Jason Stanford, who lives in Austin, reports here on the efforts to 23 school districts to develop a sensible alternatives to the standardized testing that everyone hates, except for the testing industry and their lobbyists.

He writes:

Despite the difficulty in chasing two tails, Dawson Orr, Consortium co-chair and superintendent of Highland Park ISD, pledges to press on to find an accountability system that actually measures what goes on in schools.

“You know, there’s just an awful lot of authentic work that goes on in classrooms that represents student learning that state and federal bureaucracies don’t know how to handle because they need the ease and convenience of a multiple choice test,” Orr said.

Another Texas leader, the late Speaker Sam Rayburn, once said, “A jackass can kick a barn down, but it takes a carpenter to build one.” There are a lot of folks trying to get rid of high-stakes testing—and a lot of merit in doing so—but thanks to 23 gutsy school districts, we now have some carpenters looking for an accountability system that makes sense. Good luck to them.

There are other alternatives: One, look at what Finland does. Select the best teachers; educate them well. No standardized testing. Let the teachers write their own tests. Trust them to do what is right for their students.

Or do what the best private schools do: I have never heard of any that administer standardized tests, other than for admission purposes.  Have you? Might be worth checking out what accountability looks like at Sidwell Friends (where President Obama’s children are in attendance), Lakeside Academy in Seattle (where Bill Gates went), Maumee Country Day School in Ohio (where Michelle Rhee went), Harpeth Hall (where Rhee sends one of her daughters), the University of Chicago Lab School (where Mayor Rahm Emanuel sends his children).

Let’s learn from the best!