Standardized tests do have a role to play as a component of
education; the problem is they have become the end all be all instead.
Anybody who hasn’t had their head under a rock for the last
five years knows the tests weren’t designed to evaluate teachers, that they
destroy teacher creativity, innovation and to a degree morale and that they
have led to an erosion of the joy of learning for many children too. It also caused us to give up on the classes like music, art, drama as well as skill and trade programs that many of these kids looked forward and replaced them with intensive this or remedial that.
Yet for some reason the powers-that-be continue to double down on their implementation and ratchet up the high stakes. Now many children advancing to the next grade and teachers keeping their jobs are determined by just a few hours each spring. The only people who really seem to be benefiting are the high stakes testing companies, over 3 billion for Pearson last year alone.
Yet for some reason the powers-that-be continue to double down on their implementation and ratchet up the high stakes. Now many children advancing to the next grade and teachers keeping their jobs are determined by just a few hours each spring. The only people who really seem to be benefiting are the high stakes testing companies, over 3 billion for Pearson last year alone.
Maybe, just maybe in a bizzaro type way
all of above would be worth it if it led to academic gains but as Diane Ravitch
revealed in her blog, they just haven’t worked. She wrote: There were big
achievement gains from 1971-2008
for whites, blacks, and Hispanics, and big achievement gains for students at
every age level tested–ages 9, 13, and 17.
From 1971-2008, in reading, black students at age 9 gained 34
points; at age 13, 25 points; at 17, 28 points.
From 1971-2008, white students at age 9 made gains of 14 points;
at 13 points, 7 points; at 17, 4 points.
From 1971-2008, Hispanic students at age 9 gained 25 points; at
13, 10 points; at 17, 17 points.
However, for the past four years, from 2008-2012, the scores
have been stagnant for every racial and ethnic group and for every age group
with the singular exception of Hispanic 13-year-olds and female 13-year-olds.
From 2008-2012, the acme of the high-stakes testing era, there
were no gains for black students at ages 9 or 13 or 17. http://dianeravitch.net/2013/06/27/the-latest-naep-report-dont-believe-what-you-read-about-it/
It’s a definition of insanity to do the same things over and
over and expect a different outcome, well friends we have four years of data
that says high stakes standardized tests aren’t working. Wouldn’t it be insane
to continue down the same path? The era of high stakes testing should
mercifully come to an end and then we should track down all the students who
went though it and apologize.
Want some light reading about the pervasive nature of high
stakes tests? Click the links.
Yes. High stakes testing made school a miserable experience for many students and teachers.
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