatly
influenced by the perceptions of teachers. Consequently, it is crucial that
teachers display a positive attitude towards testing. Listed below are 11
practices that teachers and administrators should adhere to in fulfilling their
testing responsibilities.
- When discussing standardized tests with students or parents, teachers and
administrators have a responsibility to be factual. Personal opinions, whether
positive or negative, should be channeled to appropriate professional personnel
for review and clarification.
- Teachers and administrators are to fulfill the requirements of the Standard
Course of Study. Instructional content should not be geared solely to preparing
students to score well on standardized tests.
- Students must be encouraged to do their best and instructed not to worry if
they do not know the answer to a test question. As teachers cover the content
in the Standard Course of Study, students are expected to show their level of
mastery on standardized tests of this curriculum; however, there will always be
some test materials that will not be covered and may be unfamiliar to students.
- Students should be informed about characteristics of norm-referenced and
criterion-referenced tests, (i.e., norm-referenced tests indicate the
performance of a student relative to his/her peers; criterion-referenced tests,
on the other hand, seek to ascertain whether students have mastered particular
skills or objectives). Generally, cut-off levels, if applicable, are set by the
State Board of Education. Students scoring below the cut-off level may be
required to undergo further testing, diagnosis or instruction to better identify
weaknesses and help them reach a level of competence.
- Students are to be informed of upcoming tests, told what to expect and
given an opportunity to become familiar with the types of questions covered on
the test. However, they are not be drilled or coached on specific test content.
It is important that students receive guidance and, training in test-taking
skills and anxiety reducing techniques.
- Under no circumstances are students to be coerced or threatened with
failure if their performance is not as desired. Any perceived pressure to
increase academic performance and, therefore, raise test scores must not be
transmitted to students. One of the tenets of effective teaching is that all
students are expected to give their best on all school-related work which
includes standardized testing.
- Teachers may not attempt to raise test scores of a particular class or
cohort by excluding low scoring students or groups of students from testing.
- Scores on standardized tests must not be the sole determinant of whether a
students is to be retained or promoted. The Basic Education Program (BEP)
specifies a three-phase promotion testing program in grades, three, six, and
eight to assist students who score below the 25th national percentile for their
grade level.
- The curriculum is not be taught simply to raise test scores. The
weaknesses of students as revealed by test scores are expected to be considered
in curriculum planning.
- Test publishers must provide information on their test's strengths and
weaknesses. However, the ultimate responsibility for appropriate use and
interpretation belongs to the test users. It is important that teachers consult
with the school psychologist, testing coordinator or other personnel with
advanced training in tests and measurement for clarification of test scores.
- Access to tests must be limited, but on rare occasions a parent or
guardian who indicates a strong need to examine a test may do so in the presence
of a school representative.
REPORTING
- Test scores must not be released to students, parents, legal
representatives, teachers or the media without appropriate interpretations and
supporting guides. Materials dealing with test results should provide the
following: 1) a description of the test; (2 a description of the subject matter
covered; 3) the meaning of the scores; 4) a warning about common
misinterpretations; and 5) the intended use of scores. Special effort should be
made to avoid attaching unwarranted connotations to group IQ or grade equivalent
scores.
- School personnel who have the responsibility for disseminating test results
should have a thorough understanding of the test manual, handbooks, user's
guides and technical reports.
- Individual test scores are best presented as approximations and not as
absolutes. It is preferable to report results as a limited score range rather
than points.
- Although test construction includes reviews to eliminate or minimize test
bias, tests should be reviewed for potential bias and test results qualified if
sources of bias have affected the scores of a particular individual, gender,
group or class.
- Test scores are to be presented as one source of information about a
student or group of students and should not b used alone for placement,
referral, and other consequential decisions on the education of a student.
- When cutoff scores are used as part of a scheme to select, classify or
certify students, the method and rationale for arriving at the cutoff score must
be supported by research with documentation available for review.
INTERPRETING RESULTS
- School personnel must not attempt to interpret test data before studying
and fully understanding a test manual that includes information on 1)
administration and scoring; 2) norms and related technical features; 3)
reliability; and 4) validity. Assistance in interpretation should be sought
from the test publisher or other expert personnel if necessary.
- School personnel must be acutely aware of the limitations of test data and
not assert relationships between instructional strategies and test performance
that are unsupported by empirical evidence.
- Those interpreting test results are to be aware of ethnic and cultural
differences among students and the impact that these differences may have on
test results. The status of a student in comparison to a norm group can be
supplemented by sub-group norms for similar groups o f students. Also, equal
emphasis can be given to growth trends rather than to normative comparisons.
- Unless a means can be established and statistically supported which
controls the many factors that influence student test results, test scores
should not be used in formal teacher or principal evaluations. When test
results are used as part of teacher self-analysis, teachers and their
supervisors are expected to focus on areas of excellence, as well as areas in
need of improvement. All analyses must be done cautiously with reasonable
expectations being set as goals for students and schools. Teachers who perceive
pressure to raise students' test scores may pressure their students with
unrealistic demands, thereby creating anxiety and apprehension to the detriment
of the students' adjustment and feelings of self worth. Appropriate mechanisms
should be established for teachers and other school personnel through existing
channels to address unrealistic demands.
Task Force on Ethics in Testing 1995-96
- Ms. Mildred Bazemore, Chief Consultant, North Carolina Department of
Public Instruction
- Mr. Colby Cochran, Testing Coordinator, Rowan-Salisbury Schools
- Ms. Kathy Haehnel, Testing Coordinator, Transylvania County Schools
- Mr. Richard Haynes, Teacher Education, Western Carolina University
- Ms. Cindi Heuts, Assistant Superintendent/Curriculum, Nash-Rocky Mount
Schools
- Mr. Ron Rudd, Principal, Transylvania Public Schools
- Ms. Ellie Sanford, Testing Consultant, North Carolina Department of Public
Instruction
- Mr. Terry Smith, School Board Member, Robeson County Schools
- Ms. Doris Taylor, Testing Consultant, North Carolina Department of Public
Instruction
- Dr. Martha Ward, Director, Assessment and Evaluation, Guilford County
Schools
- Mr. Dale Weston, Testing Coordinator, Onslow County Schools