Education Commonwealth Project: The Education Commonwealth Project (ECP) at the University of Massachusetts Lowell is guided by the belief that assessment should be a tool, not a weapon, and exists for the purpose of empowering educators and community members to strengthen and support their schools. Funded by the Massachusetts State Legislature, ECP offers public school districts across the state a new approach to assessing school quality and student learning. ECP’s two strands of work—School Quality Measures and Quality Performance Assessments—spring from five years of field-testing within the Massachusetts Consortium for Innovative Education Assessment (MCIEA). Because ECP is a publicly-funded project, our tools and technical support are available on a free and open-source basis for public schools and districts seeking to develop alternative approaches to measurement and accountability.
The Education Commonwealth Project is an extension of the <%= link_to "Massachusetts Consortium for Innovative Education Assessment (MCIEA)", "https://www.mciea.org/" %>. Formed in 2016 with support from the Massachusetts State Legislature, MCIEA is a partnership of eight public school districts–Attleboro, Boston, Lowell, Milford, Revere, Somerville, Wareham, and Winchester–and their local teacher unions. The eight MCIEA districts have worked together since 2016, with support from the University of Massachusetts Lowell and the Center for Collaborative Education, to create fairer and more accurate pictures of student learning and school quality. The consortium is co-governed by district superintendents and teachers’ union presidents, in recognition of the benefits to such partnerships.
The mission of ECP is to provide Massachusetts school districts with the opportunity to adopt and adapt the innovative assessment tools developed within MCIEA. We seek to increase knowledge among school community members about these alternative measurements, build school and district capacity for employing them, and further develop a system that might be adopted across the Commonwealth. In doing so, ECP strives to advance educational assessment that is more valid, democratic, and equitable than the current accountability system powered chiefly by a single set of standardized tests. Districts may partner with ECP to focus on SQM, QPA, or both. They can also use partnership with ECP as an on-ramp to joining MCIEA. Whatever the case, ECP encourages schools and districts to pursue their specific needs in whatever way makes sense to them.
ECP will partner with any Massachusetts public school district, provided that administrators, educators, and community members are meaningfully engaged. Working with ECP can be as simple as having a conversation with our team about assessment. But we also offer the following full range of resources on a free and open-source basis: