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That's Outrageous! Caught Cheating

Cheating is becoming a problem in schools across the country ... and teachers are the culprits.

The Pressure's On

In 2005, every single fourth- and sixth-grade student at City Day Community School in Dayton, Ohio, flunked the math portion of a statewide assessment test. That landed City Day an "academic emergency" rating, meaning state intervention or even takeover. But 2006 brought a stunning turnaround: 100 percent of the school's seventh-grade class, and 59 percent of its fifth graders, passed. Same test, same kids. It seemed too good to be true—and it was.

A few months later, the Dayton Daily News reported that 44 questions on a practice test were nearly identical to the ones in the state test the kids took a week later. When proctors came in to monitor the next year's tests, scores plummeted.

Clearly there was massive cheating at City Day. But the students didn't rig the tests—the teachers did the dirty work. (The school's superintendent denied the charges but was later fired.)

Cheating among teachers has become epidemic in America's schools, with cases from New York to California, Florida to South Dakota, Tennessee to Maryland. "It's more prevalent than anyone wants to admit," says UNC-Chapel Hill professor Gregory Cizek, an expert on cheating in schools. "Teachers are paid to be role models. It sends a really destructive message to kids."

Many experts say this disgraceful behavior has surged due to the 2001 No Child Left Behind law, which annually tests academic performance and can punish struggling schools that don't show improvement. Feeling this heat, some teachers resort to showing students test questions in advance or—if you can believe it—changing their answers after the fact.

Of course, the vast majority of teachers would never dream of cheating, but "when tests are all that matter, teachers feel pressure to boost scores, and some people cross the ethical line," says Robert Schaeffer of FairTest, a group opposed to standardized testing. Cheaters are siphoning off taxpayer dollars meant to reward the real achievers.

That was the infuriating story at Houston's Forest Brook High School. The governor awarded the low-income neighborhood school $165,000 for its rising test scores in 2006. But soon after, a Dallas Morning News exposé found strong evidence of organized cheating in dozens of schools and suspicious results in hundreds more.

Texas hired a firm to audit the results, and Forest Brook was among the most suspected of organized cheating. No wrongdoing was ever proved, but when last year's testing was monitored by outsiders, scores at Forest Brook sank like a rock. In California, another newspaper investigation found that teachers had encouraged cheating in more than 120 schools over the previous three years by letting kids use calculators and maps during tests.

One of the worst cases occurred in Uniondale, New York, where hundreds of tests were systematically changed after they were handed in. It was so bad, the state simply threw out the entire year's test results.

Administrators, too, have a lot to answer for when they look the other way. After fourth-grade math test scores in a Camden, New Jersey, school soared from rock-bottom to best in the state, no one asked why. Except The Philadelphia Inquirer, whose report led to an investigation that found "adult interference" had boosted scores.

With money and jobs at stake, the pressure is on. And anyone who raises a red flag is at risk. The former principal of Dayton's City Day says he was fired a day after questioning the test scores.

Analyzing tests from two years ago, an outside firm flagged suspicious test results in 700 Texas schools. Most schools were cleared, though the state did acknowledge problems at some (two are confirmed, and seven are still under investigation). But in the tradition of the fox guarding the henhouse, its conclusion was based mostly on assurances from the same school officials who might be held accountable. So it's not surprising The Dallas Morning News found that more than 350 answer sheets had suspicious answer patterns.

Once a Cheater, Always a Cheater?

Maybe some of the teachers who cheat got their degrees through fraud in the first place. In recent years, and in many places, wannabe teachers have sent ringers to take their certification exams. So several states, including Georgia, Oklahoma, Illinois and California, now require fingerprints to prove identity. In a climate like this, maybe we shouldn't be surprised that young Americans have stunningly casual attitudes toward cheating. According to one 2006 study, 60 percent of high school students admitted to cheating on a test in the past year.

Cizek worries that we're just not taking cheating seriously enough. "These days, a lot of people cheat and it seems kind of okay. When a baseball player uses steroids, he says you pay me to hit home runs, not to be a role model. And that's true to some extent. But teachers can't say that." And of course, kids know about all the other cheaters—Enron executives, millionaire tax dodgers, and the usual spate of sleazebags that have ripped off almost $9 billion in Iraq.

At least some good has come from all this bad: School systems are getting wise to the amount of cheating going on. More and more states, including New Jersey and South Carolina, are watching for suspicious jumps in school performance. Others have added oversight like outside monitors at problem schools.

Parents should make sure their state and local officials are aware of these problems and demand to know what they're doing about it. After all, if we let the cheaters get away with it, we wind up cheating ourselves.

What YOU Can Do

Ask your school if it can:
1) Require a code of ethics specifically prohibiting cheating, to be signed by students and teachers. If caught cheating, a student may be immediately suspended and risk expulsion, and a teacher may have his or her license revoked.

2) Hire independent monitors to proctor major exams.

If you're still not satisfied, ask your state educational official for a statistical audit by a reputable test-security firm. They look for oddities in test answers.

Michael Crowley is a senior editor at The New Republic.

Outraged? Write to Michael Crowley at outrageous@rd.com.
Comments :
By kgibbs, 10/28/2008, 6:27 PM EDT

continued from next 3 comments: for every student no matter what level they start out at, salaries for teachers commensurate with their education level and responsibilities, and adequate funding for teacher training and special education programs to achieve these goals. Thank you, Kelle L. Gibbs M.A. CCC-SLP Rineyville, KY

By kgibbs, 10/28/2008, 6:25 PM EDT

This and the next two comments are all from one letter: Strangely, opposition to NCLB seems to have stalled and teachers and school systems are now focusing on how the impossible can be done. If any cheating has occurred, be assured that it is not because of a sudden increase in unscrupulous teachers. The absurdity of NCLB and the relentless pressure have consequences. How much more reasonable it would be to expect proficiency at achievable levels and without state variances, academic gains for every student no matter what level they start out at, salaries for teachers commensurate with their education level and responsibilities, and adequate funding for teacher training and special education programs to achieve these goals. Thank you, Kelle L. Gibbs M.A. CCC-SLP Rineyville, KY

By kgibbs, 10/28/2008, 6:23 PM EDT

The root of the problem is the No Child Left Behind (NLCB) act. Though briefly mentioned in the article, it is quickly dismissed and not thoroughly explained. The intent of NLCB legislation was that all children be proficient at their grade level. Unfortunately, little provision was made for students with disabilities and levels of proficiency vary from state to state. All except those students with severe delays are factored into the equation determining if a school has attained annual yearly progress (AYP). Schools that fail to meet AYP will be subject to loss of funding. Administrators, faced with the prospect of less revenue (which would further cut already sparse programs) place incredible pressure on teachers to ensure that students score well on these tests. The result is that learning is no longer focused on developing a child’s skills required for analysis and future learning, but rather on taking the test.

By kgibbs, 10/28/2008, 6:20 PM EDT

January 2007 To The Editor: I feel compelled to comment about the article No Cheater Left Behind in the “Outrageous” section of your January issue regarding cheating on standardized tests in schools. As a Speech-Language Pathologist who has worked in public schools for ten years, I can say with certainty, that the majority of the teachers I have been privileged to work with (in four states) are extremely dedicated, hard-working and honest in spite of being underpaid, and underappreciated. The root of the problem is the No Child Left Behind (NLCB) act. Though briefly mentioned in the article, it is quickly dismissed and not thoroughly explained. The intent of NLCB legislation was that all children be proficient at their grade level. Unfortunately, little provision was made for students with disabilities and levels of proficiency vary from state to state. All except those students with severe delays are factored into the equation determining if a school has attained annual yearly progress (AYP). Schools that fail to meet AYP will be subject to loss of funding. Administrators, faced with the prospect of less revenue (which would further cut already sparse programs) place incredible pressure on teachers to ensure that students score well on these tests. The result is that learning is no longer focused on developing a child’s skills required for analysis and future learning, but rather on taking the test. Strangely, opposition to NCLB seems to have stalled and teachers and school systems are now focusing on how the impossible can be done. If any cheating has occurred, be assured that it is not because of a sudden increase in unscrupulous teachers. The absurdity of NCLB and the relentless pressure have consequences. How much more reasonable it would be to expect proficiency at achievable levels and without state variances, academic gains for every student no matter what level they start out at, salaries for teachers commensurate with their education level and responsibilities, and adequate funding for teacher training and special education programs to achieve these goals. Thank you, Kelle L. Gibbs M.A. CCC-SLP Rineyville, KY

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