“A baseline without basis”: New report challenges the validity and utility of the proposed reception baseline assessment in England
A new report from an expert panel convened by the British
Educational Research Association (BERA) sets out the case against
the government’s proposal to use a baseline assessment test of
pupils in reception to hold schools in England to account for the
progress that pupils have made at the end of key stage 2. The panel
concludes that the government’s proposals - which will cost
upward of £10 million - are flawed, unjustified, and
wholly unfit for...Request free trial
A new report from an expert panel convened by the British Educational Research Association (BERA) sets out the case against the government’s proposal to use a baseline assessment test of pupils in reception to hold schools in England to account for the progress that pupils have made at the end of key stage 2. The panel concludes that the government’s proposals - which will cost upward of £10 million - are flawed, unjustified, and wholly unfit for purpose. They would be detrimental to children, parents, teachers, and the wider education system in England. The expert panel considered whether the evidence from the assessment literature could justify such a test being used for this purpose. They concluded that it could not. In the panel’s view the proposed baseline assessment will not lead to accurate or fair comparisons being made between schools because:
Gemma Moss, the chair of the panel and a former BERA President, said “It is both ethically and methodologically questionable to use reception baseline assessment (RBA) for school accountability. As currently proposed, RBA is likely to produce results with little predictive power and dubious validity while the assessment of very young children is hard to justify when it is not being used to support a child's learning.” The panel argues that the tests cannot be accurate or fair because
The results of the RBA will do little to help secure positive outcomes for pupils, teachers or parents in either the short or longer term. The panel comment: “The government intends to hold the reception baseline data for seven whole years with few plans for any release before the end of key stage 2. Given this, teachers and parents may rightly ask, ‘Why administer a test that doesn’t help teaching and learning?’ This may indeed stoke resentment at the costs of development and administration – estimated to be £10 million pounds - at a time of considerable budget reductions in most schools.” By contrast the panel favour “an ‘intelligent accountability’ approach. Instead of being predicated on measuring performance for its own sake, this would allow practitioners to use their professional judgement more fully in the assessment process “gathering deeper and more meaningful data that can take account of contextual factors, help to support individual pupils, and inform improvement planning both within and between schools.”
Notes to editors
For further information please see the full report (link active from Wednesday 4th July): https://www.bera.ac.uk/researchers-resources/publications/a-baseline-without-basis
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