New book addresses systemic racism and educational measurement

Lynch School Professor Mike Russell provides a theoretical and historical reckoning

A new book by Lynch School of Education and Human Development Professor Michael Russell calls for purging inherent racial bias and injustice from the educational assessments that shape the trajectories of American students.

Systemic Racism and Educational Measurement, released in August, confronts the race sciences, white supremacy, and other injustices in the field鈥檚 research and practice that, according to Russell, lead test instruments, interpretation of test scores, and critical decisions such as college or high school admissions to perpetuate the nation鈥檚 racialized social structure.

鈥淲hile issues of race, discrimination, and social justice have generated increased national attention, a sharp focus on racism has eluded the field of educational measurement,鈥 said Russell, the author or co-author of four previous books on educational assessment. 聽鈥淎s evidenced by the many lawsuits and the large body of research focused on potential racial bias in testing, there is little doubt that issues of race and racism have been, and continue to be, a critical concern for the use of test scores to inform admission and scholarship decisions.鈥

January 23, 2017 -- Portrait of Boston College Lynch School of Education faculty member Mike Russell. Photographed for Boston College by Caitlin Cunningham (www.caitlincunningham.com).

Mike Russell (Caitlin Cunningham)

Russell traces how the 鈥淲hite Racial Frame鈥濃攁 theory espoused by sociologist Joe R. Feagin asserting that systemic and structural discrimination is deeply entrenched in American minds and institutions鈥攍egitimizes and maintains structural and systemic racism in the testing, measurement, and assessment of human learning and performance.

鈥淭he White Racial Frame functions as an apparatus that plays an essential role in maintaining systemic racism by perpetuating and recreating racialized narratives that elevate White people, and denigrate non-dominant racialized groups,鈥 explained Russell, a faculty member in the Measurement, Evaluation, Statistics & Assessment Department. 聽鈥淛ust as it influences all facets of social, economic, and political functioning in the United States, it, too, has impacted鈥攁nd continues to impact鈥攅ducational measurement.鈥

Even among well-meaning stakeholders who aim to improve humanity and address inequities, the White Racial Frame nonetheless shapes the field鈥檚 research questions, the methods utilized, the data valued, the interpretations made, and the language used throughout, according to Russell.

An article in the March 2021 issue of the NEA News, the newsletter of the National Education Association鈥攖he nation鈥檚 largest labor union representing public school teachers鈥攏oted that 鈥渟ince their inception a century ago, standardized tests have been instruments of racism and a biased system. Students of color, particularly those from low-income families, have suffered the most from high-stakes testing in U.S. public schools.鈥

To address these 聽influences, Russell advocates for the adoption of alternate perspectives that counter the White Racial Frame鈥檚 impact on measurement and evaluation, and offers several actions that could shift educational measurement toward anti-racism and increased fairness, such as strengthening diversity in the field; making the context of test items characteristic of the experiences of underrepresented students; and employing more sensitive techniques for detecting bias in tests, among other actions.

鈥淭he field of educational testing must first acknowledge that in its current form, it functions within, is influenced by, and contributes to systemic racism,鈥 said Russell, a Lynch School faculty member for 17 years, with nearly 10 years of private sector assessment experience. 聽鈥淭he field must be prepared to pivot from service as an agent in systemic racism to an institution engaged in anti-racist endeavors that support the pursuit of racial justice.鈥