MAP Math Test went a lot smoother. Girl can math! #maptest #secondgrade #girlboss #girlpower (at Carlsbad, California) https://www.instagram.com/p/CGbcgB1As-nVLBfonmNq2mjknfSibK_Yyp-sKE0/?igshid=1ojjkhbofmfmb
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MAP Math Test went a lot smoother. Girl can math! #maptest #secondgrade #girlboss #girlpower (at Carlsbad, California) https://www.instagram.com/p/CGbcgB1As-nVLBfonmNq2mjknfSibK_Yyp-sKE0/?igshid=1ojjkhbofmfmb

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MAP Test is overwhelming. My poor baby, but of course she did great! It was so hard not to help when she's crying and asking for help. Reading Test done! Today and tomorrow is Math! Wish us luck! #maptest #secondgrade https://www.instagram.com/p/CGXzJD5h5UNZBxB4ZbRcpJrIxksnqY4f2hGvSk0/?igshid=1d78mkd793ijc
Another great result for team twisted. Getting stronger and improving with each test @just_mikeraam2020 #raceacrossamerica2020 #raam2020 #raam2man #cyclinglife #maptest https://www.instagram.com/p/B6ylvdxJJt0/?igshid=v7n1k1gwjxk4
WOW!!!!! Ms. S!!! #maptest @jcpstweets GO GET EM COUGARS! @callawaycougars (at Callaway Hills Elementary School)
How can my lecturer forgot the date of our Map Test? lol I'll just have to memorise it again on monday.. Thanks Sir Chumel #historyclass #maptest #ancient #civilization #map #ancientworldmap (at International Islamic University Malaysia)

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Duty, honor, country: Those three hallowed words reverently dictate what you ought to be, what you can be, what you will be.
General Douglas MacArthur; Duty, Honor, Country
Did my child get dumber in math?
My child first took the MAP test in the fall of 2013 as a 3rd grader. Parents got very little information about the test. They mentioned it at back-to-school night briefly and said it adjusts itself to each student’s ability, so there is no maximum score. That sounded kind of interesting. But to be honest, the teachers sounded like they didn’t really know much about it and were just reading the company promo. (It’s okay, I’ve been in those teachers’ shoes.) I googled the MAP test after the pitch, but couldn’t find much about it. I assumed the school would give us more info before the kids actually took it. Wrong! My child told me when they were taking it sometime in September or October 2013. The teachers had certainly hyped it up to the kids. But the parents got no information even as to the day it was given. A few months later, the score report came home. It gave your kid’s score, the district average, and the national average in both math and reading Again, I went online to find out what the test was. And now I at least knew what the acronym “MAP” stood for and the company that makes it. I am a math nerd! I wanted to know what the numbers meant. I wanted to see what the averages in each grade were nationwide, at least. But Google failed me again.
My child mentioned taking this test again sometime in January/February 2014 and again near the end of the school year. I was pregnant and then had a baby during that time, so I was too tired to try to investigate. I didn’t see another score report until the end of September 2014. It was for the Spring 2014 administration and only had a score for math, nothing for reading. My child had not missed school, so I was confused about the missing reading score. But even more confusing was that the math score was a few points lower than it had been on the first report we got. So, did my child get dumber over the course of 3rd grade in math? I mean with the debacle that was the first year of Common Core, it was quite possible. But that’s another story. My main concern was the “informative” paragraph above the scores that tells parents: “[School system] will use the MAP test this year to monitor students’ academic performance and progress at the district and school levels. The test results will not be used as part of the students’ grades. Along with other test results, quizzes, class work, teacher observations, and other measures, MAP results will help [school system] make the best possible decisions for all students.” Really?? And what great decision do you make when a least one kid’s score decreased over the school year? So, I went on a more thorough internet hunt for info. I found a couple of critiques of the MAP test that mentioned that the scores are unreliable and vary widely. My school system had nothing about this test on their website. So, I wrote a long email to the system’s assessment office with all of my questions about the MAP test. I sent it to several people listed on their website who had titles that sounded important. My first email went unanswered for several days and some of the email addresses were no longer active. I sent it out again and to a few more people listed as working in that office. This time I got a reply that they would be happy to talked to me on the phone. Of course, we don’t want any written record!
Questioning the MAP test
I have sent an email to my child’s public school principal informing him that I refuse to let him participate in the Measures of Academic Progress (MAP) test. I am waiting to see what happens. Since there is not a lot of info to be found online about opting-out of standardized tests in Maryland, I figured I would start a blog. Maybe what I am doing can help someone else. Maybe someone sees this and can help me with whatever happens. This is not a knee-jerk reaction on my part. And I am not just looking for a fight. I reserve judgement on the other standardized tests for now. My decision to stop this particular test for my child is based on the fact that the scores that come home do not make sense. My child has also told me about an error in one type of question. My child’s scores are inconsistent from one administration of the test to the next. The MAP tests in reading and writing are advertised as adjusting itself to the student’s ability. So, when the math score at the end of a school year is lower than that at the beginning of that school year, does that mean the student has lost mathematical knowledge over the course of the year? When a student’s reading score increased by 12 points from one fall assessment to the following fall assessment, but then decreased to almost the original score with the winter assessment, surely there is a problem with the test! The irregularity my child told me about happened in questions that allow the student to select “all that apply.” From what I was told, these are questions where there are a lot of choices and several of them are correct, so you click each one that is correct. However, apparently when you accidentally click a wrong choice, you cannot un-click it. I have already been in contact with the school system’s assessment office twice. First, I questioned the math score issue. Then, I let them know about the issue with the questions. Now, I have sent another email regarding the inconsistency in reading scores. I will detail my prior interactions with the assessment office in another post. I did not contact my child’s school regarding the tests before now, because I wanted to go right to the source of the assessments instead of getting lost in the bureaucracy.