When you think of urgent legislative priorities, fixing a single incorrectly graded question on a high school biology test probably doesn’t top the list. Yet in Ohio, that’s exactly what’s happening – and the implications for students are more serious than you might imagine.
“You might think that a single incorrect answer on a statewide standardized test could not be that meaningful,” Chris Quinn said on Monday’s episode of Today in Ohio, the news podcast from cleveland.com and The Plain Dealer. “But, man, it is so meaningful that our Ohio legislature has gotten involved to protect the students who are unfairly marked as getting it wrong,” Chris Quinn said on Monday’s episode of Today in Ohio, the news podcast from cleveland.com and The Plain Dealer.
The stakes are surprisingly high. A

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