THE AUTHORS

Jamal Abedi, professor of education at the University of California, Davis, specializes in educational and psychological assessments. His research focus is testing for English language learners and issues concerning the technical characteristics and interpretations of these assessments. From 2010 to the present, Abedi has served as a member of the Technical Advisory Committee of the SMARTER Balanced Assessment Consortium. Before then, he served on the expert panel of the US Department of Education’s LEP Partnership and he was founder and chair of AERA’s Special Interest Group on Inclusion and Accommodation in Large-Scale Assessment. In 2008, the California Educational Research Association gave him its Lifetime Achievement Award. Abedi received his PhD from Vanderbilt University.

Frank Adamson, a policy and research analyst at the Stanford Center for Opportunity Policy in Education (SCOPE), currently focuses on the adoption of assessments of deeper learning and twenty-first-century skills at the state, national, and international levels. He also conducts research on educational equity and opportunities to learn and has published on teacher salary differences within labor markets in New York and California. Prior to joining SCOPE, Adamson worked at AIR and SRI International designing assessments, evaluating US education initiatives, and developing international indicators for the OECD and UNESCO. He received an MA in sociology and a PhD in international comparative education from Stanford University.

Jillian Chingos (previously Jillian Hamma) is currently a sixth-grade teacher at Alpha: Blanca Alvarado Middle School in San Jose, California. Chingos attended Dartmouth College, where she majored in English, minored in public policy, and received her teaching credential. She previously worked at the Stanford Center for Assessment, Learning, and Equity, developing and researching performance assessments.

David T. Conley is professor of educational policy and leadership and founder and director of the Center for Educational Policy Research (CEPR) at the University of Oregon. He is also the founder, chief executive officer, and chief strategy officer of the Educational Policy Improvement Center and president of CCR Consulting Group, both in Eugene and Portland, Oregon. Through these organizations, he conducts research on a range of topics related to college readiness and other key policy issues with funding provided by grants and contracts from a range of national organizations, states, school districts, and school networks. His line of inquiry focuses on what it takes for students to succeed in postsecondary education. His latest publication, Getting Ready for College, Careers, and the Common Core, was recently published by Jossey Bass (for more information, see www.collegecareerready.com).

Linda Darling-Hammond is Charles E. Ducommun professor of education and faculty director of the Stanford Center for Opportunity Policy in Education at Stanford University. Darling-Hammond is a former president of the American Educational Research Association and a member of the National Academy of Education. Her research and policy work focus on issues of educational equity, teaching quality, school reform, and performance assessment. In 2008, she served as director of President Obama’s education policy transition team. Her book The Flat World and Education: How America’s Commitment to Equity Will Determine Our Future received the coveted Grawemeyer Award in 2012. Her most recent book is Getting Teacher Evaluation Right: What Really Matters for Effectiveness and Improvement (2013).

Beverly Falk is professor and director of the graduate programs in early childhood education at the School of Education, City College of New York. Her areas of expertise include early childhood education, early literacy, performance assessment, school change, teacher education, and teacher research. She has served in a variety of educational roles: classroom teacher; school founder and director; district administrator; and consultant, fellow, and leader in schools, districts, states, and national organizations. Currently she is editor of the New Educator and senior scholar at the Stanford Center for Assessment, Learning and Equity. Falk received her EdD from Teachers College, Columbia University.

Ann Jaquith is associate director at Stanford Center for Opportunity Policy in Education. She has worked on a variety of performance assessment projects undertaken to reform schools in New York, Ohio, and California. As a former teacher and administrator, her expertise is in building the instructional and leadership capacity needed to use performance assessments to improve instruction and student learning. Her research interests include studying how instructional capacity gets built at different levels of the system and examining the practices professional development providers use that change instruction and improve student learning. She received her PhD in curriculum and teacher education from Stanford University.

Stuart Kahl is founding principal and CEO of Measured Progress as Advanced Systems in Measurement and Evaluation. A former elementary and secondary teacher, he worked for the Education Commission of the States, the University of Colorado, and RMC Research Corporation. A frequent speaker at industry conferences, Kahl also serves as a technical consultant to various education agencies. He has been recognized for his work in the areas of standard setting for non-multiple-choice instruments and the alignment of curriculum and assessment. Kahl received his PhD from the University of Colorado.

Suzanne Lane is professor at the University of Pittsburgh. Her recent research focuses on the implications for the next generation of assessments based on the lessons from classroom instruction and achievement in the 1990s, the assessment of twenty-first-century thinking skills, and the interplay among a theory of action, validity, and consequences. Lane has been the president of the National Council on Measurement in Education (2003–2004) and vice president of Division D of the American Educational Research Association (2002–2003). She received a PhD in research methodology, measurement, and statistics from the University of Arizona.

William Montague is a student at the University of Virginia School of Law. He began his career as a high school English teacher in Roanoke Rapids, North Carolina, as a member of Teach For America. He went on to work for Independent Education, an association of independent schools in the Washington, DC, area. While there, he collaborated on a number of projects with the organization’s executive director, Thomas Toch, a longtime education writer and policy analyst. Montague received his BA from the University of Virginia, where he majored in economics and history.

John Olson is senior partner of Assessment Solutions Group (ASG), which he cofounded in 2008. He is also president of the consulting business he founded in 2006, Olson Educational Measurement and Assessment Services, which provides technical assistance and support to states, school districts, federal bodies, testing companies, researchers, and others. He has more than thirty years of experience managing and consulting on a variety of measurement and statistical issues for international, national, state, and local assessment programs through his work at Harcourt Assessment, the Council for Chief State School Officers, the American Institutes for Research, and the Education Statistics Services Institute. He served in a number of leadership roles for the National Assessment of Educational Progress at the Educational Testing Service. Olson holds a PhD in educational statistics and measurement from the University of Nebraska–Lincoln.

Margaret Owens is currently a teacher at Mission High School in San Francisco. She earned her teaching credential and MA from Stanford University. Her studies focused on new pedagogical strategies, such as complex instruction, that bring more collaboration and engagement to students historically alienated in mathematics. Prior to her teaching career, she studied political science at Stanford with a focus on American education.

Raymond Pecheone is professor of practice at Stanford University and the founder and executive director of the Stanford Center for Assessment Learning, and Equity (SCALE). Under Pecheone, SCALE focuses on the development of performance assessments and performance-based systems for students, teachers, and administrators at the school, district, and state levels. Prior to launching SCALE, Pecheone was the bureau chief for curriculum, research, and assessment in the Connecticut State Department of Education; codirector of the first Assessment Development Lab for the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards; and project director to support the redesign of the New York State Regents. Most recently, Pecheone and SCALE are developing the performance assessment specifications and tasks for the Smarter Balanced national assessment system. He received his PhD from the University of Connecticut in measurement and evaluation.

Lawrence O. Picus is vice dean for faculty affairs and professor at the Rossier School of Education, University of Southern California. He is an expert in the area of public financing of schools, equity and adequacy of school funding, school business administration, education policy, linking school resources to student performance, and resource allocation in schools. His current research interests focus on adequacy and equity in school finance, as well as efficiency and productivity in the provision of educational programs for PreK–12 children. Picus is past president of the Association for Education Finance and Policy, has served on the EdSource board of directors for twelve years, and has consulted extensively on school finance issues in more than twenty states. He earned a PhD in public policy analysis from the RAND Graduate School, an MA in social science from the University of Chicago, and a BA in economics from Reed College.

Ed Roeber is a consultant at Assessment Solutions Group (ASG). He has served as state assessment director in the Michigan Department of Education, director of student assessment programs for the Council for Chief State School Officers, vice president of Measured Progress, and adjunct professor at Michigan State University. For ASG and the other organizations, he advises states and other organizations on student assessment-related programs and functions. Currently he is a consultant on student assessment to several organizations (Michigan Assessment Consortium, Michigan State University, and Wisconsin Center for Educational Research/University of Wisconsin). He has written extensively about educational assessment, consulted with a number of agencies and organizations, and spoken frequently about student assessment. He has a PhD in educational measurement from the University of Michigan.

Brian Stecher is a senior social scientist and associate director of RAND Education and professor at the Pardee RAND Graduate School. His research focuses on measuring educational quality and evaluating education reforms, with an emphasis on assessment and accountability systems. During his more than twenty years at RAND, he has directed prominent national and state evaluations of No Child Left Behind, mathematics and science systemic reforms, and class size reduction. His measurement-related expertise includes test development, test validation, and the use of assessments for school improvement. Stecher has served on expert panels relating to standards, assessments, and accountability for the National Academies and is currently a member of the Board on Testing and Assessment. He received his PhD from the University of California, Los Angeles.

Thomas Toch is senior managing partner for public policy engagement at the Carnegie Foundation. He also serves as director of the Carnegie Foundation’s Washington, DC, office. He is a founder and former codirector of the think tank Education Sector and a former guest scholar at the Brookings Institution, and he has taught at the Harvard Graduate School of Education. He helped launch Education Week in the 1980s. He spent a decade as the senior education correspondent at US News and World Report and has contributed to the Atlantic, the New York Times, and other national publications. His work has twice been nominated for National Magazine Awards. He is the author of two books on American education, In the Name of Excellence (Oxford University Press) and High Schools on a Human Scale (Beacon Press).

Barry Topol is managing partner of Assessment Solutions Group (ASG). He leads ASG in providing assessment cost, management, and state accountability systems analysis and consulting to states, universities, and other nonprofit institutions. Since forming ASG in 2009, Topol and ASG have worked with a number of states and the Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers, and Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium to assist them in designing their assessment and accountability systems to be more effective and efficient. Topol designed ASG’s assessment cost model, the only model in the industry that can be used to determine the appropriate price for any assessment. Topol has a BA in economics from the University of California, Los Angeles and an MBA from the Anderson School of Management at the University of California, Los Angeles.

Laura Wentworth is director of the Stanford University/San Francisco Unified School District Partnership at Silver Giving Foundation. She focuses on supporting the link between research and practice, with special attention to the subject of assessment. As a public school teacher, she and other school leaders introduced the International Baccalaureate Primary Year Program, including the use of a portfolio assessment system for kindergarten through fifth grade. After her work as a teacher, she began researching issues in assessment, including policy issues for English learners, exit exam policies, and performance assessments. Currently she directs a university-district partnership aimed at helping practitioners use research to inform their decision making that includes several assessment projects. She received her PhD in education policy from Stanford University.

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