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Exit Exam Flimflam

By John Rogers, John Rogers is associate director of UCLA's Institute for Democracy, Education and Access.|January 02, 2005

The California High School Exit Exam is a house of cards that's about to collapse on 100,000 students. Beginning in 2006, no student will receive a public high school diploma without having passed that test. The state's theory behind the exam is that threatening to deny diplomas, even to students who have passed all their courses, will motivate schools to teach better and students to study harder.


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Here are some problems with this theory of magical motivation:

* There is no evidence that such threats work. The experts charged with evaluating the test point to recent (small) improvements in scores, but there is no way they can attribute these improvements to the test threat. Further, many thoughtful teachers believe that the threat distracts from real learning and can even encourage students to drop out.

* The test covers information the state says students "should" know, even though it may not have been covered in their schools. Part of the plan is that schools will identify students who need help and provide them with the extra opportunities and attention to pass the test. Surely this happens some of the time. But "remediation" is rarely a fair alternative to skilled instruction the first time.

* It's indecent to punish students for adults' failures to provide adequate opportunities to learn, yet the recently settled Williams vs. California case documents unconscionable schooling inadequacies (undertrained teachers, poor facilities, insufficient books) in schools serving primarily low-income, minority communities across California.

It may occur to you that you've heard these arguments before. Didn't we already settle this exit exam business? Sort of. Two years ago, the state was on the verge of making 2004 the "drop dead" year for passing the exam. But it became clear that educational chaos and human catastrophes were in the making. So the test penalty was postponed until 2006.

Yet structural problems still undermine learning in many California schools. For example, in Los Angeles County, 45 high schools experience at least two of these three fundamental opportunity problems:

* Serious shortages of qualified teachers (more than 20% not certified by the state).

* Overcrowded facilities that house twice as many students as the state recommends.

* Too few courses to allow all students to complete the minimum requirements for California's four-year public universities.

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