Challenges in Assessing for Postsecondary Readiness

Adult secondary education learners approach the goal of college-level postsecondary education through three assessment gateways: (a) measures of adult education program learning gains, (b) a high-school equivalency exam, and (c) college placement tests. On the surface, the assessments in this sequen...

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Veröffentlicht in:National Commission on Adult Literacy 2007
Hauptverfasser: Mellard, Daryl F, Anderson, Gretchen
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description Adult secondary education learners approach the goal of college-level postsecondary education through three assessment gateways: (a) measures of adult education program learning gains, (b) a high-school equivalency exam, and (c) college placement tests. On the surface, the assessments in this sequence might appear to work in concert and point to the same goal. However, although not at cross-purposes, the assessments are not well aligned with one another. Each assessment is specifically designed and reliably constructed to measure skills and traits particular to its purpose. Expecting that performance on one assessment will predict a similar level of performance on an assessment with a different purpose is inappropriate. Thus, for adult education programs, these multiple assessments are less an issue of one test being more reliable than another; they are a validity issue--that is, "do the test scores represent what is intended?" This Policy Brief examines the major assessments in use today to measure adult learning gains and determine student placements--e.g., BEST, CASAS, TABE, COMPASS, ASSET, and ACCUPLACER in terms of their use and issues of alignment. Special attention is given to the GED as it relates to postsecondary readiness, and to issues of alignment between the skills needed to pass the GED and those needed for placement in a non-remediated college curriculum. The authors offer several recommendations to resolve the problems and challenges identified. (Contains 8 tables.)
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On the surface, the assessments in this sequence might appear to work in concert and point to the same goal. However, although not at cross-purposes, the assessments are not well aligned with one another. Each assessment is specifically designed and reliably constructed to measure skills and traits particular to its purpose. Expecting that performance on one assessment will predict a similar level of performance on an assessment with a different purpose is inappropriate. Thus, for adult education programs, these multiple assessments are less an issue of one test being more reliable than another; they are a validity issue--that is, "do the test scores represent what is intended?" This Policy Brief examines the major assessments in use today to measure adult learning gains and determine student placements--e.g., BEST, CASAS, TABE, COMPASS, ASSET, and ACCUPLACER in terms of their use and issues of alignment. Special attention is given to the GED as it relates to postsecondary readiness, and to issues of alignment between the skills needed to pass the GED and those needed for placement in a non-remediated college curriculum. The authors offer several recommendations to resolve the problems and challenges identified. 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Special attention is given to the GED as it relates to postsecondary readiness, and to issues of alignment between the skills needed to pass the GED and those needed for placement in a non-remediated college curriculum. The authors offer several recommendations to resolve the problems and challenges identified. 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subjects Adult Basic Education
Adult Education
Adult Learning
Basic Skills
College Bound Students
College Curriculum
College Entrance Examinations
College Preparation
Educational Policy
English (Second Language)
General Educational Development Tests
High School Equivalency Programs
Language Proficiency
Postsecondary Education
Psychometrics
School Readiness
Secondary Education
Student Evaluation
Student Placement
Test of Adult Basic Education
Test Validity
title Challenges in Assessing for Postsecondary Readiness
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