Mate Wierdl is a professor of mathematical sciences at the University of Memphis. 

He writes:

“There’s absolutely no reason to get into arguments over the reformers’ way of doing things (technology, standardized tests). Just point out that their premises, their goals are false, and be done.
“Indeed, according to the most fundamental laws of logic (already known to the Ancient Greeks), from a false premise, you can draw any conclusion you want.
“For example, if I say “If you build it, they will come.” I can be held to my promise only if you build “it”, that is, if my premise is true. If you don’t build it, it’s immaterial whether they come or not, you cannot blame me for making false promises.
“What the reformers are saying, can be illustrated by “If learning is measurable, then this school’s performance is low on the scale we set forth.”
“Well, learning is not measurable, so it’s immaterial whether they find a school’s scores low or high.
“Of course, reformers don’t say anything this way; they don’t start with an “if”, they don’t start with “If learning is measurable”. They strategically pretend “it’s common sense” that learning is measurable. They do this because they know that’s where are on the shakiest grounds. Hence this is exactly where we have to get them: “Don’t talk to us about scores and data and technology, just show us the research claiming that learning is measurable; show us what you measure.”
“Forget about low level arguments about technology or test scores. Get our reformers first explain the high level, get them explain their premise about the measurability of learning.
It’s like “If I am innocent, I then deserve apology, full compensation, a house on the beach, a car with a driver, free ice cream for the rest of my life, free …” to which the response is “Hey, slow down with listing your demands and let’s examine your innocence first, shall we?”
Let’s not let the reformers jump to their messy conclusions, let’s get them at their premises.”