Oklahoma’s Sudden Shift Away from Statewide End-of-Year Testing Puts Students at a Disadvantage 

Oklahoma
Quality

ExcelinEd CEO Patricia Levesque responds to Oklahoma’s decision to end the statewide summative assessment requirement, warning it will undermine consistent academic measurement, burden districts and make it harder to help students succeed. 

Statement from Patricia Levesque, CEO, ExcelinEd: 

“Oklahoma’s student performance has reached crisis levels. In 2024, eighth graders scored at an all-time low in both reading and math. Fourth graders scored at an all-time low in reading and nearly as low in math as they did almost two decades ago. 

“Yet instead of focusing on strategies and supports to help these students catch up, last year the state superintendent chose a different path. He advocated lowering passing scores for students on the statewide assessment.  

“If you think about the statewide test like a scale that measures a student’s academic “weight,” the superintendent adjusted the scale to create a whole new reality. A student who would have measured as struggling in reading or math was suddenly considered on grade level. A student who would have been flagged for urgent support was now, on paper, doing just fine. 

“State leaders rightly reversed that decision, directing the superintendent to use the state’s former, reliable, honest scale so parents, teachers and policymakers could see the truth and act on it. 

“Now, the superintendent has decided to throw out the statewide test altogether. Instead of a single, end-of-year assessment aligned to the Oklahoma academic standards that educators across the state worked hard to create and are required to teach, districts will be asked to choose from a menu of off-the-shelf tests that aren’t necessarily designed to align with Oklahoma’s standards.  

“This change will make it impossible to compare results across districts, identify which students need help or fairly measure progress. Under the newly proposed system, local districts may wind up paying more for assessments, creating inequities in testing quality and access. 

“In the past, federal officials rejected a similar proposal from Arizona because the law requires states to have a single, statewide test for accountability. Muddying the waters only helps those who want to obfuscate what lies beneath. 

“Students, families and educators deserve better than patchwork testing and lowered expectations. We urge policymakers at the state and federal level to stand firm against this disruptive change and to ensure Oklahoma’s students get the clarity, consistency and honesty they need to succeed in school and beyond.” 

Key Questions for Policymakers to Consider regarding the State Superintendent’s waiver request: 

Solution Areas:

School Accountability

Topics:

Assessments