I think that people who have never homeschooled have a hard time really grasping why standardized testing will never work for homeschooled children.
No, I don't think it's a difficult concept -- it's just different from school.
I teach almost 60 students in my two academic classes. I give them quizzes and tests because I can't talk to every one of them one-on-one to see just how much they're understanding. Plus, a test gives them all the same chance -- it's not that I was in a hurry while talking to one, or in a better mood while talking to another. And I need concrete numbers that I can pass on to parents /the administrators to prove that the student has achieved X amount of knowledge on the subject.
On the other hand, a parent who's working one-on-one has a much better idea of whether his child understands the material. And he has less need for documenting it for others.
Because the government is so good at it

.
Oh, it's absolutely true that not all kids in public school are getting the education that they should -- BUT the thing is, public school has "checks and balances" to catch these situations. I'm thinking of two kids in my class this year who are doing everything they possibly can
to avoid learning anything. They're behavior problems, they won't take part in anything academic, and their parents are not at all supportive. We aren't likely to be successful with these two. BUT every one of their teachers have reported them to the office. Their guidance counselors, the administrators, the school social workers are all trying to do something to motivate these two -- and their parents.
These two kids are pretty extreme examples, and in spite of all our best efforts, I
don't think we're going to get them to "see the light". BUT people are aware and people are trying.
The thing with homeschooling is that
unless someone like the OP notices and steps up to report it, no one may know. The end may be the same -- the child may not "be saved" -- but there's a greater chance in public school that the problem'll be noticed.
Yep they certainly do. In my state kids have to pass a specific standardized test to graduate from high school and will have to pass another to be promoted from 3rd grade. They are most certainly linked to performance (and many places try or have linked them to teacher pay/performance as well).
Ah, yes, they say, "You have to pass to move on to the next grade" . . . but what actually happens is that the few kids who don't pass are required to attend a couple-weeks summer school program, and then they move on with their class.
Then they hit high school, and they don't understand that they really DO have to pass their classes -- we don't offer a you-didn't-really-pass-3rd-grade-but-you-can-make-it-up-in-two-weeks option.
I would be extremely shocked if your public schools do little to nothing in regards to the tests because they are a huge part of NCLB . . .
Also tests are NOT a good judge of true learning either. I believe there are plenty of studies out there that explain why they don't and how ineffective they are as a measure of success.
You know that
NCLB is yesterday's news?
NCLB was George Bush's baby, and it's been replaced by Obama's
Race to the Top initiative. The two are rather similar, but Plan Obama isn't getting the same press that
NCLB did.
You can find studies to prove that testing's great . . . or that testing's awful. But the reality of group schooling is that testing is the least expensive, most time-efficient way to measure what a large group's learned. LOADS of stuff goes into testing that the general public doesn't grasp, and the things that really matter aren't the things that people discuss.
I can't believe for a moment even in your state they think "la la la..no biggie" because they are still held to the NCLB accountability standards in regards to progress and yearly scores
Actually, of the tests that we've been forced to give over the last 6-8 years, only three remain -- that's about 1/3 of what we administered just a couple years ago. New tests and new standards are being developed for the future, but they aren't here yet -- we're in something of a no-man's land in between programs. I'm really surprised that so many people think
NCLB is still alive and well.