“…Alignment has seen slight change in definition since the 1940s, with a consistent focus on the concept of “agreement,” and a variety of source materials being compared on extent of agreement: instruction and curriculum (Tyler, ); content across grades (Wise & Alt, ); institution‐wide or school‐improvement targets (Pautler, 1989; Scott, ); and intended learning outcomes and expectations (La Marca, Redfield, Winter, & Despriet, ). Alignment work from the late 1990s and into the 2000s as part of the standards‐based reform movements, with the related attention to accountability measures, examined tests’ alignment with standards (Liu et al, ; Porter, ), and the test validity implications of alignment (Beck, ), while later worked turned to comparisons of standards across states and patterns of teachers’ reported practice (Polikoff & Porter, ).…”