Volume 37, Number 4 (Fall) 2002

Koretz, Daniel. 2002. "Limitations in the Use of Achievement Tests as measures of Educators' Productivity." Journal of Human Resources 37(4):752-777.

Test-based accountability rests on the assumption that accountability for scores on tests will provide needed incentives for teachers to improve student performance. Evidence shows, however, that simple test-based accountability can generate perverse incentives and seriously inflated scores. This paper discusses the logic of achievement tests, issues that arise in using them as proxy indicators of educational quality, and the mechanism underlying the inflation of scores. It ends with suggestions, some speculative, for improving the incentives faced by teachers by modifying systems of student assessment and combining them with numerous other measures, many of which are more subjective than are test scores.

Daniel M. Koretz is a professor at the Harvard Graduate School of Education and Associate Director of the Center for Research on Evaluation, Standards, and Student Testing. The data for this paper are unavailable because of restrictions imposed by the source agencies.


© 2003 by the Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System

US ISSN 0022-166X

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