Regents Recap — January 2016: Reused Exams

Published by MrHonner on

I’ve looked at many New York State Math Regents exams over the years, and in that time I’ve definitely seen a few recycled problems appear on tests.  But I’ve never seen anything like what happened this past Regents cycle.

Most current high school students in New York are required to take the Common Core Algebra exam, which replaced the Integrated Algebra exam in 2014.  However, some students are still eligible to take the old Integrated Algebra exam, and so to accommodate those students, a special administration of the Integrated Algebra exam was offered this past February.

What was perhaps most “special” about the exam given in February, 2016 is that it was the exact same Integrated Algebra exam that was given in August, 2009.  The exact same, as in every single question on the February 2016 exam was identical to the corresponding question on the August, 2009 exam.

duplicate regents exam

It’s hard to believe that this was allowed to happen.  Yes, it takes a lot of effort to make a state exam, and this one likely doesn’t affect that many students.  But simply copying-and-pasting an old exam seems to undermine the state’s assertion that these high-stakes exams are critically important to education and should be taken very seriously by schools, teachers, students, and parents.

As of writing this, the state still has not made public the February, 2016 exam, which is quite unusual.  Perhaps they think it unnecessary, since they already published it 7 years ago.

To see for yourself, you can find copies of the exams posted at JMAP.org:  here’s the February, 2016 exam, and here’s the August, 2009 exam.

Related Posts

 

Categories: Testing

5 Comments

Elizabeth · May 11, 2016 at 6:21 pm

WordPress › Error

There has been a critical error on this website.

Learn more about troubleshooting WordPress.