CHARLESTON —
Students across West Virginia are being prepared for a new standardized test that will replace the state’s Westest.
Students will begin taking the Smarter Balanced Assessment test during the 2014-2015 school year. The test, adopted by West Virginia and 45 other states, is based on the national Common Core standards.
“Westest is just a West Virginia-based test. Smarter Balanced is being developed by a consortium of 26 states. This should assure parents that West Virginia is implementing an equal curriculum,” said Robert Hull, associate superintendent for the state Department of Education’s Division of Teaching and Learning. “Now, we will be able to measure how our students compare to other states much easier.”
Kindergarten and first-grade classes already are using the Next Generation Content Standards and Objectives for math and reading/language arts. The standards are being implemented in second-grade classes, and all grades will use them by the fall of 2014.
Standards for other subjects are still being developed. In the interim, the Westest will be used for science and social studies, Hull told the Charleston Gazette.
“The content is much more rigorous in that students don’t just need to know all of the basic skills, but instead need to be able to apply those skills. It’s not just, ‘Do you know it or not?”’ Hull said. “We used to say our curriculum was an inch deep and a mile wide, but it’s no longer about that. It’s about knowing fewer, more strategic things at a much deeper level. Students actually have to take the information and do something with it — not just regurgitate it back.”
The new test also is more individualized than the Westest because it is taken on a computer.
“Right now, everyone has a pencil and paper and they’re asked the same question. The new test is adaptive, which means students will be taken to different levels when they answer questions. If they get the answer right, they will receive a more advanced question,” Hull said.
Administering the test will require a computer capable of producing it in every classroom in every school. Hull said that is a hurdle but he is confident that the state will be ready.
Students are not the only ones being prepared for the new test. Teachers will receive training through the Regional Education Service Agencies.
“Every single classroom has to be touched because it’s changing the entire curriculum,” he said. “You can’t just flip a switch.”
Earlier this month, Crystal Godbey, Kanawha County Schools assistant superintendent for instruction, told the county Board of Education that the lessons are understandable and align with college and career expectations. But she said a lack of prerequisite skills created issues with student pacing and achievement gaps.
West Virginia
West Virginia educators prepare for new standardized test in 2014-15
- West Virginia
-
-
W.Va. House elects Miley as new speaker
West Virginia’s House of Delegates elected Tim Miley as its new speaker Tuesday — though only after one of his fellow Democrats crossed party lines to vote for the GOP nominee.
-
Morrisey to assess abortion regulations
West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey asked the state’s two legal abortion clinics on Monday to answer a series of questions about their practices and their policies for ensuring patient safety as he investigates whether any regulatory changes are needed.
-
Education standards facing backlash
West Virginia is sticking with new standards for math, reading and writing in public schools, but faces opposition fueled by the tea party movement, which believes the benchmarks are part of an attempted federal takeover of local education authority.
-
W.Va. set to celebrate 150th birthday
When Chelsea Ruby became executive director of the West Virginia Sesquicentennial Commission a few years ago, her hope was to set up some type of ceremony in Charleston to mark the state’s 150th birthday.
-
Numerous events to mark state’s 150th birthday
A look at some free events surrounding West Virginia’s 150th birthday celebration in the coming week. For a complete list, visit www.wv150.com :
Sunday: -
Regional bank aims to grow Appalachian economy
Mike Hurley had a great opportunity: He could multiply sales and staff by converting his metal-stamping business from one that made brackets for the automotive industry into a top-tier supplier of satellite dishes to DirecTV.
-
Senators ask network to ban kids’ junk food ads
Four U.S. senators are calling on children’s cable network Nickelodeon to ban ads targeted at children that promote and sell junk food and sugar.
-
NRA going after Manchin for gun stance
After years of showering U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin with stellar ratings and campaign endorsements, the National Rifle Association targeted the West Virginia Democrat with a TV ad launched Wednesday over his continuing push for broader gun buyer background checks.
-
Active-shooter drills advised for state schools
Every West Virginia school should practice responding to a gunman’s attack at least annually, as part of a plan to guard against violence, the top prosecutor for the state’s southern federal court district said Tuesday.
-
Woman sues W.Va. clinic over abortion procedure
A West Virginia woman is suing a doctor who she claims performed an abortion procedure on her, even though she asked him to stop because she was having severe pain.
- More West Virginia Headlines
-
W.Va. House elects Miley as new speaker



