National Standards in reading, writing and mathematics for students in Years 1-8 are now in their third year of implementation, and Fairfax Media recently published data facilitating the comparison of schools on the performance of their students against the standards. The Ministry of Education has also published National Standards data.
There are two arguments often voiced by politicians and media commentators in favour of the publication of these kinds of data. The first is that the publication of National Standards data is a legitimate mechanism to hold schools accountable to the taxpayers who fund them and the parents whose children attend them. The second is that comparative data can assist parents to make informed choices about the schools in which to enrol their children.
The New Zealand Assessment Academy, a group of leading researchers in educational assessment and measurement, does not agree with either of these arguments. While we acknowledge that accountability is important, we do not believe that the data published by Fairfax will serve accountability, either by the way they presented the data or by the conclusions which are likely to be drawn from them.
Neither, at this stage, do we support the publication of National Standards data by the Ministry of Education. We believe that what might seem valuable information about the performance of schools in fact runs a serious risk of misinforming the public and, in some cases, of unfairly tarnishing schools' reputations.
If data are to be used for accountability purposes they must have a high degree of integrity and reliability. At present, there is no evidence that this is so.