District prepares for new exit exam
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Danette Goulet
NEWPORT-MESA -- Students currently in the eighth grade will be the first
high school class required to pass a new state-mandated exit exam.
The new test will be piloted in September by students in the class of
2004, who will have to pass the test by their senior year in order to
graduate.
The tests in place are minimal proficiency tests, whereas the new exams
will be based on higher standards, said Peggy Anatol, director of
curriculum and assessment for Newport-Mesa Unified School District.
“Before, it was adding, subtracting, multiplying and dividing,” Anatol
said. “Now it will be algebra, geometry, statistics and probability based
on the California standards. Now it’s a higher bar.”
The exit exam, which is in the process of being written by a 52-member
team of teachers, professors and business people, will contain a language
arts and a mathematics section, Anatol said.
The exam is the result of Senate Bill 2 authored by Sen. Jack O’Connell
(D-San Luis Obispo), which called for education accountability and a high
school exit examination. After sailing through the Legislature, the bill
was signed by Gov. Gray Davis on March 29. The purpose of the legislation
was to make the schools and students accountable for achieving the
rigorous state standards.
The Legislature found that local proficiency standards were at varying
levels, often set below a high school level and were not consistent with
state standards as set by the state Department of Education.
Beginning in the 2000-2001 school year, students in the ninth grade will
be given the opportunity to take the exam. During the following school
year, students in the 10th grade must take the exam and may continue to
take it each year until they pass each section.
As future students enter the ninth grade, they will be able to take the
exam each year in order to pass all the sections as they learn the
subject matter, Anatol said.
Once the new test has been completed and presented to schools throughout
the state, the district intends to recommend the current test no longer
be given, said Supt. Robert Barbot.
By 2004, any student who has not passed the high school exit exam will
not receive a diploma.
But Anatol said she believes there should be some room to adapt the tests
to students with special needs.
“There will have to be some form of default clause for students found to
be highly proficient, but who can’t pass the test,” she said.
Although high schools are not yet feeling the crunch of the new exam,
several have already made changes to align the curriculum with state
standards.
Before worrying about the increased difficulty of the new tests, Corona
del Mar High School officials are waiting to see how it compares to
existing tests.
“I’m not overly concerned yet,” said Principal Don Martin. “When it
becomes a reality, then we’ll take a look at matching what we’re doing
with what they are giving.”
He added that students are, for the most part, not aware of what is
coming.
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