Sunday, May 13, 2012

New jersey standardized test

  • TRENTON, N.J. -- State education officials will no longer use a standardized test question that asked third-graders to reveal a secret and write about why it was difficult to keep.
  • (Huffington Post)
  • New Jersey education officials say they will no longer use a standardized test question that asked third-graders to reveal a secret and write about why it was difficult to keep.
  • (msnbc.com)
  • Some New Jersey parents are steamed about a question on a statewide standardized test this week that asked some third-graders to write about a secret and why it was hard to keep.
  • (Atlantic City Press)
  • New Jersey parents are up in arms after their third-graders were asked, on a standardized test, to reveal a secret about their lives and explain why its hard to keep.
  • (USA Today)
  • Justin Barra, a spokesman for New Jersey's state Education Department, said the state planned to look into who wrote the "secret" question. In the meantime, since the story first broke, the question has been scrapped.
  • (Hotair.com)
  • As schools across the region finish administering the New Jersey Assessment of Skills and Knowledge standardized tests, they work to find creative ways to keep their students relaxed.
  • (Atlantic City Press)
  • Its also Police were investigating a shooting at a nightclub in Newark, N.J. Police were investigating a shooting at a nightclub in Newark, N.J.
  • (myfoxny.com)
  • as they flesh out specific requirements to try to make sure all New Jersey students graduate from high school properly prepared for the future is strike a balance and individualize the process of standardized testing.
  • (Patch)
  • K-12 Language Arts and English Supervisor Lynn DiMatteo and K-12 Math and Science Supervisor David Coster presented the districts 2012-2013 standardized of the NJASK (New Jersey Assessment of Skills and Knowledge) 2013 test.
  • (NorthJersey.com)

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