A Critical Review of 'Getting Tough? The Impact of High School Graduation Exams'

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Bibliographic Details
Title: A Critical Review of 'Getting Tough? The Impact of High School Graduation Exams'
Language: English
Authors: Phelps, Richard P. (ORCID 0000-0003-4008-087X)
Source: Online Submission. 2020 16:1-28.
Peer Reviewed: Y
Page Count: 28
Publication Date: 2020
Document Type: Journal Articles
Reports - Evaluative
Education Level: High Schools
Secondary Education
Descriptors: High School Students, Exit Examinations, Academic Achievement, Minimum Competencies, Minimum Competency Testing, Classification, Achievement Gains, Testing Problems, Accountability, Achievement Tests, Standardized Tests, Basic Skills, Norm Referenced Tests, Scores, High Stakes Tests, Longitudinal Studies
Geographic Terms: Ohio, Georgia, New Jersey, North Carolina
Assessment and Survey Identifiers: California Achievement Tests, Comprehensive Tests of Basic Skills, Metropolitan Achievement Tests, Otis Lennon School Ability Test, Stanford Achievement Tests, National Education Longitudinal Study of 1988 (NCES)
Abstract: This review critiques the highly-praised and influential 2001 study, "Getting Tough? The Impact of High School Graduation Exams," which concluded that "minimum competency," or high school "graduation exams," had no effect on student achievement. The review compares the test classifications of "Getting Tough?" to those in two contemporaneous federal government testing program surveys. The comparison suggests that "Getting Tough?" mis-classified several tests and, at the same time, failed to control for several factors highly correlated with test performance and student achievement gains, such as stakes, content, student effort, administration methods, security protocols, and the effect of other tests administered around the same time period. The influence of "Getting Tough?" went far beyond its own content, however, because the author and others asserted a methodological superiority over all previous scholarly work on the topic. Eventually, the number of states administering high school graduation exams would diminish from a large majority of them at the turn of the millennium to less than ten now.
Abstractor: As Provided
Entry Date: 2023
Access URL: https://nonpartisaneducation.org/Review/Reviews/v16n4.htm
Accession Number: ED625162
Database: ERIC
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