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A new study shows health disparities cost Texas billions of dollars; Senate rejects impeachment articles against Mayorkas, ending trial against Cabinet secretary; Iowa cuts historical rural school groups.

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The Senate dismisses the Mayorkas impeachment. Maryland Lawmakers fail to increase voting access. Texas Democrats call for better Black maternal health. And polling confirms strong support for access to reproductive care, including abortion.

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Rural Wyoming needs more vocational teachers to sustain its workforce pipeline, Ohio environmental advocates fear harm from a proposal to open 40-thousand forest acres to fracking and rural communities build bike trail systems to promote nature, boost the economy.

Committee “Willing To Look At Opening Up Rigid SOL Testing”

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Tuesday, September 2, 2014   

RICHMOND, Va. - A member of the Standards of Learning Innovation Committee says Virginia should open up how it measures student progress. It's still early in the committee's two-year process, but a teacher in the group is willing to consider adding a writing component or other ways to more broadly measure learning.

Karen Cross, a seventh-grade civics teacher at Bristol Public School, says the current test is too rigid to capture individual growth or student poverty.

"There are so many other ways to assess student learning," Cross says. "The real world is not made up of standardized tests and we're doing a disservice to our students."

Along with mandating the innovation committee, the legislature eliminated five Standard of Learning tests last session. Supporters of the test say it's key to holding students and schools accountable. Cross is all for accountability, but says there are better ways to reach it.

One problem is the huge gap between the state's rich and poor schools. Some northern Virginia counties are among the wealthiest in the country. But Cross says homeless students would go hungry without free meals at school.

"We have a fifth-grade class that only has two students that started in the school, the rest transferred in," Cross says. "Our current SOL testing is an excellent indicator of poverty."

Cross describes having a single, crucial test on just one day in the spring as very punitive towards poor and struggling students. She says it often doesn't show their real growth and learning.

Cross gives the example of a struggling student who scores 370 on the reading test one year.

"That child pulls that score up the next year to 395, that is significant growth," she says. "Yet that still shows as a failure for that child, for that school and for that school division."

Cross says teachers use tests to find out what students don't know, but says the SOL serves no purpose in the classroom.

"Teachers never get to see the test," she says. "We don't get to see what the students actually missed, we don't see where the students struggled. We can't use the test then to improve learning for our students."



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