The Problem with Testing
Based on the title, The Trouble With Testing Mania,
I feared that this NYT editorial would be a hatchet job, but I actually thought
it made mostly fair and reasonable points. We have a long way to go to improve
tests and make sure that they are robust and fair instead of lousy and easily
game-able. My oldest daughter just took three AP exams and I took six in high
school – and I’ve almost never heard of anyone criticize them for lack of
rigor, teaching to the test behavior, etc. The right answer isn’t to eliminate
tests and accountability, but rather to improve the tests and testing system.
The best schools, which are achieving off-the-charts outcomes
with the most disadvantaged students, almost all use A TON of tests, but good
tests (often ones generated by the teachers) that are primarily used to make
sure that EVERY student is learning the materials being taught. Then, by the
time the required state tests come around, the kids know the material and there
are few surprises for anyone: principal, teacher, parents, child. This is the
opposite of teaching to the test.
Congress made a
sensible decision a decade ago when it required the states to administer yearly
tests to public school students in exchange for federal education aid. The
theory behind the No Child Left Behind Act was that holding schools accountable
for test scores would force them to improve instruction for groups of children
whom they had historically shortchanged.
Testing did spur
some progress in student performance. But it has become clear to us over time
that testing was being overemphasized — and misused — in schools that were
substituting test preparation for instruction. Even though test-driven reforms
were helpful in the beginning, it is now clear that they will never bring this
country’s schools up to par with those of the high-performing nations that have
left us far behind in math, science and even literacy instruction.
Congress required
the states to give annual math and reading tests in grades three through eight
(and once in high school) as a way of ensuring that students were making
progress and that minority children were being fairly educated. Schools that
did not meet performance targets for two years were labeled as needing
improvement and subjected to sanctions. Fearing that they would be labeled poor
performers, schools and districts — especially in low-income areas — rolled out
a relentless series of “diagnostic” tests that were actually practice rounds
for the high-stakes exams to come.
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