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‘Trib Talk’: System crashes and glitches impede year-end testing at Utah’s public schools

(Rick Egan | Tribune file photo) Oscar Gonzolez takes a practice test with his 3rd grade class at Elk Run Elementary school on Wednesday, April 22, 2015.

In August of 2017, Missouri’s commissioner of education announced that statewide high school exams were so unreliable, their results would be discarded. One month later, the Utah Board of Education hired the same company Missouri did to create its new year-end assessment system, called RISE, given to all public school children in grades three through eight.

The launch of RISE this spring was marked by widespread glitches as half-completed tests were lost to frozen computer screens and whole school districts were locked out of the system. Those issues follow years of frustration with standardized testing in Utah, and have prompted questions on why the state school board chose a company with such a troubled history.

On this week’s episode of “Trib Talk,” State Superintendent Sydnee Dickson and Tribune reporter Courtney Tanner join Benjamin Wood to discuss the problems with RISE and what it means for year-end testing in Utah.

Click here to listen now. Listeners can also subscribe to “Trib Talk” on SoundCloud, iTunes and Apple Podcasts, Google Play, Stitcher, Spotify and other major podcast platforms.

“Trib Talk” is produced by Sara Weber with additional editing by Dan Harrie. Comments and feedback can be sent to tribtalk@sltrib.com, or to @bjaminwood or @tribtalk on Twitter.

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