The thought has often occurred to me that current federal and state policy was created by people who got high scores on standardized test takers. Maybe they hope to create a pure meritocracy, in which only those who get high test scores rule everyone else. The problem with my theory is that the real consequences of this approach are too dumb to have been created by the smartest people. Maybe they were the ones who got high scores but were nonetheless not very smart, not at all creative, incapable of thinking outside the box, just good test-takers. And they want all the rewards to go to people just like them.

Here is another take by a Montessori teacher:

“The confession of a good test-taker: I never read an assigned book in entirety when I was in high school. It was part of my secret, quiet, rebellion against the obsession of acquiring points and the focus on testing. I remember thinking to myself that these authors, who poured their souls into creating what was now considered a classic, didn’t write their novels so they would one day be plopped into the lap of a teenager whose only focus was getting the most points on a test. However, I still got good grades because I am good at taking tests.

“I learned early on that tests, especially standardized tests, are a game of strategy. When I took these tests, I didn’t do them from the point-of-view of the test-taker but that of the test-maker. My grades and scores were not a reflection of what I knew or how hard I worked but of how well I could play the game of collecting points. I gained enough points to do well at a large suburban school district, be accepted into a good university, and receive a degree.

“I think that today’s reformers loved collecting points and valued it as students. Maybe it helped them understand their world and gave them a sense of order and meaning. The way I perceive my world and what I value is very different; for me, acquiring knowledge and understanding is very personal and private because it becomes part of who I am.

“So here is yet another message to all of the people in power who are “reforming” our nation’s schools; we do not all think like you or value what you do and that is how it should be. Along with the power that you possess, you also have the responsibility to have empathy, humility, understanding, and respect in order to be good leaders.”