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Austin, Ellison and Lester


    PRAIRIE VIEW A&M UNIVERSITY




           PUBLIC SCHOOL LAW

                 ADMN 5023




         William Allan Kritsonis, PhD
                  Professor




          STUDENT ASSESSMENT




                  Submitted
                     by

Carrie Austin, Tanisha Ellison and Donna Lester
Austin, Ellison and Lester


                                   STUDENT ASSESSMENT

                                       INTRODUCTION

         Standardized testing in the state of Texas has undergone several makeovers. Currently
Texas public school students are administered the TAKS (Texas Assessment of Knowledge and
Skill) test, but in 1997 the state administered the TAAS (Texas Assessment of Academic Skill)
test. In tenth grade public school students were required to successfully complete the “exit level”
TAAS for Math, Reading and Writing in order to meet graduation requirements. Students were
not able to receive high school diplomas if they failed to meet TAAS standards. According to
state and district records, approximately twenty percent of minority students failed to meet the
TAAS standards; compared to only ten percent of white students. Based on these statistics, a
group of nine minority students, with the help of the Mexican American Legal Defense and
Education Fund (MALDEF), filed a federal lawsuit against the Texas Education Agency (TEA)
claiming that the TAAS test was racially discriminatory. GI Forum Image de Tejas v. Texas
Education Agency

                                            Case One

                                 United States District Court,
                               W.D. Texas, San Antonio Division.

                     GI FORUM, IMAGE DE TEJAS, Plantiff - Appellants
                                        v.
                    TEXAS EDUCATION AGENCY, Defendants - Appellee

                                 No. Civ.A. SA-97-CA1278-EP.
                                          Jan. 7, 2000

                                          LITIGANTS

Plaintiff – Appellants: Rhonda Boozer, Melissa Marie Cruz, Michelle Marie Cruz, Leticia Ann
Faz, Elizabeth Garza, Mark Garza, Alfred Lee Hicks, Brandye R. Johnson and Jocqulyn Russell

Defendant – Appellee: Texas Education Agency, Dr. Mike Moses, Members and the Texas State
Board of Education

                                        BACKGROUND

   In 1997 several African-Americans and Hispanic Americans filed a federal lawsuit against the
Texas Educational Agency (TEA) by challenging the use of the Texas Assessment of Academic
Skills (TAAS) examination as a requirement for high school graduation. The plaintiffs argued
that the TAAS test was discriminatory because 20% of blacks and Hispanics failed the test,
compared to 10% of whites.
Austin, Ellison and Lester


                                             FACTS

        According to state and district testing records, twenty percent of minority students
(African American and Hispanic) failed to meet state standards for TAAS testing. In contrast
only ten percent of Caucasian students failed to meet TAAS standards. Suit was brought
challenging the use of the Texas Assessment of Academic Skills (TAAS) examination as a
requirement for high school graduation.
This suit was brought individually by nine Texas students who did not pass the TAAS exit-level
examination prior to their scheduled graduation dates. Those students who actually testified
request that their respective school districts issue their diplomas




                                           DECISION

   Per District Judge J. Pado: The issue before the Court is whether the use of the Texas
Assessment of Academic Skills (TAAS) examination as a requirement for high school
graduation unfairly discriminates against Texas minority students or violates their right to due
process. The Plaintiffs challenge the use of the TAAS test under the Due Process Clause of the
United States Constitution and 34 C.F.R. § 100.3, an implementing regulation to Title VI of the
Civil Rights Act of 1964, asking this Court to issue an injunction preventing the Texas Education
Agency (TEA) from using failure of the exit-level TAAS test as a basis for denying high school
diplomas.

   The Court has considered the testimony and evidence presented during five weeks of trial
before the bench, as well as the relevant case law. After such consideration, and much reflection,
the Court has determined that the use of the TAAS examination does not have an impermissible
adverse impact on Texas's minority students and does not violate their right to the due process of
law. The bases for the Court's determination are outlined more fully in its findings of facts and
conclusions of law, below. The Court writes separately only to make a few general observations
about the legal issues underpinning this case.


                                             DICTA

   Suit was brought challenging the use of the Texas Assessment of Academic Skills (TAAS)
examination as a requirement for high school graduation. The District Court, Prado, J., held that:
(1) use of TAAS examination did not violate of Title VI regulations, and (2) use of TAAS
examination did not violate due process rights of Texas' minority students.




                                        IMPLICATIONS
Austin, Ellison and Lester




    This case is remarkable for what it does not present for the Court's consideration. In spite of
the diverse and contentious opinions surrounding the use of the TAAS test, this Court has not
been asked to-and indeed could not-rule on the wisdom of standardized examinations. This Court
has no authority to tell the State of Texas what a well-educated high school graduate should
demonstrably know at the end of twelve years of education. Nor may this Court determine the
relative merits of teacher evaluation and “objective” testing.

    This case is also not directly about the history of minority education in the State. While that
history has had some bearing on some of the due process concerns raised by the Plaintiffs, what
is really at issue here is whether the TAAS exit-level test is fair. As the Court notes below, the
test cannot be fair if it is used to punish minorities who have been victimized by state-funded
unequal educations. Thus, the Court has carefully considered the claims that Texas schools still
offer widely diverse educational opportunities and that, too often, those opportunities depend on
the color of a student's skin or the financial resources of the student's school district. To some
degree, as discussed below, the Court must accept these claims. But that finding, alone, is an
insufficient basis for invalidating this examination. There must be some link between the TAAS
test and these disparities. In other words, the Plaintiffs were required to prove, by a
preponderance of the evidence, that the TAAS test was implemented in spite of the disparities or
that the TAAS test has perpetuated the disparities, and that requiring passage of the test for
graduation is therefore fundamentally unfair. The Court believes that this has not been proven.
Instead, the evidence suggests that the State of Texas was aware of probable disparities and that
it designed the TAAS accountability system to reflect an insistence on standards and educational
policies that are uniform from school to school. It is true that these standards reflect no more than
what the State of Texas has determined are essential skills and knowledge. It is undeniable that
there is more to be learned. However, the Court cannot pass on the State's determination of what,
or how much, knowledge must be acquired prior to high school graduation.

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Court Case 1

  • 1. Austin, Ellison and Lester PRAIRIE VIEW A&M UNIVERSITY PUBLIC SCHOOL LAW ADMN 5023 William Allan Kritsonis, PhD Professor STUDENT ASSESSMENT Submitted by Carrie Austin, Tanisha Ellison and Donna Lester
  • 2. Austin, Ellison and Lester STUDENT ASSESSMENT INTRODUCTION Standardized testing in the state of Texas has undergone several makeovers. Currently Texas public school students are administered the TAKS (Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skill) test, but in 1997 the state administered the TAAS (Texas Assessment of Academic Skill) test. In tenth grade public school students were required to successfully complete the “exit level” TAAS for Math, Reading and Writing in order to meet graduation requirements. Students were not able to receive high school diplomas if they failed to meet TAAS standards. According to state and district records, approximately twenty percent of minority students failed to meet the TAAS standards; compared to only ten percent of white students. Based on these statistics, a group of nine minority students, with the help of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund (MALDEF), filed a federal lawsuit against the Texas Education Agency (TEA) claiming that the TAAS test was racially discriminatory. GI Forum Image de Tejas v. Texas Education Agency Case One United States District Court, W.D. Texas, San Antonio Division. GI FORUM, IMAGE DE TEJAS, Plantiff - Appellants v. TEXAS EDUCATION AGENCY, Defendants - Appellee No. Civ.A. SA-97-CA1278-EP. Jan. 7, 2000 LITIGANTS Plaintiff – Appellants: Rhonda Boozer, Melissa Marie Cruz, Michelle Marie Cruz, Leticia Ann Faz, Elizabeth Garza, Mark Garza, Alfred Lee Hicks, Brandye R. Johnson and Jocqulyn Russell Defendant – Appellee: Texas Education Agency, Dr. Mike Moses, Members and the Texas State Board of Education BACKGROUND In 1997 several African-Americans and Hispanic Americans filed a federal lawsuit against the Texas Educational Agency (TEA) by challenging the use of the Texas Assessment of Academic Skills (TAAS) examination as a requirement for high school graduation. The plaintiffs argued that the TAAS test was discriminatory because 20% of blacks and Hispanics failed the test, compared to 10% of whites.
  • 3. Austin, Ellison and Lester FACTS According to state and district testing records, twenty percent of minority students (African American and Hispanic) failed to meet state standards for TAAS testing. In contrast only ten percent of Caucasian students failed to meet TAAS standards. Suit was brought challenging the use of the Texas Assessment of Academic Skills (TAAS) examination as a requirement for high school graduation. This suit was brought individually by nine Texas students who did not pass the TAAS exit-level examination prior to their scheduled graduation dates. Those students who actually testified request that their respective school districts issue their diplomas DECISION Per District Judge J. Pado: The issue before the Court is whether the use of the Texas Assessment of Academic Skills (TAAS) examination as a requirement for high school graduation unfairly discriminates against Texas minority students or violates their right to due process. The Plaintiffs challenge the use of the TAAS test under the Due Process Clause of the United States Constitution and 34 C.F.R. § 100.3, an implementing regulation to Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, asking this Court to issue an injunction preventing the Texas Education Agency (TEA) from using failure of the exit-level TAAS test as a basis for denying high school diplomas. The Court has considered the testimony and evidence presented during five weeks of trial before the bench, as well as the relevant case law. After such consideration, and much reflection, the Court has determined that the use of the TAAS examination does not have an impermissible adverse impact on Texas's minority students and does not violate their right to the due process of law. The bases for the Court's determination are outlined more fully in its findings of facts and conclusions of law, below. The Court writes separately only to make a few general observations about the legal issues underpinning this case. DICTA Suit was brought challenging the use of the Texas Assessment of Academic Skills (TAAS) examination as a requirement for high school graduation. The District Court, Prado, J., held that: (1) use of TAAS examination did not violate of Title VI regulations, and (2) use of TAAS examination did not violate due process rights of Texas' minority students. IMPLICATIONS
  • 4. Austin, Ellison and Lester This case is remarkable for what it does not present for the Court's consideration. In spite of the diverse and contentious opinions surrounding the use of the TAAS test, this Court has not been asked to-and indeed could not-rule on the wisdom of standardized examinations. This Court has no authority to tell the State of Texas what a well-educated high school graduate should demonstrably know at the end of twelve years of education. Nor may this Court determine the relative merits of teacher evaluation and “objective” testing. This case is also not directly about the history of minority education in the State. While that history has had some bearing on some of the due process concerns raised by the Plaintiffs, what is really at issue here is whether the TAAS exit-level test is fair. As the Court notes below, the test cannot be fair if it is used to punish minorities who have been victimized by state-funded unequal educations. Thus, the Court has carefully considered the claims that Texas schools still offer widely diverse educational opportunities and that, too often, those opportunities depend on the color of a student's skin or the financial resources of the student's school district. To some degree, as discussed below, the Court must accept these claims. But that finding, alone, is an insufficient basis for invalidating this examination. There must be some link between the TAAS test and these disparities. In other words, the Plaintiffs were required to prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the TAAS test was implemented in spite of the disparities or that the TAAS test has perpetuated the disparities, and that requiring passage of the test for graduation is therefore fundamentally unfair. The Court believes that this has not been proven. Instead, the evidence suggests that the State of Texas was aware of probable disparities and that it designed the TAAS accountability system to reflect an insistence on standards and educational policies that are uniform from school to school. It is true that these standards reflect no more than what the State of Texas has determined are essential skills and knowledge. It is undeniable that there is more to be learned. However, the Court cannot pass on the State's determination of what, or how much, knowledge must be acquired prior to high school graduation.