Another opinion on teaching to the test from washingtonpost.com

punkin

<font color=purple>Went through pain just to look
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I really hate that schools are now teaching only what will be tested on some standardized test or other. I was reading the washington post online and found this opinion piece which seems to sum up how I feel fairly well. Does anyone agree or disagree?

'Teach to the Test'? What Test?

By Colman McCarthy
Saturday, March 18, 2006; Page A21

From the academic sidelines, where calls to Leave No Child Untested are routinely sounded by quick-fix school reformers, Jay Mathews joins in with his Feb. 20 op-ed column, "Let's Teach to the Test." In well-crafted prose, he reports that "in 23 years of visiting classrooms I have yet to see any teacher preparing kids for exams in ways that were not careful, sensible and likely to produce more learning."
On Mathews's visit to my classroom four years ago -- at School Without Walls, where I have been volunteering since 1982 -- he must not have noticed that not only was I not preparing my 28 students for tests but that I regard tests as educational insults. At School Without Walls and two other high schools where I am a guest teacher -- Wilson High School in the District and Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School in lower Montgomery County -- I have never given a test. I respect my students too much to demean them with exercises in fake knowledge.
Tests represent fear-based learning, the opposite of learning based on desire. Frightened and fretting with pre-test jitters, students stuff their minds with information they disgorge on exam sheets and sweat out the results. I know of no meaningful evidence that acing tests has anything to do with students' character development or whether their natural instincts for idealism or altruism are nurtured.
I have large amounts of evidence that tests promote the opposite: character defects. After having two of my high school classes read Mathews's column, I asked the students: If during a test the opportunity came to cheat, with no fear of being caught, would you? A majority of hands went up. A few students dismissed the question as naive. Not cheat if you could get away with it? Get real. When speaking at high school assemblies, I ask students how many can raise their hands and say with total honesty that they never cheated in school. Few hands go up. If some brave souls do confess to honesty, they are greeted with jeers or calls of "yeah, right."
Standardized tests measure braininess and memory skills. American society has plenty of people who were academic whizzes in high school but were so driven by the lure of a high grade-point average that their spiritual lives remained stunted. I worry about students who make too many A's. What parts of their inner lives are they sacrificing to conform to someone else's notion that doing well in tests means doing well in life? Is any time left over from mastering theoretical knowledge for gaining the kind of experiential knowledge found in community service or volunteering in programs such as Special Olympics or DC Reads?
Desire-based learning happens when teachers deal in combustibles, when fires are lit and students burn to explore ideas that have nothing to do with what testocrats require. Quality teachers who are fire-lighters often find themselves trapped in schools that have been seduced by the Advanced Placement fad. Teachers whose students can't hack the AP final are regarded as failures.
School principals get hammerlocked also. They watch teachers' performance the way teachers watch students' performance. A hierarchy results. Most everyone is fearful of someone in power right above. Students worry about teachers, teachers worry about principals, principals worry about school boards, school boards worry about politicians and politicians worry about the voters.
Before riskily breaking ranks with an innovation or two that might actually eliminate fear in the classroom, a deviator must ask: Will I be whacked by that power-wielder just above me? Caution reigns.
To compensate for my no-testing policy, I assign tons of homework. The assignments? Tell someone you love him or her. Do a favor for someone who won't know you did it. Say a kind word to the workers at the school: the people who clean the toilets, cook the food, drive the buses and heat the buildings. And a warning: If you don't do the homework, you'll fail. You'll fail your better self, you'll fail to make the world better, you'll fail at being a peacemaker.
For 25 years of testing the waters by not testing, I've been telling my students not to worry about answering questions. Be braver and bolder: Question the answers. Which answers? To start, the ones from anyone who champions classroom get-aheadism based on test scores. Throw off your chains, students. You have nothing to lose but your backpacks.
 
Huh? Tests are insulting? Fear based? Character defects???

Kook.

How does he know his students got what he taught?
 
Charade said:
Huh? Tests are insulting? Fear based? Character defects???

Kook.

How does he know his students got what he taught?

I would hope that a teacher has some idea of how his studens are doing without resorting to incessant testing.
 
punkin said:
I would hope that a teacher has some idea of how his studens are doing without resorting to incessant testing.

Incessant? Without *any* testing, how would a teacher know the concepts taught are understood?
 

It's time for me to bring out my Basketball analogy.

It's great if you make all the free throws in practice but for it to count you have to do it in the actual game.
 
I have to agree with Charade on this one. Testing is a measurement of what a child is retaining. Life is full of tests whether we like it or not. If you want to be police officer you have to take a test and pass it. If you want to be a fireman, another test to take and pass. If you want to enter the military another test to take and score well on.

So I guess in the reporters world, no one would have to take a test to obtain a driver's license? Just walk up to DMV and tell them I really know how to drive, honest I do.

Charade said:
Huh? Tests are insulting? Fear based? Character defects???

Kook.

How does he know his students got what he taught?
 
Charade said:
Incessant? Without *any* testing, how would a teacher know the concepts taught are understood?


Papers they write, conversations they have in small groups or with the class, questions they pose.....

lots of ways.

I hate tests - they waste my class time and encourage my students (college level) to only "learn" aka "worry about" what will be on the test.
 
Though there are other ways of assessing students' comprehension of the lessons besides standardized testing, it is still important to teach students how to prepare and take standardized tests.
Keep in mind it is often the state, district or individual school's policy to assess students through testing. So when one says "incessant testing" it is often not the teacher that is at fault but the laws governing the education system. This week in NJ certain elementary grades are spending the week taking the NJASk test. If the students don't do well, it will show on the school's record and if the students continue to not reach a certain level, there are sanctions against the school. Problem is the state grades students of all abilities and disabilities on the same test. So don't knock the teacher who wants to prepare her students by giving them practice tests and such. I digress. Back to the main point!
There are alternative forms of assessment that don't require a standardized test to see if the student has learned the material such as reports, essays, oral presentations, art, music, etc but it is unrealistic to think that a teacher can never use traditional testing. A good teacher will use a combination of both so he/she can truly assess the knowledge of the students, not just by bombarding them with an overload of homework as your article suggests.
 
MsLeFever said:
Papers they write, conversations they have in small groups or with the class, questions they pose.....

lots of ways.

I hate tests - they waste my class time and encourage my students (college level) to only "learn" aka "worry about" what will be on the test.

papers they write, conversations they have, etc. are just other forms of testing.
 
Talk to the politicians, not the teachers. The politicians set the standards
and state mandates (many of them unfunded), it's our job to juggle between
playing by the rules (preparing the students for testing) and providing our
own alternative assessments.

One of the positives that standardized testing does provide, is that it is an
objective assessment, whereas many of the others (reports, discussion,
art, music, projects, etc.) are usually very subjective .
 
I don't think he's blaming the teachers. (God knows I'm not blaming the teachers-all the good ones I know hate doing this) I think he is critical of the no child left behind laws.
As far as, well life is full of standardized tests; what if it wasn't? Tests are also subjective. They measure a child's ability to take tests, not his ability to learn and translate that knowledge into something useful.
 
MsLeFever said:
Papers they write, conversations they have in small groups or with the class, questions they pose.....

lots of ways.

I hate tests - they waste my class time and encourage my students (college level) to only "learn" aka "worry about" what will be on the test.

Yes. Exactly. When I was in school, the question aske most often in the classroom was "will this be on the test?"

I don't think that's learning. That's cramming. You forget the material as soon as the test is over.
 
You could say the same about any assessment, that you forget it once
it's over.

I wrote many papers, did many group projects, etc... during my Master's
Degree classes, couldn't recall a darn one of them if I had to. What I do remember is the process of preparation, research skills, and work ethic it
took to succeed with them. All of which could be also be said about taking
tests.

I'm not here to defend standardized testing, it definitely has it's flaws. But it
is equally flawed to swing the pendulum completely to the other side and say
alternative assessments are the only way to go.
 
I am not completly opposed to the standardized test, but in our district the tests are given twice a year. My DD8 passed the fall test and had to take the spring test. She scored well the first time!
The test included many things that had not been taught in class. By the spring test, the teacher had given them a small amount of each subject on the test.
My problem is none of the subjects are fully covered. I feel the tests are given before the children can properly learn and absorb all the information. I am not a teacher, but I have heard from many in our district that the test are very unfair and should be given either at the end of the school year or at at the begining, covering what the children learned the year before.
 
If you want them to not worry about "what's going to be on the test" you have to change much more than school - you have to change ongoing, real, adult life.
 
Galahad said:
If you want them to not worry about "what's going to be on the test" you have to change much more than school - you have to change ongoing, real, adult life.

Yes, so don't forget to vote. :rolleyes:


My son's school has NO TESTS-no spelling tests, no geography tests, no math tests....nothing. It's an "informal" school. Strangely, when mandatory testing rolls around(and sadly, they DO have to take those tests), his school's results are the highest in the city. Our teachers do not panic about testing. Our students are respected all year long and testing week is celebrated with lots of fun! Great snaks, a family dance night, extra recess, parent breakfasts. We serve breakfast in the halls for the kids too! On carts and we dress in formal attire so they are literally 'served formally.' Everyone loves testing week!!! The parents ALL SERIOUSLY HATE the tests. But hey, if you get lemons-make lemonade and serve it with your best china and sterling. I think testing is totally a waste! To those of you who think it prepares children for life- :p
 
shortbun said:
Yes, so don't forget to vote. :rolleyes:


My son's school has NO TESTS-no spelling tests, no geography tests, no math tests....nothing. It's an "informal" school. Strangely, when mandatory testing rolls around(and sadly, they DO have to take those tests), his school's results are the highest in the city. Our teachers do not panic about testing. Our students are respected all year long and testing week is celebrated with lots of fun! Great snaks, a family dance night, extra recess, parent breakfasts. We serve breakfast in the halls for the kids too! On carts and we dress in formal attire so they are literally 'served formally.' Everyone loves testing week!!! The parents ALL SERIOUSLY HATE the tests. But hey, if you get lemons-make lemonade and serve it with your best china and sterling. I think testing is totally a waste! To those of you who think it prepares children for life- :p

So where do you live? I'm moving. Seriously though, is it a public school? My youngest is in a private school with no testing and she is doing great. Actually, my older one is doing fairly well in her public middle school as well, but the entire emphasis there is on the tests and on the grades. Nothing else seems to matter. After all those years of having her in progressive schools it is very strange to me and to her.
 



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