Affiliation:
1. Baruch College of the City University of New York
Abstract
This paper uses archival and secondary sources to examine the early history of state student assessment in the United States. While it is generally accepted that school evaluation and accountability are the raison d'être of assessment policy making in the United States, between 1865 and 1965 an accountability model for state testing failed to take hold, despite numerous attempts. In accounting for these policy developments, this paper stresses the role that institutionalized clusters of normative and causal ideas play in educational policy making. These idea structures—called policy frameworks—define the core principle or principles that animate state action, the legitimate aims served by intervention, and the manner in which these ends are to be achieved. Three frameworks—examination, guidance, and accountability—play a prominent role in the history of assessment policy making in the United States.