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Norm-referenced cognitive and achievement scores as predictors of state-wide high-stakes test scores with students referred for special education / High-stakes testing

Relatively recent federal education initiatives, such as No Child Left Behind (NCLB;
2001), have focused on school accountability for student achievement including achievement of
traditionally at-risk populations, such as students in special education, students from low-income
or high poverty areas, and students who speak English as a new second language. Additionally,
these federal initiatives also mandate that all students take the same test measuring grade level
standards despite research that has demonstrated that students from at-risk populations are
sometimes at a disadvantage on high-stakes tests. Furthermore, initiatives such as NCLB are
often at odds with other education initiatives such as IDEA, which states that students in special
education should be tested at their respective level. Therefore, the current study proposed to
examine the relationship between Cattell-Horn-Carroll cognitive abilities and performance on a
state-wide high-stakes achievement test. There currently are no studies examining such a
relationship.
This study used Multivariate Regression Analysis, in order to investigate the relationship
between CHC cognitive and achievement abilities and performance on a state-wide high-stakes
achievement test, namely the ISTEP+, with 45 children who had been referred for a psychoeducational evaluation to determine special education eligibility and who had also taken
the ISTEP+. No statistically significant result was found between the WJ-III-COG broad CHC
abilities and performance on the English/Language Arts and Math performance of the ISTEP+.
Furthermore, no statistically significant result was found between the WJ-III-ACH and Math
performance on the ISTEP+. However, a statistically significant result was found between the
WJ-III-ACH Passage Comprehension subtest and the English/Language Arts portion of the
ISTEP+. The results indicated that students who had higher scores on the Passage
Comprehension subtest also had higher scores on the English/Language Arts portion of the
ISTEP+.
The current study took a step forward in the area of the relationship between CHC and
academic achievement, particularly state-mandated high-stakes testing given the dearth of
research in this area. Given the data from the current study indicating a statistically significant
relationship between Passage Comprehension and English/Language Arts from the ISTEP+, the
current study has practical implications for school psychologists, especially when school
psychologists are being asked to make predictions regarding a student’s academic achievement.
Results of the current study might help elucidate reading problems and recommended
interventions for those reading problems. / Department of Educational Psychology

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:BSU/oai:cardinalscholar.bsu.edu:123456789/197411
Date20 July 2013
CreatorsTrinkle, James M., II
ContributorsDavis, Andrew S.
Source SetsBall State University
Detected LanguageEnglish

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