Rokkitsci said:
I have seen these standardized test questions. There is absolutely nothing tricky about them. The knowledge they are testing comprises the most fundamental concepts of the subject. If you cannot answer these questions, you do not know the subject - regardless of how "bright" your parents think you are.
Do you not think that some students learn differently, therefore they also, as a result, will test differently?
I am an auditory learner. Don't make me read anything because I won't remember it, especially if the subject matter doesn't interest me. However, if I hear something, quite literally, I will remember it forever. When it comes to standardized testing, I, for one, do not test well. It's not pressure or stress, it's boredom and torture. However, if given an oral exam, or an essay exam, I will excel. In terms of the essay, I can hear the answer in my head and convert my thoughts to paper. Standardized testing always made me feel boxed in and pressured to pick one of the canned answers. Perhaps what you consider to be blue, I consider to be azure. They both mean the same thing, but on a standardized test, perhaps the symantics of the answer will cause me to select a different response.
That is how I can see that bright students may not do well on what you consider to be straight-forward, easy tests.
I object vigorously to teachers who just "teach the test" = meaning that they spend a week before the test showing their students what is on it and showing them "how to work them." However, I completely endorse the concept of "teaching the test" = meaning that we should be absolutely positive that our teaching addresses the content of the test.
Our district has been teaching the test all year... not just the week before the test. Concepts have been mungled together without ensuring that there is any true grasp of a concept. I've said to you on a different thread that one week my DS had multiplication homework one night, geometric shapes another and by the end of the week, they were studying time. The district is trying to make them jacks of all trades but masters of none. If much rather the "Charles Emerson Winchester" approach of doing one thing very well and then moving on. My DH and I transferred our children to public school this year because my DD needed the special learning assistance that it could offer. We also live in a "very good" district. She has gotten a lot of help with reading, and also went through necessary eye therapy. We are debating sending them for one more year to public school, or sending them back to private because historically, the private schools actually teach... because they can... because they are allowed to do so because they aren't just teaching for the tests... for their own grades.
I do not agree with the attitude of "let me teach what I want to teach, and don't make my students take any standard tests." I invite any standard tests at any time in any of my classes. In fact I wish we had more of them. I like the idea of some outside source of questions. That way my students would know they are learning the subject, not just some favorite formulation of my own. I want them to know they are ready for anything - from anybody - at any time.
What's the difference if it is your whim that they are learning, or the governments? Other than the fact that the government's is the one that is being forced on everyone. Either one could be the "right" one or the wrong one.
We need to support our teachers fully. But we also need to make sure that the instruction our students are receiving is up to minimal standards. I still believe the biggest problem we have in education is the culture that is producing the students. We must require that teachers do their jobs properly, but we must also require that parents share the blame for their childrens failures. Without the parents making sure their children are being raised as good citizens, no amount of money or testing will help.
I am all for teachers being able to grade the parents of their students and for funding for counseling some of those parents to do better for their kids once the situation is investigated. Without accountability from the parents for their kids' well-being, we're just kidding ourselves. A student can have the best teacher in the world, but without the proper support system at home, there isn't much that the teacher or the school can do.