Quantcast

Milwaukee City Wire

Wednesday, September 10, 2025

Wisconsin Assembly bill by Rep. Wittke mandates changes to school assessment and accountability

Webp wlpeu9xuh45n3vmmlp54yt5zkvc7

Robert Wittke, Wisconsin State Representative for 63rd District | Official website

Robert Wittke, Wisconsin State Representative for 63rd District | Official website

Passed bill authored by State Rep. Robert Wittke seeks to standardize and restore previous evaluation metrics in Wisconsin's public school assessments and accountability reports, according to the Wisconsin State Assembly.

It passed both chambers as of March 18, clearing the Assembly by a vote of 54-44 and the Senate by a vote of 18-14.

However, Gov. Tony Evers vetoed the bill on March 28.

The bill, introduced as AB1 on Jan. 31, during the 2025 session, was summarized by the state legislature as follows: "changes to the educational assessment program and the school and school district accountability report. (FE)".

The following is our breakdown, based on the actual bill text, and may include interpretation to clarify its provisions.

In essence, this bill mandates changes to Wisconsin's educational assessment program and the structure of school accountability reports. Beginning with the school year it is enacted, the Department of Public Instruction (DPI) must revert to using the cut scores, score ranges, and performance category definitions from the 2019-20 school year for school and district report cards. For the Wisconsin Student Assessment System (WSAS) tests, DPI will align the English language arts and math assessment standards for grades three through eight with the National Assessment of Educational Progress. Meanwhile, for the PreACT and ACT with Writing examinations in English, reading, and math for grades nine to eleven, DPI will use the standards from the 2021-22 school year. Performance categories must use the terms "below basic," "basic," "proficient," and "advanced." These changes are aimed at standardizing and restoring previous evaluation metrics across Wisconsin's public schools.

In the Assembly, 54 Republicans voted in favor while 44 Democrats opposed it.

Meanwhile, in the Senate, 18 Republicans voted in favor while 14 Democrats voted against it.

Representatives Wittke, Novak, O'Connor, Kreibich, Tusler, and 25 other legislators introduced the bill in the Wisconsin Assembly on Jan. 31 during the 2025 legislative session. The bill was also co-authored by Sen. John Jagler (Republican-13th District), Rep. Scott Allen (Republican-82nd District), Rep. Elijah R. Behnke (Republican-6th District), Rep. Mark Born (Republican-37th District), and Rep. Lindee Rae Brill (Republican-27th District).

The bill was also co-sponsored by Sen. Julian Bradley (Republican-28th District), Sen. Rachael Cabral-Guevara (Republican-19th District), Sen. Dan Feyen (Republican-20th District) and 34 other co-sponsors.

Wittke graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire in 1980 with a BA.

Wittke, a Republican, was elected to the Wisconsin State Assembly in 2025 to represent the state's 63rd Assembly district, replacing previous state representative Robin Vos.

In Wisconsin, the legislative process starts when a senator, constituent, group, or agency proposes an idea for a bill. After drafting, the bill is introduced, numbered, and referred to a committee for review and public input. If approved, it moves through three readings and votes in both the Senate and Assembly. Once both chambers pass the same version, the bill goes to the governor, who can sign it, veto it, or let it become law without a signature. Only a small share of bills introduced each session ultimately become law. You can learn more about the Wisconsin legislative process here.

Wisconsin Assembly Votes for AB1

LegislatorPartyDistrictVote
Adam NeylonRepublican15Yea
Alex A. DallmanRepublican39Yea
Alex R. JoersDemocrat81Nay
Amaad Rivera-WagnerDemocrat90Nay
Amanda M. NedweskiRepublican32Yea
Andrew HysellDemocrat48Nay
Angela StroudDemocrat73Nay
Angelina M. CruzDemocrat62Nay
Angelito TenorioDemocrat14Nay
Ann RoeDemocrat44Nay
Barbara DittrichRepublican99Yea
Ben DeSmidtDemocrat65Nay
Benjamin FranklinRepublican88Yea
Bob G. DonovanRepublican61Yea
Brent JacobsonRepublican87Yea
Brienne BrownDemocrat43Nay
Calvin T. CallahanRepublican35Yea
Chanz J. GreenRepublican74Yea
Christian PhelpsDemocrat93Nay
Christine SinickiDemocrat20Nay
Chuck WichgersRepublican84Yea
Cindi DuchowRepublican97Yea
Clint P. MosesRepublican92Yea
Clinton M. AndersonDemocrat45Nay
Daniel KnodlRepublican24Yea
Darrin B. MadisonDemocrat10Nay
Dave MaxeyRepublican83Yea
David ArmstrongRepublican67Yea
David MurphyRepublican56Yea
David SteffenRepublican4Yea
Dean KaufertRepublican53Yea
Deb AndracaDemocrat23Nay
Duke TuckerRepublican75Yea
Elijah R. BehnkeRepublican6Yea
Francesca HongDemocrat76Nay
Greta NeubauerDemocrat66Nay
Jeffrey MursauRepublican36Yea
Jenna JacobsonDemocrat50Nay
Jerry L. O'ConnorRepublican60Yea
Jessie RodriguezRepublican21Yea
Jill BillingsDemocrat95Nay
Jim PiwowarczykRepublican98Yea
Joan FitzgeraldDemocrat46Nay
Jodi EmersonDemocrat91Nay
Joe SheehanDemocrat26Nay
Joel KitchensRepublican1Yea
John SpirosRepublican86Yea
Joy L. GoebenRepublican5Yea
Kalan HaywoodDemocrat16Nay
Karen DeSantoDemocrat40Nay
Karen KirschDemocrat7Nay
Karen R. HurdRepublican69Yea
Kevin PetersenRepublican57Yea
Lee SnodgrassDemocrat52Nay
Lindee Rae BrillRepublican27Yea
Lisa SubeckDemocrat79Nay
Lori A. PalmeriDemocrat54Nay
Margaret ArneyDemocrat18Nay
Mark BornRepublican37Yea
Maureen McCarvilleDemocrat42Nay
Mike BareDemocrat80Nay
Nancy VanderMeerRepublican70Yea
Nate L. GustafsonRepublican55Yea
Patrick SnyderRepublican85Yea
Paul MelotikRepublican22Yea
Paul TittlRepublican25Yea
Priscilla A. PradoDemocrat9Nay
Randy UdellDemocrat47Nay
Renuka MayadevDemocrat77Nay
Rick GundrumRepublican58Yea
Rob KreibichRepublican28Yea
Rob SummerfieldRepublican68Yea
Rob SwearingenRepublican34Yea
Robert BrooksRepublican59Yea
Robert WittkeRepublican63Yea
Robin VosRepublican33Yea
Robyn ViningDemocrat13Nay
Ron TuslerRepublican3Yea
Russell GoodwinDemocrat12Nay
Ryan M. ClancyDemocrat19Nay
Ryan SpaudeDemocrat89Nay
Scott AllenRepublican82Yea
Scott KrugRepublican72Yea
Sequanna TaylorDemocrat11Nay
Shae A. SortwellRepublican2Yea
Shannon ZimmermanRepublican30Yea
Shelia StubbsDemocrat78Absent
Steve DoyleDemocrat94Nay
Supreme Moore OmokundeDemocrat17Nay
Sylvia Ortiz-VelezDemocrat8Nay
Tara JohnsonDemocrat96Nay
Tip McGuireDemocrat64Nay
Todd NovakRepublican51Yea
Tony KurtzRepublican41Yea
Travis TranelRepublican49Yea
Treig E. PronschinskeRepublican29Yea
Tyler AugustRepublican31Yea
Vincent MiresseDemocrat71Nay
William PentermanRepublican38Yea

Wisconsin Senate Votes for AB1

LegislatorPartyDistrictVote
André JacqueRepublican1Yea
Brad PfaffDemocrat32Nay
Chris KapengaRepublican33Yea
Chris LarsonDemocrat7Nay
Cory TomczykRepublican29Yea
Dan FeyenRepublican20Yea
Devin LeMahieuRepublican9Yea
Dianne H. HesselbeinDemocrat27Nay
Dora E. DrakeDemocrat4Nay
Eric WimbergerRepublican2Yea
Howard L. MarkleinRepublican17Yea
Jamie WallDemocrat30Nay
Jeff SmithDemocrat31Nay
Jesse L. JamesRepublican23Yea
Jodi Habush SinykinDemocrat8Nay
John JaglerRepublican13Yea
Julian BradleyRepublican28Yea
Kelda RoysDemocrat26Absent
Kristin Dassler-AlfheimDemocrat18Nay
LaTonya JohnsonDemocrat6Nay
Mark SpreitzerDemocrat15Nay
Mary FelzkowskiRepublican12Yea
Melissa RatcliffDemocrat16Nay
Patrick TestinRepublican24Yea
Rachael Cabral-GuevaraRepublican19Yea
Rob HuttonRepublican5Yea
Rob StafsholtRepublican10Yea
Robert W. WirchDemocrat22Nay
Romaine Robert QuinnRepublican25Yea
Sarah KeyeskiDemocrat14Nay
Steve L. NassRepublican11Yea
Tim CarpenterDemocrat3Nay
Van H. WanggaardRepublican21Yea

MORE NEWS