Originally published in Certification Magazine.
Do you know how your certification test results are being used? Do you know if they are being kept confidential? Have you been treated with respect and courtesy when taking a test? Do you know the steps to address your concerns about the test or the testing experience? These are a few questions that address your rights as a test-taker. They are questions you should know the answers to, because your test provider should already be transparently communicating about these topics.
Over the past few years, the increase in the use of tests has been phenomenal, and tests are clearly accepted as a common part of our culture. And I’m not just talking about IT certification tests, but testing in all industries, in education and in government. With such growth and activity, it is easy to focus on the many aspects of the tests themselves, sometimes ignoring the test-takers. For this reason—to address the rights of test-takers—the Joint Committee on Testing Practices (JCTP) was formed as a cooperative effort of several professional organizations.
The main objective of the JCTP is the advancement, in the public interest, of the quality of testing practices. As part of this goal, the committee produced a document titled “Rights and Responsibilities of Test-Takers: Guidelines and Expectations.” As the title suggests, the pamphlet contains a list of 10 rights and 10 responsibilities that you, the test-taker, have.
By knowing your rights, you are in a better position to monitor the quality of the examination experience, not just what occurs while taking the test. (Your responsibilities will be listed in a future column.)
You should keep in mind that these rights are not legally based, nor are they inalienable rights such as those listed in the United States of America’s Bill of Rights. According to the document produced by the JCTP, “they represent the best judgments of testing professionals about the reasonable expectations that those involved in the testing enterprise… should have of each other.”
As a test-taker, you have the right to: