Published: August 17, 2001
Exam Anxiety
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More testing is an unworthy and ineffective means of raising
expectations for poor and minority students.
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President Bush’s proposal to test students in grades 3 through 8
every year amounts to bad policy that could create chaos and harm
thousands of children without improving their performance.
Unfortunately, the two houses of Congress have already agreed on the
testing plan in the Elementary and Secondary Education Act; their
argument is mainly over how to carry it out.
People who should know better are supporting the Bush plan because
they believe it will force teachers to raise their expectations for
poor and minority students and prompt them to teach those kids the
rigorous curricula that high- achieving students receive. Although that
is a worthy objective, more testing is an unworthy and ineffective
means of achieving it. Here’s why:
- The testing plan assumes we can threaten and pressure schools and
students into raising performance. But states already taking this
tack produce few positive results. Failing and marginal schools
nearly always lack the capacity to solve their problems. They
don’t have the money or the know-how, nor do they have the
quality teachers they need, the supplies, the equipment, or the
facilities.
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Failing and
marginal schools nearly always lack the capacity to solve their
problems.
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- If testing in grades 3 to 5, in particular, is intended for
diagnostic purposes, as the president claims, it won’t help
much. The tests will be administered late in the year, meaning they
won’t be scored and returned to teachers until the students are
well into the next school year. Moreover, teachers continuously test
kids for diagnostic purposes. If they aren’t using what they
learn now to help students, why would they use new data?
- The plan will increase pressure on faculties to teach to the
test, which would be fine if the test covered what we want students
to learn. But in 44 states, exams aren’t aligned with
standards. Most states are still using the same old off-the-shelf
tests.
- The amount of testing has grown so fast that the rather small
testing industry has been scrambling to meet demand. As a result,
testing companies have admitted to horrendous mistakes that prevented
seniors from graduating, forced other students to attend summer
school, and resulted in some kids repeating a grade. These same
companies are frequently late in getting tests developed and scoring
completed. Untrained, temporary workers often are hired to read and
score essays and other open-ended questions. These mistakes are
costly—sometimes life-altering—for thousands of
youngsters. And the president’s mandate could increase the
demand on these companies by as much as 50 percent.
- Implicit in Bush’s proposal is the assumption that, if
additional testing reveals poor student performance or weaknesses in
schools, somebody (who?) will take corrective action. But we
don’t need more tests to tell us that large numbers of children
are entering (and leaving) high school without being able to read,
write, or compute at basic levels, much less proficient levels, and
that state and federal governments are a long way from taking the
steps necessary to correct these problems. The president’s plan
will add hundreds more schools to the list of failures, about which
little or nothing will be done.
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The president's plan will add hundreds more schools to the list of
failures, about which little or nothing will be done.
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- Finally, one has to wonder how much of this is political
posturing. Congress adopted strict Title I accountability measures in
1994, requiring states to develop six new tests in six years. The
federal government hasn’t enforced that law, and only 11 states
have complied fully.
President Bush has justified the new tests by saying, “Without
yearly testing we do not know who is falling behind and who needs our
help.” If that’s what this is all about, we can save lots
of time and money. All the president and Congress need to do is visit
the districts and schools that serve the urban and rural poor,
immigrants, and racial minorities. There they can see, with their own
eyes, the children whom we always leave behind and who desperately need
our help. If our political leaders actually need more testing to tell
them that, they haven’t been paying attention.
—Ronald A. Wolk
Vol. 13, Issue 1, Page 4
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