Keynote speakers, from a legislator to an academician, to a business
owner, share a variety of messages...
Senator Dodd: Improving the Competitiveness
of America’s Workforce
Calling
the United States a leader in the development of technology, Senator
Christopher Dodd (D-CT) cautioned attendees at the fourth annual ATP
Conference that the U.S. will not remain so unless it ensures that the next
generation of Americans has the education and the skills needed to compete
not only in the U.S. workplace, but in the global economy as well.
And he called upon test publishers to insure that their assessments work to
assess accurately these skills.
In his address, Dodd noted, "many public schools are failing and many
individuals are unemployed because they lack the skills for the new
economy." He pointed out that jobs once open to an individual with less than
a high school diploma have become technologically advanced. "The UPS
delivery man shows up at the front door carrying a clipboard equipped with
more technology
than we used to put a man on the moon," he quipped. On a serious note he
added, "we (policy makers and citizens) bear a collective
responsibility to insure that everyone has an opportunity for success."
Dodd praised the No Child Left Behind Act signed into law by President
Bush last year, but at the same time cautioned that "testing, in and of
itself, is not an educational policy." He likened excessive testing in
schools to "taking the temperature of a sick person over and over again"
which, he said is not going to make them better. "I wish I could say
that the federal government is poised to provide a better education -- but
millions of children face the possibility of being left behind. That
is the reality." Dodd noted.
Dodd urged Americans to reflect on the federal government’s strong history
of support for public education dating back to the Civil War. He noted that
it was during that time of national strife, that legislation was passed
putting land aside for the purpose of building public schools. "During some
of the most critical moments in history, leaders recognized that
education was crucial," Dodd said. He went on to liken those days of
past strife with today’s world situation. "We are now in the midst of a war
on terrorism, our
economy is in a turn down, state budget deficits exceed millions of dollars,
and there is a great temptation is to cut back on public schools," he
stated.
Dodd was critical of private and parochial education which he said, is not
the answer, "The thought that we can walk away from our public education
obligation is ludicrous. We can’t shut down failing schools on the
assumption that there is a nice little parochial school down the road that
is going to fill in the gap."
At the same time Dodd admitted that public education in the U.S. isn’t
equal. "There are," he said, "tremendous disparities." He noted that in his
home state of Connecticut, Hartford is the poorest city in America, while
the state of Connecticut is one of the most affluent. And the
difference in educational opportunity is a stark 15 minutes apart. He
reported that 36-percent of the inner city teachers in Hartford are not
certified. And yet quality education is available in outlying areas.
Dodd was also critical of the state of adult education in the U.S. and
of the administration’s budget which he said cut $622 million for job
training programs. "The most successful businesses are those that understand
that education is a lifelong endeavor," he said.
Among his solutions to these problems Dodd called for increased emphasis on
a public private partnership with corporate America. "I can’t see that we
can continue to depend on property taxes and think that equal opportunity is
going to be afforded. We need more participation from the corporate
sector," he stated. And as for test publishers, Dodd said the
challenge would be to create assessments that accurately report the state of
affairs of education in the United States today.
"We’re all in this together -- this is a challenging time for all of us.
Events overseas are adding additional pressures. But if we need to make the
proper investments in our educational system -- not just elementary and
secondary -- but all the way up to job training," he concluded.
Randy Bennett: Inexorable and
Inevitable: The Continuing Story of Technology and Assessment
"The
advance of technology is inexorable and therefore the use of technology in
assessment is inevitable... and we (test publishers) must keep pace."
-- That is the message Randy Bennett, Ph.D., distinguished presidential
appointee, Educational Testing Service ("ETS") brought to attendees of the
ATP conference.
Bennett, whose keynote address opened the second day of the conference,
outlined the state of technology education taking root across America. He
reported that 35 states now have virtual universities to deliver or promote
distance learning and that student enrollments at some online institutions
have already reached traditional on-campus levels. He reported that as of
Sept. 2001, 86-percent of students between 18 and 24 years of
age are using a computer in school and that most college students (
73-percent) say they use the internet more than the library for
research. Bennett noted that at the kindergarten through grade12 level, at
least 14 states have established virtual high schools and 90-percent of
Kindergarten through grade 12 teachers report using the internet as a
teaching resource. He said that 75-percent of students ages five
through nine years of age, and 85-percent of students 10 through 17 years of
age use a computer in school. He also reported that 26 states require
technology training for teacher licensure.
And in the most recent proof of the advancing status of technology in
education, Bennett noted that the No Child Left Behind Act seeks to
explicitly improve student achievement through the use of technology.
But advancements, Bennett cautioned, do not come without issues and
challenges. "e-learning has (to-date) no strong research base to support its
effectiveness," he said. And he pointed out that many distance
learning companies have failed. " The dot com crisis," he reported, "hit
education too." But perhaps the greatest barrier to innovative
teaching, Bennett said, is that today’s assessments continue to measure
yesterday’s goals. And, he added, "they continue to use yesterday’s paper
and pencil technology to do it."
Bennett reported that several states are actively working to switch to
computer technology in assessments. "But no matter how the issue is looked
at, technology assessments are higher cost than paper and pencil," Bennett
said. He added that the high cost of implementing the No Child Left
Behind Act at the same time that states are dealing with large
deficits makes technology assessments prohibitive for most.
Another challenge, noted Bennett, is that time-lines for the No Child Left
Behind Act are extremely ambitious. "By 2005-06 states must be able to
assess students in reading and math on an annual basis. This is
ambitious just for pencil and paper," he said.
In addition to cost, Bennett listed a number of other challenges including
measurement and fairness issues, comparability across delivery modes,
comparability across platforms, comparability across students with respect
to standards and issues related to security.
Another area in which schools are finding challenge is in equipment software
and network dependability. "Ongoing maintenance and troubleshooting are an
issue for schools," Bennett reported.
But despite these seemingly daunting issues, Bennett predicted that the
forward progression of technology in education will, in fact, be spurred by
the same catalysts that offer the most challenge. "The No Child Left Behind
Act demands yearly progress or else," Bennett said. Thus, he
conjectured, school officials are going to need to know how students are
doing at the start of the school year and throughout the year. "Computer
assessment can give immediate results as well as give benchmark and
formative information," he said.
Bennett noted what he felt were "trends to watch." He included on this
list: inexpensive, wireless devices, more powerful delivery of
technologies, more powerful automated scoring technologies, more informative
reporting technologies, as well as the emergence of a science of assessment
design.
On a conclusionary note, Bennett cautioned those in the testing field
that delivering traditional tests electronically must only be a beginning.
"If we’re not careful we might just put into place the ability to make bad
tests faster and better," he said. In the pursuit of good tests and
good testing practices Bennett concluded, "we (test developers) must be
inexorable."
Charlie Wonderlic: So What About
Technology?
"We
ARE test publishers,"-- that was the final emphatic statement made by
Charlie Wonderlic, president of Wonderlic Inc., as he wrapped up both his
keynote address and the 2003 ATP conference with a humorous poem he authored
for the occasion. In it he summarized the struggle of his, and other test
publishing companies, as they attempt to keep pace in the fast lane of
technology, while at the same time retaining their identity as quality test
publishers.
Prior to reciting his poem, Wonderlic reflected on his own journey into the
industry of test publishing as well as that of his family’s business.
Wonderlic completed his formal education in the mid-80s, graduating with
what he said was one clear conviction, "I didn’t want to go into the family
business." Testing, he explained wasn’t really "hot" at the time and sales
were low. The company, founded by his grandfather, brought in about
400k annually. Nevertheless, Wonderlic gave the business a try and
within 3 years was able to triple sales to 1.2 million. "And I didn’t
know what I was doing!" he quipped. Wonderlic attributed much of the
success to the introduction of new marketing techniques and the growing
popularity of testing. Ten years later, he said, Wonderlic, Inc. was
bringing in nine million in annual sales. Reflecting on his past
success and the success of the industry, Wonderlic advised both those
entering the testing industry for the first time, as well as those with
experience, to make sure they remain open to change. "Be careful not to
build a box around what you do. Explore new ways - (utilize) customer
surveys, experiment, diversify offerings," he said.
Wonderlic noted that the industry had weathered change in the past. He
said the big issues of the ‘60s and ‘70s were civil rights, and that the
80s, were characterized by recession. "We have a long legacy that we should
be very proud of," he said.
At present, Wonderlic said, as a company and as an industry, they are being
presented with challenges - some new, some that have been faced before.
"We are in the middle of a recession. Our sales have gone down and in
some cases significantly enough that we’ve had to take severe actions that
we’ve never had to take before such as laying off people." He noted
that as a company they are retrenching. "We’re focusing on operating
expenses and on making sure we survive."
But Wonderlic also noted that retrenchment is not a substitute for strategic
planning. "Retrenchment will buy us time, but not a future." And the future
he admitted is daunting. " All I can count on today is that everything is
changing. I’m not sure I have the time, the intellect and the
resources to keep up with it... any consumer can get on the internet and
find out in two clicks what (products) are out there, what (they) cost and
what their options are. Anyone who prices their product too high for the
value is going to be gone," he said.
But at the same time Wonderlic echoed the optimism that has brought his
company as far as it has, "A wonderful opportunity has happened!" he
exclaimed. And the task for test publishers in the new millennium will
be, "to figure out how to leverage the internet."
Wonderlic said that as a business owner the only decision left was whether
they would insource their technology or outsource it. But either way,
they would seek to leverage it, "Technology and innovation are not merely an
option anymore, they’re a prerequisite to our future."
ATP FOCUS ON...
This year’s winner of the ATP Career Achievement
Award: Dr. Ronald Hambleton
Research,
and lots of it, is what Ronald Hambleton, this year’s recipient of the ATP
Career Achievement Award in Computer-Based Testing, prescribed for the
testing industry. "Lets do the research and then move forward with
assessment innovations based on research findings - to do anything other
would be a denial of all that we have learned about constructing valid
assessments," he said.
And if anyone knows what it takes to construct valid assessment , it is Dr.
Hambleton who, as distinguished professor and chairperson of the Research
and Evaluation Methods Program and co-director of the Center for Educational
Assessment at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, has spent 37 years
in the area of psychometrics.
Hambleton, upon accepting this year’s Career Achievement award, outlined his
concerns and cautions for the testing industry. He noted that although
his little lap top has more (technological) power than the entire University
of Ohio had with 56,000 students in 1966 -- test developers still don’t have
all the answers when it comes to accurate and valid assessment. "I am
suspicious of any company that says ‘We’re the one who measure what people
know with absolute certainty’ or use slogans such as ‘The company with all
the skills to get it done brilliantly’," he said.
Hambleton went on to describe several areas where testing still struggles
with major misunderstandings. He said that despite the burgeoning area
of international testing, test developers are still struggling with the best
methods to properly translate tests into numerous languages without losing
validity in the process "There are major misunderstandings about the
difficulties of translating and adapting exams from one language to
another," he noted as he gave several examples. He said the American
phrase "out of sight, out mind" translated into French comes out as
"invisible, insane." In another example he said American and Finnish
students were both asked if the words pessimistic and sanguine were similar
in meaning. But because the re was no equivalent for sanguine in
Finland, Finnish students were given an obvious opposite alternative and
wound up outscoring American students 2 to 1.
Such problems occur, said Hambleton, when the assumption is made that any
translator is qualified to translate exams and that only one type of
translation process is required. "(Test developers) need to use
forward and backward designs to review tests and compile empirical evidence
to address construct, method and item bias...that and hire qualified
translators," Hambleton said.
Hambleton said that despite advances in modeling of test data, questions
remain regarding model choice (both in fit and practicality) and calibration
of items.
In the area of item format, Hambleton noted that today there is perhaps lots
of hype, but insufficient research with regard to cost/benefit analysis and
other concerns. " (There is) lots of sizzle here with
simulations, virtual reality, push back features, and performance tests...
being able to put a medical student in a pair of gloves and feel organs ,
some hard, some squishy... But if you can only get a few questions and
answers... within 15 minutes -- it’ll never hold up in court," Hambleton
noted.
Hambleton noted that test security, always an issue within the testing
industry, is now a major concern, especially in light of the sheer numbers
of items that are required for valid computer based testing, "It only takes
one person to put that item on the Internet and share it with the world," he
said.
And finally Score Reporting. "How can reports be made more understandable
and more informative to candidates and users?" Hambleton gave the example
that a large percentage of the population does not understand the
scoring of a simple IQ tests. "You’d be shocked to know how many people
don’t know the difference between a percent or a percentile and how may
people actually believe that 70 on an IQ test is passing and 100 is
perfect!" Hambleton said. We have a real job here to communicate the meaning
of the numbers. In conclusion, Hambleton gave a pitch for one of
his favorite topics the full employment of psychometricians. And he also
noted that computers and measurement technology hold great promise, but cost
analysis and research must not be taken lightly.
Editor’s Note: Professor Hambleton's research has focused in recent
years on several topics of interest to ATP -- computer-based test designs,
setting performance standards on credentialing exams, translating
credentialing exams for uses in multiple languages and cultures,
applications of item response theory, and test score reporting.
Professor Hambleton is an author of several texts including
Fundamentals of Item Response Theory and Item Response Theory:
Principles and Applications, as well as having served as a
Past-President of the National Council on Measurement in Education, Division
5 of the American Psychological Association, the International Test
Commission, and Division 2 of the International Association of Applied
Psychology.
Association Notebook
ATP Welcomes as Members...BrainCore.net, LLC, Institute of Social
Psychology, Linux Professional Institute, and Symantec.
Next Board Meeting... October 2 & 3, at The Sagamore, Bolton Landing,
New York. Members can have business placed on the agenda by emailing
the ATP Board of Directors c/o LScheibatATP@aol.com
Presentation Papers Available on the ATP Website...conference
attendees can download presentation papers from the ATP conference held
February 24-26, 2003 at www.testpublishers.org. Non-attendees can purchase a
password to download the papers. For details, go to www.testpublishers.org.
Next ATP Conference... The 2004 ATP Conference will be held February
2-4, at the Renaissance Esmeralda Resort in Indian Wells, CA (near Palm
Springs.)
ATP hosts successful conference for
more than 500 attendees, representing 20 countries

Walter Lin Wang (second from right), COO of the
American Testing Authority (ATA) and his staff traveled from Beijing, China
to exhibit as a platinum sponsor and to attend the ATP conference in Amelia
Island, FL
ATP Gratefully Acknowledges its sponsors for the 2003 Conference
Technology in Testing: Application and Innovation
PLATINUM: ACT, Inc. • American Testing Authority, Inc. • The Chauncey Group
International • Educational Testing Service ("ETS") • Galton Technologies,
Inc. • Integral 7, Inc. • Pearson Professional Testing • Prometric, a part
of the Thomson Corporation •Promissor, Inc. • Questionmark Corporation •
TestOut Corporation
GOLD: Applied Measurement Professionals, Inc. ("AMP") • BrainCore.Net,
LLC • Buros Center for Testing • Castle Worldwide • Citigate Global
Intelligence & Security • i-asses.com • Performance Assessment Network
("PAN") • Professional Credential Services, Inc. • Vantage Learning
SILVER: The College Board • The Donath Group • Examsoft • LaserGrade
ATP Also thanks Hewlett Packard for its donation of computers.
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Conference Co-Chairs Bill Cramer (left) of Chauncey International and Don
Wagner (right) of Pearson VUE greeted convention attendees. |
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Division leaders, such as Linda Waters of Chauncey International (center)
Chair of the ATP Certification Division, held divisional meeting at
the conference at which they were able to meet face- to-face with members,
set goals and discuss strategies for the coming months. |
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Hewlett Packard, an ATP member, donated a bank of computers for
attendees to use so that they could keep up on email and have access to the
internet while attending the conference. |
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ATP had 11 Platinum sponsors and 9 Gold sponsors who exhibited at
the conference |
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Poster Sessions were an added feature to this year’s conference, allowing
attendees to get a sampling of a variety of presentations. |
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Patty Adair, wife of the late Dr. Jim Adair, was on hand to receive a
memorial plaque on behalf of her husband’s work and to launch a new memorial
session on Performance Assessment |
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Carol Watson, ATP Chair-elect announced that next year’s conference
will be held at the Renaissance Esmeralda Resort in Indian Wells, CA,
February 2-4, 2004 |
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The weather in Amelia Island cooperated and workshop attendees were able
to enjoy a poolside luncheon on the first day of the conference |
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