After announcing Indiana’s students will take a new standardized test this spring, state superintendent Glenda Ritz suggested the state should suspend A-F grades for schools because most students will perform poorly on the new test.
Gov. Mike Pence does not support that plan. In a letter to U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan released Friday, he said the state will not freeze accountability like Ritz suggested.
“We are confident that our state can implement the more rigorous standards while also accounting for any temporary impact on testing scores in a way that does not unfairly affect students, teachers and schools,” Pence wrote.
Pence, Ritz and members of the Indiana Department of Education are working with federal education officials to keep the state’s No Child Left Behind waiver. One of the conditions to keep the waiver is having an assessment that matches academic standards used by the state, which is why students will see a new test next spring.
The DOE will submit proof of this matching assessment to the feds by June 30.