BRUSH FIRES Fires in the Gorge Creu’s have the brush fires around Interstate 84 that have consumed 7,000 acres of grass about 60/percent contained PAGE 4 SPORTS Offseason Report Angelina Woken will be one of three sophomores in the low post for the women’s basketball team this war rAUt a i a TUESDAY.AUGUST 11. 1998 TODAY I he World Masters Games athletics will continue at Hayward Field WEATHER Today Partly cloudy 1 ligh 85. Low 57. Wednesday Sunny I ligh 93- Low 58. ASUO Senate gets DDS rolling again—for now The senate exhausted all of its $5,000 in summer funds at Monday night’s meeting By Leanne Nelms Associate Editor The ASUO Student Senate voted 6-0 Mon day evening to approve a budget freeing the remainder of the Designated Driver Shuttle budget. Next stop: the Constitution Court. In the weeks since the last senate meeting, tensions between the ASUO Executive and DDS appear to have escalated, but the sen ate’s authority extended only to issues re garding the group’s budget directly. After twenty minutes of debate, including lengthy statements by both DDS director Brandon Smith and ASUO Vice President Morgan Cowling, the senate restricted further debate to senators only. “I think we should keep de bate centered on the budget, not tire admin istrative things swirling around this,” said Sen. Selena Brewington during the meeting. The senate’s decision transfers $23,788 to DDS, bringing the group’s total budget to $50,000—the amount of the ballot measure ap proved by students during the spring elections. Prior to the final vote, Smith had asked the senate to postpone a decision on his group’s budget. He said he was primarily concerned about the basis of authority for the execu tive’s intervention and the senate’s jurisdic tion in matters pertaining to ballot measure funds. Smith said planned to bring his con cerns before the Constitution Court during its next session on Aug. 20. “I have a brief ready to go. Theoretically, any decision made here could be overturned by the Con Court,” Smith said during the meeting. The issues surrounding the situation are complex, but much of the disagreement stems from the insistence of the executive that DDS adopt an itemized budget for its ballot measure funding. Historically, this isa departure from previous cases where voter approved money was allocated as a lump sum, said Smith. Cowling said she feels she is acting in the best interests of University students. "It’s our job to make sure programs are accountable and responsible,” she said. “We felt that there needed to be process. Some decision had to be made to get the program up and running.” Moving to an itemized budget also opens details of planned spending to scrutiny by the senate. One issue the senators were con cerned about during debate was DDS' shift Turn to SENATE, Page 3 student Senate Sprinkles on top LAURA GOSS/Emerald A sunflower at the University's urban farm soaks up sun and water in Monday's nice Heather. New tests aim to measure learning more accurately State officials plan to give tests with varying difficulty levels to students in the same grade level The Associated Press PORTLAND — Oregon soon will become the first state to give students in the same grade different standardized tests to help determine their achieve ment level. The different tests — easy, average and hard — are being praised by Oregon officials. Even skeptics agree that, done right, it could give a more accu rate reading of students’ profi ciency. But others say parents should be concerned. The state tests have become a centerpiece of efforts to raise academic standards for all Ore gon students. Benchmarks are set for each grade level. Since 1991, each student has been tested in grades three, five, eight and 10. Students who function far above or below the average for their grade will benefit the most from the new approach, proponents say. A one-test-fits all model subjects such stu dents to too many questions that are beyond their skill level, and may not even stretch far enough from grade-level skills to detect the student’s true achievement level. Without an accurate picture of achievement, the proponents say, it’s more difficult for teach ers to tailor instruction to fit the student’s needs. The choice of tests will fol low weighing a pupil’s previ ous test scores. And teachers can make recommendations based on their knowledge of how well the student performs in class. But some test experts caution that there are pitfalls in using differentiated tests to measure students against a uniform benchmark. Tests questions must be de veloped carefully to fairly grade students on the same grading scale, said Stanley Rabinowitz, co-director of testing for West Ed, a federally funded regional laboratory specializing in test ing and academic standards. In addition, he cited a philo sophical issue: Whether Ore gon, having determined which skills every student in a partic ular grade should master, is right to then give some students tests that primarily measure skills not at the benchmark lev el. But officials creating the tests say they are confident the tests will be fair to all 150,000 Ore gon students assessed each year and will give teachers more re liable information about what each student has mastered and what each needs. “I don't see any aspect of these tests that is so unique that we haven’t addressed the con cerns many times over,” said Ron Houser, Oregon’s associate superintendent for assessment and evaluation. “By more tight ly focusing in the student’s achievement range, you actual ly vastly improve the reliability of the measurement.”