Coady says he has reservations about MCAS. What he wants, he says, is an annual assessment so student performance can be monitored year-to-year, rather than waiting for MCAS scores at grades 4, 8 and 10.
But he supports the test--and as principal he was serious about getting students to take it.
When three eighth-graders suggested they might boycott the test, Coady called the students and their parents into his office.
"I told them we take great pride in taking the MCAS and doing well," he says. "This is an important test for us, because as we do well on it....We continue to attract parents."
All three students took the test.
On the Horizon
This spring for the first time, a diploma will be on the line for sophomores taking MCAS. And next year, the eighth-graders taking the test will have taken it as fourth-graders--so their performance can be compared directly.
Read more in News
Schor To Leave Harvard For B.C.Recommended Articles
-
MCAS Tests At Center of DebateSince the 1996 debut of the Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment Test (MCAS), a student test used as a statistical marker of
-
Cambridge Schools Shine On Third-Grade Iowa TestsAfter two years of dismal student scores on statewide standardized tests, Cambridge school officials finally have something to cheer about.
-
Test Scores Should Not Deny DiplomasBarring a major transformation in the abilities of Massachusetts high school students over the next three years, more than a
-
LettersConsequences, Not Learning, Shape Test Scores To the editors: David M. DeBartolo's article about the Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System ("Test
-
Parents Protest, Students Boycott as MCAS Rolls OnMCAS is everywhere. The Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System is a battery of exams in language arts, social studies, math and
-
City's MCAS Scores Plunge After BoycottScores on last spring's MCAS tests precipitously declined in Cambridge as district-wide scores felt the impact of the numerous students