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Ann Lahrson Fisher
Few people consider standardized tests to be the powerful teaching instruments they
are, nor do parents consider the possible impact of tests on their children. Most
homeschoolers who have their children tested find the tests to be merely a source of
academic feedback or a simple way to notify the state that the children are being educated
according to their standards.
Years ago I administered standardized tests to the students in my public school
classrooms. As a homeschooling parent, I have agonized over whether to test my own
children. Now I regularly administer achievement tests to homeschooled students. I
continue to notice that standardized tests often teach significant lessons.
Please consider the "side effect lessons" listed below. Parents may want
to consider how to best counter these potentially harmful lessons the next time their
children are tested.
Side Effect Lessons
- Someone else knows what you should know better than you do.
- Learning is an absolute that can be measured.
- Your interests are not important.
- The subject areas being evaluated on the test are the only things that are important
to know.
- Thinking is not valued; getting the 'right' answer is the only goal.
- The answer (to any question) is readily available, indisputable,and it's one of these
four or five answers here; there's no need to look deeper or dwell on the question.
- Your worth can be summarized by a single mark on a paper.
- The purpose of learning is to get a high score. High test scores are the only purpose
of testing.
- If you score very well, you are better than other people who do not score as well.
- Poor test scores mean that you are a failure. If you score poorly,there is nothing
you can do to change it. Why try?
- I haven't learned to read yet. I am not smart.
- Since we are tested once a year so we can homeschool, we have to spend the rest of
the year preparing for the test.
- The test was too hard. I am not smart.
- The test was easy. I don't have to learn any more.
- The test was easy [hard]. Public [home] [private] school kids are dumber [smarter]
than I am.
- The questions on the test are what is important. What I have been studying is not
important.
- I have to get a higher score next year to show that I am learning.
Other professional educators share my concerns about achievement testing. A few
years ago, I spent an afternoon in the Multnomah County Library in Portland searching
through education journals, reading articles on testing and evaluation. Here are the notes
I gleaned that day.
- The single most common misuse of any test score is as a sole evaluation tool,
contrary to test makers' recommendations.
- Tests do not measure what they are said to measure.
- Standardized tests cannot measure creativity.
- Test scores reward children who have one style of learning, and penalize all other
children for having a different style of learning.
- Standardized tests cannot measure the ability to think, and actually teach children
bad thinking habits, such as trying to outguess the testmakers, rather than thinking for
themselves.
- Standardized tests result in a type of evaluation that is easy to manage (true/false,
multiple choice). Thinking skills are very difficult and time consuming to evaluate.
- Standardized tests are designed, not to test individual progress, but to compare a
child's progress to the progress of other children. Thus, tests promote competition, not
cooperation.
- Poor test scores decrease self esteem, possibly leading to social and discipline
problems.
- Testing can damage the trust relationship between teacher and student.
- Test scores and grading are a divisive force in families, separating parents from
their natural position as the child's first and most committed teacher. (Wow! Some
educators know this! Dare I hope for a positive future?)
- Reliance on standardized test scores reduces initiative, independence, creativity,
and willingness to take risks in learning situations.
- Test scores become the goal of student work (extrinsic reward) rather than the sense
of satisfaction and wonder that naturally follows discovery of something new (intrinsic
reward).
- The drive for high test scores creates unnecessary, unproductive stress.
- Standardized tests promote under achievement.
- Test makers assume that all children have equal readiness for all subjects at the
same age.
- Tests focus on a narrow band of learning, emphasizing memorization skills.
- Reliance on test scores and grades causes students to drop courses of study.
It is worth noting that standardized tests, in addition to being narrowly focused
and frequently misused comparative measurements of academic progress, are powerful
teachers in their own right. Only when these instruments have been imposed on huge
populations of students for many years can we begin to see that the tests take on a
teaching life of their own, quite apart from the intentions of their creators.
This selection is exerpted from Ann Lahrson Fisher's next book, "What Did you
Learn at Home(school) Today? Teaching Independent Thinking Through Meaningful Progress
Evaluation", scheduled for publication in 1997.
Ann Lahrson Fisher,
Author/Publisher,Homeschooling In Oregon: The Handbook
Comments: Ann's article speaks from my own heart. I have always felt testing was unfair
to many wonderful talented children who just may not do well on standardized testing.
Visit her homepage above for other articles.-Dorna Chambers
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