In this post, Jan Resseger reminds us why Daniel Koretz’s book, The Testing Charade, is essential reading.
Read this book about the failure of NCLB and Race to the Top before you listen to Arne Duncan repeat his baseless claim that we need more testing and more of what already failed.
How has high stakes testing ruined our schools and how has this strategy, which was at the heart of No Child Left Behind, made it much more difficult to accomplish No Child Left Behind’s stated goal of reducing educational inequality and closing achievement gaps?
Here is how Daniel Koretz begins to answer that question in his 2017 book, The Testing Charade: Pretending to Make Schools Better: In 2002, No Child Left Behind “mandated that all states use the proficient standard as a target and that 100 percent of students reach that level. It imposed a short timeline for this: twelve years. It required that schools report the performance of several disadvantaged groups and it mandated that 100 percent of each of these groups had to reach the proficient standard. It required that almost all students be tested the same way and evaluated against the same performance standards. And it replaced the straight-line approach by uniform statewide targets for percent proficient, called Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP)…. The law mandated an escalating series of sanctions for schools that failed to make AYP for each reporting group.” Later, “Arne Duncan used his control over funding to increase even further the pressure to raise scores. The most important of Duncan’s changes was inducing states to tie the evaluation of individual teachers, rather than just schools, to test scores… The reforms caused much more harm than good. Ironically, in some ways they inflicted the most harm on precisely the disadvantaged students the policies were intended to help.”
Koretz poses the following question and his book sets out to answer it: “But why did the reforms fail so badly?”
I recommend Daniel Koretz’s book all the time as essential reading for anyone trying to figure out how we got to the deplorable morass that is today’s federal and state educational policy. I wish I thought more people were reading this book. Maybe people are intimidated that its author is a Harvard expert on the design and use of standardized tests. Maybe it’s the fact that the book was published by the University of Chicago Press. But I don’t see it in very many bookstores, and when I ask people if they have read it, most people tell me they intend to read it. To reassure myself that it is really worth reading, I set myself the task this past weekend of re-reading the entire book. And I found re-reading it to be extremely worthwhile.

I never understood why NCLB wasn’t challenged by state ed departments as being an unconstitutional law (Act of Congress). Imagine punishing state police department if they did not reduce their crime rates to zero. Or state transportation departments if they did not reduce their accident rates to zero. A law that cannot possibly be complied with cannot possibly be constitutional. I’m no lawyer but . . .
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I’ve been saying that for years. Imagine Congress passing a law that every city and town in America will be crime-free in 12 years. Any city or town that is not will be severely punished, first by closing it’s police department, then allowing private security corporations to step in and collect your tax dollars to protect you. Oh, yes, bring in recent college graduates called Police for America, and give them a badge.
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So why wasn’t the NCLB act challenged? Fear on the part of educators at every level to tell the truth: All children CANNOT learn the same material at the same rate – and that many of the cognitively disabled really would never be able get over any significant academic bar. And that many children psychologically damaged by the stress of family dysfunction and generational poverty would be unable to get over that same bar.
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Why Rager?
One simple acronym: GAGA.
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If education is the responsibility of the states, why should the federal government mandate testing for all?
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NCLB was a shock doctrine for teachers and schools by putting everyone on notice that they were standing on quicksand that could easily suck them under. With AYPs and sanctions that eventually led to impossible goalposts, teachers and schools were swept into “survival of the fittest” mode. This led to a variety of ways to attempt to game the system through test prep and in some districts cheating. High stakes testing leads to corruption and a narrowing of the curriculum for students which ultimately diminishes the quality of the education. Wasting so much time and effort on testing is counter productive as the tests provide little useful information to inform instruction. Stack rankings neither help teachers nor students.
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“How did I ruin thee? Let me count the ways.”
Hyper-focus on just two subjects (math and ELA) resulting in expansion of the null curriculum and the narrowing of how we teach math and ELA.
Distorting and reducing the goals of the K to 12 public school experience to the point where “higher test scores” became the holy grail and everything else took a back seat on the bus.
Forcing children to work for the schools instead of their own futures.
Bestowing mythical, Herculean qualities to what are still just invalid and unreliable test scores.
Creating the biggest bullshit movement of them all: teacher and school accountability while leaving the learner with zero accountability.
Letting administrators and supervisors off the hook for failing to vet, hire, tenure, support, and dismiss the very few truly incompetent teachers in any system.
Creating an enormous distraction that siphoned untold billion of dollars and countless teacher hours into the testing, test-prep, and consultant industries while completely ignoring the real reasons student fail to succeed in school.
Inflicting incredible opportunity costs to a generation of students by constraining and narrowing their school experience. Lost experiences and no time machine.
Opening the door$ to the corporations and privatizers to pillage and plunder the finite resources of schools already strapped by an inequitable funding system and devastated by the 2008 -2009 Greta Recession.
Creating so much test-driven, standards-based inertia that it will take a generation to move to a better direction.
Provided platforms and false credibility to billionaires and reformers – edufakers that couldn’t teach their way out of a wet paper bag while demoralizing the nations 3 million hard working teachers via omission.
Creating a top down system based on the four pillars of threats, coercion, fear, and stress in a sector which required the untold cooperation, motivation, and efforts of 50 million children.
Creating and promoting the false narrative that our nations public schools and teachers are all failures; that public schools need to be fixed and that they would be glad to sell us their solutions. Talk about real failure.
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AMEN!!! I think you hit on every nasty “rephorm” and “fauxlanthropy” that’s been implemented since NCLB. Sadly, these are all the reasons why child #2 will be attending a private high school. We can’t wait any longer for the system to change so we must pay for that change to happen. At some point, we can no longer fight the system….and that time is now.
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I missed one:
Ushering in the age of micro-management (read: “distrust”) by ego-centric principals, supervisors and even superintendents and the companion move to “scripted (read: “test-prep”) lessons”. I was lucky in this regard, to have a old school, common sense building principal. Many teachers were not so lucky. This was a result of the enormous pressure and stress that high stakes testing placed on systems already near the breaking point.
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Micro-management also include the ridiculous demands to adhere to ridiculous instructional rubrics from Marzano or Danielson.
Example:
Teachers were reprimanded and or received lower evaluations if they did not post the learning objective for the day and refer to it at least three times during the course of a 40 minute lesson or activity.
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Ah yes, Rage! I nearly sent a fellow teacher into heart failure when I asked her what SWBAT was for. No one had told me that we were required to write on the board exactly what each student would accomplish by the end of class. For those who are uninitiated SWBAT means “Students will be able to…”.
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“Inflicting incredible opportunity costs to a generation of students by constraining and narrowing their school experience. Lost experiences and no time machine.”
Opportunity costs is far too nice a term. The public schools have inflicted serious harms on the most innocent of society in that narrowing and constraining of their school experience. It has been a serious violation of their personhood along with an unethical and unjust abuse of their being to be used by the supposed adults who have them in their care.
I cannot condemn strongly enough those who have Gone Along to Get Along with these egregious malpractices without fighting back, refusing to implement them. Yes, I’m talking about all the federal and state education bureaucrats, the local school boards, the district administrators, the school administrators and the teachers who have had a hand in implementing these atrocities without nary a peep and no countervailing action.
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Years ago I floated the idea of a “conscientious objector” status for teachers regarding the administration of standardized tests. My local administrator allowed me to supervise the opt out room instead of the testing room. Few others took up the idea. State politicians that I met with refused to support the bill. I can still hear their words, “But how else can we hold teachers accountable?” Gutless, clueless cowards.
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Exactly, gutless and clueless cowards.
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“Koretz poses the following question and his book sets out to answer it: “But why did the reforms fail so badly?”
Because they were not reforms but edudeforms whose epic onto-epistemological errors and falsehoods and psychometric fudges guaranteed said failings not to mention the many harms caused to all students as shown by Noel Wilson in his never refuted nor rebutted “Educational Standards and the Problem of Error” found at: http://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/577/700 were already known at the time of the implementation of those malpractices.
So if I may alter your last paragraph a bit:
I recommend WILSON’S STUDY all the time, HAVE FOR ALMOST TWO DECADES, as essential reading for anyone trying to figure out how we COULD HAVE GOTTEN INTO the deplorable morass that is today’s federal and state educational policy. I wish I thought more people were reading this STUDY. Maybe people are intimidated that its author is AN AUSTRALIAN expert on the design and use of standardized tests. Maybe it’s the fact that the WORK was published AS A DISSERTATION. But YOU WON’T FIND IT IN ANY bookstores, JUST USE THE LINK ABOVE, and when I ask people if they have read it, most people tell me they intend to read it AND NEVER DO. To reassure myself that it is really worth reading, I set myself the task this past week of re-reading the PAPER FOR THE UMPTEENTH TIME and FIND re-reading it to be extremely worthwhile GETTING SOMETHING NEW OUT EVERY TIME.
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The problem is that parents are disengaged. In public schools, the idea is to keep the parents out or make it hard for them to volunteer. Adminimals (as you call them) come into community schools and purposely drive out the parents (been there/seen it first hand). Once you get the parents out of the classrooms/schools, there is no one to witness the abuse of small children sitting at desks for hours, the shortening of recess, the narrowing of the curriculum, the weird math, the “close reading”, the laser focus on test scores. All the parents have are report card grades….and if little Johnny/Susie is bringing home “A’s” and “B’s” why should they complain? If the test scores are rising, why should the parents complain? It took me a few years (when my kids were in elem school), but I soon realized that “data analysis” was code word for test prep and that was done in the afternoons when parents were discouraged from visiting and volunteering. Parents just don’t know…..and there are many that could know, but just don’t have the time to devote to this mess.
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I can’t agree at all with “In public schools, the idea is to keep the parents out or make it hard for them to volunteer.”
I never had a problem volunteering in my children’s schools or coming in and questioning anything. Nor did I ever see that sort of denying parents access or any attempt to “drive out parents” in my 21 years of teaching at a public high school.
You are right about data analysis being code for test prep, that abomination of education malpractice so common these days. All those things you mention long seat time for youngsters, shortening or no recess, narrowing of curriculum, etc. . . are all educational malpractices, no doubt.
And as a parent you have the right to not allow the adminimals to bully you out of the school. Were you living around me I’d gladly be an advocate for your child in making sure that he/she was receiving the proper education as needed. Be that as it may, I wish you luck and skill (and patience, eh) in advocating for your child.
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Maybe where you live, there is still parent activism that is welcome. I’m right outside of DC and we get every single “rephorm” that’s thrown out by those wonderful DC think tanks. Our Supers are all Broadies (or Brody like), our school admin is top down and most older teachers have been offered early pensions to make room for the new generation of teachers. That’s how it rolls. The parking lots at the local elementary schools are pretty empty now….they used to be full with parent volunteers. That’s too dangerous for admin.
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Sorry to hear about your situation, LisaM. It’s certainly a sad state of affairs.
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And ruining public education while making a profit, too. SCAMS!
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