Owen Davis writes here about the enrichment of the testing industry by No Child Left Behind and Race to the Top.
The testing and accountability craze started before No Child Left Behind, but that federal law turned it into a bonanza for Pearson and other companies and led to a consolidation of the testing industry.
We now know, almost 20 years after NCLB was signed into law on January 8, 2002, that it has had very little effect on student test scores, on closing achievement gaps, or on any of the other wild promises made first by George W. Bush, echoed by Rod Paige and Margaret Spellings, and reiterated again by Arne Duncan and John King.
Who in Congress or the federal government will have the courage to call a halt to this insane investment of billions of dollars into the testing industry?
Davis writes:
Three days after taking office, George W. Bush unveiled his signature domestic policy, No Child Left Behind. The bill would triple the number of exams the federal government required of students, while dangling stiff penalties over struggling schools. For many educators it felt like a depth charge.
The mood was different at Pearson Education, a division of the London-based conglomerate Pearson PLC. As the education community was still absorbing the shock in February 2001, Pearson Education chief executive Peter Jovanovich spoke to a group of Wall Street investment analysts. He pointed them to the proposed annual testing requirements and school report cards. “This,” Jovanovich said, “almost reads like our business plan.”
Pearson Education was a relative newcomer to the education market. Three years earlier, Pearson PLC had paid $4.6 billion to buy the textbook wing of publishing house Simon & Schuster. In 2000, the company acquired a leading standardized test provider. Now Pearson’s stars had aligned.
“Content has been king,” Marjorie Scardino, Pearson’s top executive, said at the time. “But now we’ll have the ability to put content and applications together and that will really allow us to be king.” With a hand in both delivering curriculum and testing students over that curriculum, Pearson would capitalize on America’s newfound school accountability kick.
Pearson Education’s profits increased 175 percent in the decade following No Child Left Behind. The company, whose properties included Penguin Books and the Financial Times, soon derived most of its profits from American education. Test sales jumped fivefold between 2000 and 2006. “Our assessment businesses are in the sweet spot of education policy,” Scardino told investors in 2005 – a year when more than 60 percent of American school kids lived in states giving Pearson tests.
Since 2000, the testing market has roughly tripled in size, to nearly $4 billion a year, with annual achievement tests spawning a range of more frequent tracking assessments. As testing has flourished, more and more functions of the school publishing industry the have fallen into fewer and fewer hands. In 1988, ten publishers shared 70 percent of the textbook market. Today, the “Big Three” —McGraw-Hill, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt and the juggernaut Pearson—control at least 85 percent of the market. These lucky few have since expanded their offerings; Pearson hawks everything from student data trackers to online credit-recovery courses to ADHD diagnostic kits.

But along the way the American public grew wary of the companies’ influence in education. Parent groups on both the left and right have cast testing mandates as political favors to test makers, a notion that has helped spark a recent nationwide pushback against accountability policies. Hundreds of thousands of parents across the country have opted their children out of mandatory tests last year, and entire schools have held test boycotts.
The sense that students are over-tested is no illusion. A 2013 study from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development found the stakes attached to testing in the U.S. to be the highest in the developed world. One study of the 66 largest urban school districts found the average student took 112 standardized tests from kindergarten to graduation, spending an average 22 hours a year just taking the exams, let alone preparing for them.
The efforts of testing companies to secure and expand their business have helped pushed American schools toward an overbearing focus on assessment – one that has failed to achieve its desired result of dramatically improving student and school performance. Here’s the story of how we got to this point.
Has to be among the greatest thefts in American history. And the stolen money is used to perpetuate itself. Maddening.
Lobbyists suck.
“As a report from the conservative Heritage Foundation explained: “Business leaders can make change occur by mobilizing their local communities. But to do so, business leaders must arm themselves with the data about education’s failure.””
Smoking gun here. This is a document that invalidates all the research that comes from this institution, for it admits that its sole purpose was to provide the critics of education with ammunition for argument. If this does not invalidate scholarly research, what does it take?
“If this does not invalidate scholarly research, what does it take?”
The thing is that it wasn’t “scholarly research” to begin with. Yes, it was research but scholarly research should be unbiased as much as possible, the research vetted and peer-reviewed before publication, etc. . . . The sthink tank “research” doesn’t qualify as scholarly.
“sthink tank” Is that German?
No je parle Deutsch. Nah, just a neologism of think and stink.
Corrected statement: I meant to say “if this does not invalidate this as scholarly research” sorry, left out some words.
And the truth underlying all of this is that teachers, those closest to the work, have been calling out this deranged mania since day 1. And they are still fighting for respect. Wake up America! We MUST stop placing faith in outside “experts” who are really only fleecers of the American pocketbook and good faith.
Once again, WHY are we still WRITING (& whining) about this?! Every year it’s been “THIS is the year we stop “standardized” testing,” but that year has never come.
Well, **THIS MUST be THE year. NATIONAL strike. EVERY educator in EVERY state REFUSE to administer the tests. WALK OUT…EVERYONE..STUDENTS, too.
I have to go to a meeting…will write more later…
Amen, Sista RBMTK!
Although I wouldn’t count on many adminimals (if we can even count them as educators) participating. They know who butters their bread and will be busy taking names and writing up disciplinary letters.
But you are correct in what it’s going to take.
HEY, NEA, AFT and others when are you going to coordinate such a strike? (Yes, I know that’s a rhetorical question because they are part of the problem)
AMEN TO THIS!!! I am sick of waiting for the national teachers’ unions to get a freaking clue and call for a nationwide strike until the feds promise to end the insane federal high-stakes standardized testing mandate. The damage that this has done to use education in terms of diverted resources and trivialization of curricula and pedagogy is incalculable. It’s obscene and unconscionable that the major union leaders haven’t done this. Enough. Until they do, nothing will change, and the horror will continue.
I long for the day when our teachers’ unions will announce a boycott of Pearson products until they get out of the business of evaluating students and teachers with their invalid tests.
A couple years ago, boxes of the Pearson myPerspectives literature program showed up in my classroom. I also got an email saying that I had to use this going forward.
I reviewed the program and then wrote a long, long email to my Principal and to all my colleagues in which I did a deep dive into a single two-page spread in this program, pointing out its many, many inanities, errors in fact, errors in grammar and usage, inaccurate definitions, and pedagogical absurdities. I referred to its general approach to teaching literature as Common [sic] Core [sic] ‘And Now for Something Completely Different’ Trivialization of the teaching of English.
I left the Pearson books in their boxes and took them out only rarely, to have my students read a few literary selections in the program that happened to be worth reading. I had them ignore ALL the Pearson study apparatus, which was garbage, obviously thrown together by low-paid freelance hacks.
Pearson recently unloaded its crappy K-12 courseware to an equity firm, in a fire sale. But it held onto its oh-so-lucrative testing and evaluation and depersonalized education software businesses. This company should change its motto to Pearson, Not Persons.
The big basal textbook companies have suffered enormously from the cutbacks, in real dollars, of state spending on education dating back to the financial crisis of 2007. Their courseware businesses have taken a BIG hit. What has kept them alive is the testing scam. 20 years ago, there were many, many K-12 publishers publishing competing (and higher quality) products. We now have three basal companies with most of the market, and they can’t survive on their textbook businesses given current school budgets. So, what needs to be done? First, do away with state adoption and return textbook purchasing decisions to the school level. This will encourage competition and innovation. Second, start funding our schools adequately. We spend more on defense than do China, Saudi Arabia, India, France, Russia, the United Kingdom, and Germany COMBINED. Third, can the invalid standardized tests and the puerile Gates/Colman Common [sic] Core [sic] bullet list, which have become the de facto curriculum map in ELA and math and have, in the former case, trivialized curricula and, in the latter, made it developmentally inappropriate in the early grades.