Hundreds More AP Test Scores Reported Missing
By Valerie Strauss
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, September 2, 2006; Page A03
The company that administers Advanced Placement exams said yesterday that more test results than previously disclosed were lost and for the first time blamed computer glitches for part of the problem.
Score sheets for portions of at least 1,500 exams taken in May around the world were discovered missing, said Tom Ewing, spokesman for the Educational Testing Service. Last month, Ewing had said that a few hundred had gone astray. Students from England, Israel, Canada and the United States have reported missing test scores.
In addition, Ewing said that about 2,700 scores for the Praxis teacher licensing examinations taken in the United States in June had been delayed or misplaced but that most have been found. States use Praxis results as part of their teacher licensing certification process....
***
Some of the problems with the lost AP scores resulted because of computer problems in May and June with tracking and processing tests, Ewing said. Officials at ETS, which develops and scores AP tests for the nonprofit College Board, are trying to figure out what happened, he said....
***
Students around the world have been struggling with how to handle the lost tests, with options including taking tests again or seeking a refund, and some school administrators and parents have said that they are not satisfied with the testing service's effort to help them....
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/09/01/AR2006090101381.html