William Mathis, a member of the Vermont Board of Education and managing director of the National Education Policy Center, reviews reactions to the dismal scores on the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP).
The people who inflicted high-stakes testing insist that more and more and more testing is needed. More of the same policies that have already failed will surely work if we keep doing the same things for another generation or two.
The main perpetrator of the claim that we must “stay the (failing) course” is Arne Duncan, of course.
Mathis writes:
The latest round of flagellation of dead horse flesh has been provoked by the release of the National Assessment of Educational Progress scores. After 20 years of overall progress, many of the scores went down. While all groups improved over the long haul, the gaps between white and other racial groups varied over time but generally remained in place.[i] Education critics lament and proclaim, “It’s time to get tough! Let’s do some more of what didn’t work!” Meanwhile officials whisper measured words through steepled fingers saying they are “concerned,” that we must do more to ensure our students are well prepared to compete with China and “we have more work to do.” Still others claim that this exercise in numerology is helpful.
Put plainly, standardized tests have no meaningful relationship with economic development and they are poor definers of learning needs. Nevertheless, the NAEP is a valuable outside way of examining trends.
Such is the case with NAEP. The strongest predictor of standardized test scores is poverty.[ii] In this latest release, the biggest drops were among disadvantaged students. Sean Riordan at Stanford has compiled a data base of all school districts in the nation and found that test scores are most affected by this single construct.[iii]
He goes on to note that schools are highly segregated by class and by race. In fact, society is showing signs of resegregating.[iv] Resolving these gaps is our first threshold issue. High needs children are concentrated in high poverty schools which are, on average, less effective than schools with lower poverty. In a vicious cycle, poor schools are provided lesser resources. Compounding the problem, the Census Bureau tells us the wealth gap has sharply increased across the nation. Many schools across the nation have not recovered from the 2008 fiscal crisis and the federal government has never provided the promised support for needy children.
Regardless, the schools were mandated to solve the test score problem. The trouble was that the policymakers got it backwards. Poverty prevents learning. It is the threshold issue. Without resorting to what we knew, the dead horse was beaten once more with the No Child Left Behind Act. We adopted the Common Core curriculum, punished schools, and fired principals and teachers whose misfortune was being assigned to a school with high concentrations of needy children. It was literally expected that a child from a broken home, hungry and with ADHD would be ready to sit down and learn quadratic equations. Nevertheless, the test-based school accountability approach emerged and still remains the dominant school philosophy. While it is claimed that successful applications exist, the research has not been found that says poverty can be overcome by beating the dead horse. The irony is that the tests themselves show that a test based system is not a successful reform strategy.
“Nevertheless, the NAEP is a valuable outside way of examining trends.”
At this point of the NAEP woe is me mental masturbation I don’t know whether to laugh or cry.
What I do know is that to use the invalid results of a process-the standards and testing malpractice regime-that is rife with onto-epistemological (foundational conceptual) errors and falsehood is not only “vain and illusory” but is also an absurd waste of time, energy and resources.
Why lend credence to such invalidities?
the exact eight words which might describe my personal experience with long years of NCLB/RttT test-focused school invasions: an ABSURD waste of time, energy and resources
“High needs children are concentrated in high poverty schools which are, on average, less effective than schools with lower poverty.”
Someone please define “less effective”.
I can’t speak to rural schools, but I’ve spent a lot of time in suburban schools and inner city schools, serving kids from higher and lower income families respectively, and the contrasts are very obvious. The inner city schools have larger class sizes, and materials, supplies and personnel are severely lacking. They also come up short on the kinds of active learning experiences that tend to further comprehension as well as student enjoyment of school, such as in-depth projects, the Arts and extra curricular activities (and even recess), while getting huge amounts of “drill and kill” test prep that undermines motivation.
Inner city children are already at a disadvantage due to poverty and even though they require more guidance, supports and services, they attend schools with fewer resources than schools for privileged children, so their schools are not able to do more for them with a whole lot less.
And who could? Would we say that the chef who’s missing a lot of key ingredients and equipment and then can’t make his signature dish as great as usual is “less effective”? I doubt it. Most likely, we would say “You can’t make a silk purse out of a sow’s ear.”
Less effective at testing. Basically, here’s how it works: If you have less money, you have less effective test scores. So if you have less effective scores, the plutocrats take what’s left of your less effective money. Dead horses get the lowest test scores of all, so the beatings will continue until test scores become more effective.
“Nevertheless, the test-based school accountability approach emerged and still remains the dominant school philosophy. . . . The irony is that the tests themselves show that a test based system is not a successful reform strategy.”
As Mattis is correct in pointing out that it is poverty that is the deciding factor in determining schooling outcomes, the factor in the “test-based school accountability” that is behind that term is the concept of “standards” which N. Wilson has shown to be a chimera, a duende, an absurdity.
Thanks for taking a closer look at this stuff, Duane.
Would people listen if you called standards what they are: lists of descriptions of things. So much in education is little more than stating the obvious in way that obfuscate the simplicity. I think we began down the slippery slope with behavioral objectives. Bloom thought we could describe the exact behaviors of students that meant they were becoming educated.
RT: I remember having to memorize Bloom’s taxonomy in education classes in college. It never made any sense to me.
Kids in my music classes were always performing and using what they knew. [Band students learn from holding their instruments and performing. Why did I have to justify this by writing goals for usage of a music method book and concerts?] I hated memorizing things and being forced to ‘use’ it. The “newest ideas” in education kept coming around. I guess the worst of the ‘new ideas’ is the common core and its testing that is worthless.
………………………………
In 1956, Benjamin Bloom with collaborators Max Englehart, Edward Furst, Walter Hill, and David Krathwohl published a framework for categorizing educational goals: Taxonomy of Educational Objectives. Familiarly known as Bloom’s Taxonomy, this framework has been applied by generations of K-12 teachers and college instructors in their teaching.
The framework elaborated by Bloom and his collaborators consisted of six major categories: Knowledge, Comprehension, Application, Analysis, Synthesis, and Evaluation. The categories after Knowledge were presented as “skills and abilities,” with the understanding that knowledge was the necessary precondition for putting these skills and abilities into practice.
While each category contained subcategories, all lying along a continuum from simple to complex and concrete to abstract, the taxonomy is popularly remembered according to the six main categories.
As they often say in 12 Step programs, insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.
Arne Duncan again, UGH! He’s the curse that keeps on cursing, as if he didn’t do enough damage as the Secretary of [Mis]Education from 2009 through December 2015. Please go away and take a bath in hedge funds or pork bellies.
A vision: Arne Duncan and Betsy DeVos marooned on a small island in the middle of some ocean….ALONE, just the two of them. And, not a Club Med want-to-be-there, lounging on the beach sort of island. No, no, no. Something swarming with rapacious land crabs and tiny, bloodsucking insects. There are few trees and a merciless sun. And, no internet. That’ll get ’em!.
Survival of the grittiest.
After a few weeks, a C-130 with Red Crosses painted on the wings approaches…circles the hellish atoll. The unseen crew kicks out hundreds of boxes that drift down lazily on silk white parachutes. Ah…saved!
Devos and Duncan put down their clubs and other homemade weaponry. They run with what little strength they can still muster in their spindly limbs. Slavering with hunger, they rip open the packages marked: “Courtesy of Corporate America”.
But, no, it’s not life-giving sustenance they find…it’s educational SHOCK AND AWE!
The first package is filled with SAT exams. The next, hundreds of New York State 8th grade ELA tests complete with a voluminous scoring guide (Heck, at least they don’t have to print out the scoring guide themselves!)
Arne lunges for the next package, shoving his fellow castaway to the side: He claws it open: 500 gross of #2 pencils. Betsy starts to gnaw on one.
Box after box, their desperation only grows: One crate has 50 laptops and directions how to connect to the “Summit Learning Platform”. (Arne and Betsy stop for one moment, and genuflect in homage toward the Silicon Valley. Then their mad scramble renews…) Another package has vouchers to attend another island…if only they can swim there!
One crate is chock-full of “The Art of the Deal” and “The Audacity of Hope” – the books congealed with mildew. Another: a heap of Amway laundry detergent, sticky and sickly sweet.
Then, in the distance they spy a large size crate that seems to be wobbling from side to side. As they draw closer they hear a New Yorky, nasal whine emanating from within…
The crate explodes open, wood and splinters flying….and out pops -Rudy Giuliani!
Ah, the fun is only beginning for them all…..
I think they also should receive a box filled with paper towels. If it was good enough for Puerto Rico, it’s good enough for these two.
Absolutely, Carol. Thrown at them.
You’ve set the scene for a great comedy skit the could be presented at a union social.
I have no mouth and I must scream.
Maybe they need a case of 50 grit sandpaper labled: Toilet paper
Reblogged this on Crazy Normal – the Classroom Exposé and commented:
Poverty prevents learning and all the high stakes, rank-and-punish tests in the world will not change that FACT!
I find it so frustrating that people keep placing the blame on education. Granted, there is much to be improved there, too, but nobody ever says, “The test scores are bad! Let’s make sure every child has adequate medical care.” I do not know what it will take for our country to see that education is not isolated from the effects of poverty. Worse, I don’t know what it will take for our country to decide that it is worth it to mitigate the effects of poverty by supporting the impoverished.
Perhaps the main problem is that the NAEP math test does not reflect the material covered by the new common core standards.Apparently 42 percent of common core standards were not being tested by any items on the NAEP test. Meanwhile 87% of 8th grade NAEP standards included CC standards at grade 8 or below. In other words, the NAEP math test does not reflect the curriculum that the children taking it are learning!
https://www.air.org/news/press-release/new-study-examines-alignment-between-naep-and-common-core-state-standards-4th-8th
I’m going to ask a, hopefully not too stupid, question. Every year the Nevada Department of Education releases their “shining stars” list, the schools that receive 4 or 5 star ratings (the two highest in Nevada) that are at least 50% FRL eligible. This list consistently has urban schools, rural schools, traditional public schools, and public charter schools on it. We keep talking about what isn’t working. Why are we instead of asking all the failing schools why they are failing, ask these succeeding schools what they are doing to succeed and start replicating it?