Standardized testing has been used in American schools for a century, though never on the scale of the past twenty years. It first was introduced into some schools as IQ tests, which were used (wrongly) to judge students’ innate ability and to assign them to different tracks, which then determined their life outcomes. I wrote about the IQ tests in my 2000 book “Left Back: A Century of Battles Over School Reforms.” The psychologists who created the tests believed that IQ was innate, inherited, and fixed. They asserted that the tests demonstrated the superiority of whites who spoke English well. Their views were welcomed and used by racists and anti-immigrant groups to support their policies. They were used to defend segregation and to restrict immigration. Their critics pointed out that the tests measured culture and life circumstances, not innate intelligence.
One of the psychologists who developed IQ tests and wrote a racist book about the results was Carl C. Brigham of Princeton. Brigham later created the prototype for the multiple-choice SAT in the 1930s, which replaced the essay-based “College Boards” in 1941.
Many schools used standardized tests in the second half of the twentieth century. Some states required periodic state tests, like the Iowa tests. No state required standardized testing every student every year until the passage of No Child Left Behind in 2001, based on George W. Bush’s assertion that there had been a “miracle” in Texas because of annual testing in grades 3-8.
We now know that there was never a miracle in Texas, but the every U.S. public school has been required to administer standardized tests since NCLB was signed into law on January 8, 2002.
When NCLB was re-authorized in 2015, there were demands to eliminate the testing mandate, but the Gates Foundation organized many of its recipients to insist on preserving the testing as a “civil right,” which was ironic in view of the racist and culturally biased history of standardized testing and its negative impact on marginalized groups. The new Every Student Succeeds Act preserves the annual testing. (Be it noted that every Democratic senator—including Sanders and Warren—on the Senate HELP Committee drafting the law voted in 2015 to preserve the most punitive aspects of NCLB, including the testing mandate, but the Murphy Amendment was voted down by Republicans).
Recently, Valerie Strauss wondered whether the nation’s obsession with standardized testing was ending due to the pandemic pause. While I share her enthusiasm to make the pause permanent, I know it won’t happen unless the federal law is changed. That requires sustained citizen action to counter the millions that the testing industry will certainly spend to preserve their economic interests.
She wrote:
America has been obsessed with student standardized tests for nearly 20 years. Now it looks like the country is at the beginning of the end of our high-stakes testing mania — both for K-12 “accountability” purposes and in college admissions.
When President George W. Bush signed the K-12 No Child Left Behind Act in 2002, the country began an experiment based on the belief that we could test our way to educational success and end the achievement gap. His successor, Barack Obama, ratcheted up the stakes of test scores under that same philosophy. It didn’t work, which came as no surprise to teachers and other critics. They had long pointed to extensive research showing standardized test scores are most strongly correlated to a student’s life circumstances. Real reform, they said, means addressing students’ social and emotional needs and the conditions in which they live, and making improvements in school buildings.
Higher education was not immune to the testing frenzy, either, at least not in admissions. Scores on the SAT or ACT became an important factor in deciding who was accepted. College rankings — led by the annual lists of U.S. News & World Report, which were heavily weighted on test scores — became powerful as students relied on them and schools tried to improve their rankings with targeted reforms. Scholarship programs were linked to test scores, and some companies checked the scores of potential hires.
Florida spent millions of dollars to give bonuses to teachers with high SAT scores — even decades after the tests were taken.
Now, we are seeing the collapse of the two-decade-old bipartisan consensus among major policymakers that testing was the key lever for holding students, schools and teachers “accountable.”
And it is no coincidence that it is happening against the backdrop of the coronavirus pandemic that forced educational institutions to revamp how they operate. States are learning they can live without them, having been given permission by the Department of Education to not give them this past spring. Georgia has already announced its intention to get a waiver for 2020-21, too.
A tsunami of colleges and universities have dropped the requirement for an ACT or SAT score for at least a year. The huge organizations that own the tests, ACT Inc. and the College Board, are clearly struggling in the new environment. Even high-stakes law exams are starting to be waived. Washington state’s Supreme Court just decided to allow graduates from American Bar Association-accredited law schools who were registered to take the bar exam in July or September to be licensed without passing the test. The winning argument was that it would be too difficult for many students to study for and take the exam during the pandemic. The justices must have thought the education and grades the students received in law school were good enough.
Politically, too, the stars seem aligned for a serious de-escalation of testing. President Trump has never been a loud advocate for standardized testing and has repeatedly said his education priority is expanding alternatives to public school districts. His education secretary, Betsy DeVos, has not been a testing proponent either, with her eye instead on expanding school “choice.”
Former vice president Joe Biden, who is the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee and ahead of Trump in many polls, has tried to distance himself from the pro-testing policies of the Obama administration. He was not a cheerleader of testing during Obama’s two terms and has said recently he is opposed to high-stakes testing. That’s not a promise that he will work to reduce it, but it is a promising suggestion.
None of this means standardized testing will stop, or even that every state and district will cut back, or that all colleges and universities will stop requiring an SAT or ACT score to apply.
But here are some developments in the testing world that show that more policymakers understand tests can’t fix problems in schools — and that schools alone can’t fix the nation’s problems.
This past spring, K-12 school districts across the country did something that for nearly two decades had been deemed unthinkable. With permission from the Education Department, they canceled annual high-stakes standardized testing after the covid-19 crisis upended the last several months of the school year.
Millions of students were at home, learning remotely either on paper or on screens. And state leaders realized it wasn’t plausible or fair to give students the tests.
Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine (R) made the point that “the world will not come to an end” if the federally mandated tests weren’t given — though for years, federal and state policymakers had acted as if it would.
States require students to take standardized tests for different purposes. Some tests are mandated by K-12 law, and while that didn’t start with No Child Left Behind (NCLB), it ushered in the high-stakes testing era in which punishments were meted out to schools and teachers based on how well students performed on the exams. It didn’t matter that testing experts repeatedly warned that using scores for these purposes was not valid or reliable.
States give standardized tests, too, for reasons including third-grade retention, high school graduation, and end-of-course exams. A two-year study released in 2015 revealed that kids were being forced to take too many mandated standardized tests — and that there was no evidence that adding testing time was improving student achievement. The average student in America’s big-city public schools was then taking some 112 mandatory standardized tests between prekindergarten and the end of 12th grade — an average of about eight a year, the study said. Those were on top of teacher-written tests.
The purported goal of NCLB — written with the input of not a single public school teacher — was to ensure that marginalized communities were not ignored by looking at test scores by student subgroups and targeting help where it was needed. Schools concentrated on math and English so students could pass the exams while giving short shrift to, or eliminating, classes in history, science, art, music, physical education and other subjects.
Public education advocates hoped Obama would stop the country’s obsession with standardized tests and address inequity baked into the funding system. His administration instead heightened the importance of the test scores by dangling federal funds in front of states that agreed to evaluate teachers through the exam results. States developed cockamamie schemes to do this, including grading teachers on students they didn’t have and subjects they didn’t teach.
A grass-roots effort to get the administration to change course took hold, and some states tried to find ways to cut back on local testing. But then-Education Secretary Arne Duncan micromanaged education policy so much that the department was derided as a “national school board,” and Congress, in late 2015 — eight years after it was supposed to — passed a successor law that sent policymaking largely back to the states.
By early 2016, Obama and his second education secretary, John B. King Jr., said kids were, after all, over-tested. Still, the new federal law, the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA), mandated the same testing regime, and states were still spending millions of dollars each year on testing programs. Ostensibly, the tests would provide data to schools about what students had learned and how effective teachers were.
But research study after study showed that the highest correlation was between the scores and whether a child lived in poverty. This all made DeWine’s statement about the world not coming to an end if tests were suspended for a year an unusual admission.
On June 18, Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp (R) made it clear he doesn’t think missing two years of standardized testing is a big problem, either. This past spring, DeVos gave all states a one-year waiver to suspend the federally mandated testing. Kemp announced that his state would be the first to seek a second testing waiver from the Education Department, this time for the soon-to-start 2020-21 school year.
Other states are likely to follow suit amid so much uncertainty about the trajectory of the pandemic. Kemp also said that the “current high-stakes testing regime is excessive,” and promised to keep pushing an initiative in the state legislature to eliminate four of eight end-of-course exams required for high school students, and another standardized test given in middle school.
Georgia isn’t the only state that is now moving to cut back on standardized testing. In late May, the Ohio House of Representatives passed legislation to reduce standardized testing. What could make this effort to cut testing different from earlier ones are the outside circumstances.
Because of the pandemic, states and school districts are facing potentially unprecedented budget deficits — and school spending in some states has still not recovered from the Great Recession of 2007-2009. Because testing programs are extremely expensive, states could decide the costs aren’t worth the dubious results. Many teachers say they don’t need standardized tests to help them assess where students are in their learning.
Add to that the effects of the national uprising for racial justice, sparked by the death in police custody of George Floyd, an unarmed black man in Minneapolis. Protesters in the streets are looking for justice not only in policing and the courts. They also want social, economic and educational justice.
Though educators have long known that students need more than tests to thrive and that schools must address more than academics, there is a new awareness among the people who make policy. Spending mountains of money for inequitable testing accountability systems isn’t compatible with calls for more holistic ways of educating and helping students grow and thrive.
College admissions On the higher education front, the pandemic also interrupted the SAT/ACT college admissions testing juggernaut. With exam days canceled and aspiring college students getting frantic about not having a score to add to their applications, many colleges and universities said they would drop their requirements for an SAT or ACT test score for admission in fall 2021.
To be sure, a “test-optional” movement had been building for years. A nonprofit group called the National Center for Fair and Open Testing (FairTest), which operated on a shoestring budget with a mission to end the misuse of standardized tests, worked with testing critics and compiled a list of colleges and universities that had dropped the use of ACT or SAT scores for admissions. Hundreds of schools had already done so, as research showed the test scores were linked to socio-economic factors and not predictive of college success, despite counter statements by the College Board and ACT Inc.
Then the pandemic hit. Schools shut down and college students went home to finish their semesters virtually. The two testing giants canceled repeated administrations of their exams, losing millions of dollars and making it difficult for many students to get a score required by most institutions of higher education.
The inevitable happened: Colleges and universities announced suspensions of testing requirements for 2020-21. Some said they would not require tests for a few years as an experiment to see how the admissions process would do without them.
Then, in May, in what was called a seminal event in college admissions, the University of California system announced it would phase out SAT/ACT testing requirements over several years, with some members of the Board of Regents saying the tests were not helpful in creating diverse student bodies and one member labeling them “racist.” The prestigious system has long been a force in public higher education, and its decision is expected to influence other schools. By mid-June, every Ivy League school had agreed to drop SAT/ACT requirements for students entering in the fall of 2020. FairTest’s list includes more than 1,250 schools that in some way allow students leeway in including test scores on their applications, albeit some of them just for 2020-21. (The list includes for-profit schools.)
The College Board and ACT have been struggling during the pandemic. Both were forced to cancel multiple administrations of the SAT and ACT, losing millions of dollars and leaving many students fearful they wouldn’t have a score for applications. Both promised they would offer at-home exams this fall if necessary, but the College Board backed off after its experiment with at-home Advanced Placement tests. Though most students had no problem taking the AP tests, thousands did, and the College Board decided not to try an at-home SAT.
The ACT said it will go ahead, but the Iowa-based organization has other problems. In May, ACT chief executive Marten Roorda, who aggressively lobbied against the UC decision, lost his job. At the same time, ACT announced it was taking “a series of cost-cutting measures,” including no raises and cuts in fringe benefits.
Meanwhile students trying in May to sign up for future AP and SAT exams, should they be given, ran into online trouble.
The fundamental notion that standardized testing is an effective way of gauging student achievement is being challenged more strongly than ever. Some K-12 schools will continue to use these exams extensively, seeing them as a valuable tool, including in Florida, where former governor Jeb Bush (R) pioneered high-stakes accountability testing and still has influence in education policy.
And many colleges and universities will require admissions test scores, seeing them as a useful data point in making decisions on whom to admit.
But the combination of the pandemic, the uprising and disillusionment with the testing industry — which has been building among teachers, parents and students for years — points to a new chapter for public education, or, at least, the beginning of the end of our obsession with high-stakes standardized tests.

Get rid of high stakes testing and “real” LEARNING can happen again.
Oh, and get rid of all that SCREEN TIME, too.
LikeLike
I have been hoping that the teachers’ unions would FINALLY mobilize teachers nationwide to hit the streets and demand an end to the federal testing mandate. This really needs to end. The standardized testing we’ve been doing is a scam, and it’s caused enormous harm.
Unfortunately, most media take a central tenet of the Education Disruption and Deform Movement at its face value–that the standardized tests we give in ELA and mathematics in 3-8 and again in high school are valid measures of what they purport to measure. This is simply ASSUMED in most reports, even though it is demonstrably FALSE.
LikeLike
Combating Standardized Testing Derangement Syndrome (STDs)
The dirty secret of the standardized testing industry is the breathtakingly low quality of the tests themselves. I worked in the educational publishing industry at very high levels for more than twenty years. I have produced materials for all the major standardized test publishers, and I know from experience that quality control processes in that industry have dropped to such low levels that the tests, these days, are typically extraordinarily sloppy and neither reliable nor valid. They typically have not been subjected to anything like the standardization procedures used, in the past, with intelligence tests, the Iowa Test of Basic Skills, and so on. The mathematics tests are marginally better than are the tests in ELA, US History, and Science, but they are not great. The tests in English Language Arts are truly appalling. A few comments:
The state and national standardized tests in ELA are invalid.
First, much of attainment in ELA consists of world knowledge–knowledge of what–the stuff of declarative memories of subject matter. What are fables and parables, how are they similar, and how do they differ? What are the similarities and differences between science fiction and fantasy? What are the parts of a metaphor? How does a metaphor work? What is American Gothic? What are its standard motifs? How is it related to European Romanticism and Gothic literature? How does it differ? Who are its practitioners? Who were Henry David Thoreau and Mary Shelley and what major work did each write and why is that work significant? What time is it at the opening of 1984? What has Billy Pilgrim become “unstuck” in? What did Milton want to justify? What is a couplet? terza rima? a sonnet? What is dactylic hexameter? What is deconstruction? What is reader response? the New Criticism? What does it mean to begin in medias res? What is a dialectical organizational scheme? a reductio ad absurdum? an archetype? a Bildungsroman? a correlative conjunction? a kenning? What’s the difference between Naturalism and Realism? Who the heck was Samuel Johnson, and why did he suggest kicking that rock? Why shouldn’t maidens go to Carterhaugh? And so on. The so-called “standards” being tested cover ALMOST NO declarative knowledge and so miss much of what constitutes attainment in this subject. Imagine a test of biology that left out almost all world knowledge (How do vertebrates differ from invertebrates? What is a pistil? A stamen? What are the functions of the Integumentary System? What are mycelia? What is a trophic level?) and covered only biology “skills” like–I don’t know–slide-staining ability–and you’ll get what I mean here. This has been a MAJOR problem with all of these summative standardized tests in ELA since their inception. They don’t assess what students know. Instead, they test, supposedly, a lot of abstract “skills”–the stuff on the Gates/Coleman Common [sic] Core [sic] bullet list, but they don’t even do that.
Second, much of attainment in ELA involves mastery of procedural knowledge–knowledge of what to do. E.g.: How do you format a Works Cited page? How do you plan the plot of a standard short story? What step-by-step procedure could you follow to do that? How do you create melody in your speaking voice? How do you revise to create sentence variety or to emphasize a particular point? What specific procedures can you carry out to accomplish these things? But the authors of these “standards” didn’t think that concretely, in terms of particular procedural knowledge. Instead, in imitation of the lowest-common-denominator-group-think state “standards” that preceded theirs, they chose to deal in vague, poorly conceived abstractions. The “standards” being tested define skills so vaguely and so generally that they cannot, as written, be sufficiently operationalized, to be VALIDLY tested. They literally CANNOT be, as in, this is an impossibility on the level of drawing a square circle. Given, for example, the extraordinarily wide variety of types of narratives (jokes, news stories, oral histories, tall tales, etc.) and the enormous number of skills that it requires to produce narratives of various kinds (writing believable dialogue, developing a conflict, characterization via action, characterization via foils, showing not telling, establishing a point of view, etc.), there can be no single prompt that tests for narrative writing ability IN GENERAL. But this is a broader problem. In general, the tests ask one or two multiple-choice questions per “standard.” But what one or two multiple-choice questions could you ask to find out if a student is able, IN GENERAL, to “make inferences from text” (the first of the many literature “standards” at each grade level in the Gates/Coleman bullet list)? Obviously, you can’t. There are three very different kinds of inference–induction, deduction, and abduction–and whole sciences devoted to problems in each, and texts vary so considerably, and types of inferences from texts do as well, that no such testing of GENERAL “inferring from texts” ability is even remotely possible. A moment’s clear, careful thought should make this OBVIOUS. So, the tests do not even validly test for what they purport to test for, and all this invalidity in testing for each “standard” doesn’t–cannot–add up to validity overall.
Third, nothing that students do on these exams even remotely resembles what real readers and writers do with real texts in the real world. Ipso facto, the tests cannot be valid tests of actual reading and writing. People read for one of two reasons—to find out what an author thinks about a subject or to have an interesting, engaging, vicarious experience. The tests, and the curricula based on them, don’t help students to do either. Imagine, for example, that you wish to respond to this post, but instead of agreeing or disagreeing with what I’ve said and explaining why, you are limited to explaining how my use of figurative language (the tests are a miasma) affected the tone and mood of my post. See what I mean? But that’s precisely the kind of thing that the writing prompts on the Common [sic] Core [sic] ELA tests do and the kind of thing that one finds, now, in ELA courseware. This whole testing enterprise has trivialized education in the English language arts and has replaced normal interaction with texts with such freakish, contorted, scholastic nonsense.
Fourth, a lot of attainment in ELA is not about explicit learning, at all, but, rather, about acquisition via automatic processes. So, for example, your knowledge (or lack thereof) of explicit models of the grammar of your native tongue has almost nothing to do with your internalized grammar of the language. But the ELA standardized tests and the “standards” on which they are based were conceived in blissful ignorance of this (and of much else that is now known about language acquisition).
Fifth, standard standardized test development procedures require that the testing instrument be validated. Such validation requires that the test maker show that results for the the test and for particular test items and test item types correlate strongly with other accepted measures of what is being tested. No such validation has been done for any of the new generation of state and national standardized ELA tests. None. And, given the vagueness of the “standards,” none could be. Where is the independent measure of proficiency on Common Core State Standard ELA.11-12.4b against which the items on the state and national measures have been validated? Answer: There is no such measure. None. So, the tests fail to meet a minimal standard for a high-stakes standardized assessment–that they have been independently validated.
The test formats are inappropriate.
The new state and national tests consist largely of objective-format items (multiple-choice and so-called evidence-based selected response items, or EBSR). On these tests, such item formats are pressed into a kind of service for which they are, generally, not appropriate. They are used to test what in EdSpeak is called “higher-order thinking.” The test questions therefore tend to be tricky and convoluted. The test makers, these days, all insist on all the multiple-choice distracters, or possible answers, being “plausible.” The student is to choose the “best” answer from among a list of plausible answers. Well, what does plausible mean? It means “reasonable.” In other words, on these tests, many reasonable answers are, BY DESIGN, wrong answers! So, the test questions end up being extraordinarily complex and confusing and tricky–impossible for kids to answer, because the “experts” who designed these tests didn’t understand the most basic stuff about creating assessments, for example, that objective question formats are generally not great for testing so-called “higher-order thinking” and are best reserved for testing straight recall. The use of these inappropriate formats, coupled with the sloppiness of the test-creation procedures, results in question after question where there is, arguably, no correct answer among the answer choices given or one or more choices that are arguably correct. Often, the question is written so badly that it is not, arguably, answerable given the actual question stem and text provided. I did an analysis of the sample released questions from a recent FSA ELA practice exam and demonstrated that such was the case for almost all the questions on the exam, so sloppily had it been prepared. But I can’t release that for fear of being sued by the scam artists who peddle these tests to people who aren’t even allowed to see them. Hey, I’ve got some great land in Flor-uh-duh. Take my word for it. Available cheap (but not available for inspection).
The tests are diagnostically and instructionally useless.
Many kinds of assessment—diagnostic assessment, formative assessment, performative assessment, some classroom summative assessment—have instructional value. They can be used to inform instruction and/or are themselves instructive. The results of the high-stakes standardized tests are not broken down in any way that is of diagnostic or instructional use. Teachers and students cannot even see the tests to find out what students got wrong on them and why. The results always come too late to be of any use, anyway. So the tests are of no diagnostic or instructional value. None. None whatsoever.
The tests have enormous opportunity costs.
I estimate that, nationwide, schools are now spending a third of the school year on state standardized tests. That time includes the actual time spent taking the tests, the time spent taking pretests and benchmark tests and other practice tests, the time spent doing test prep materials, the time spent doing exercises and activities in textbooks and online materials that have been modeled on the test questions in order to prepare kids to answer questions of those kinds, and the time spent on reporting, data analysis, data chats, proctoring, and other test housekeeping. That’s all lost instructional time.
The tests have enormous direct, incurred costs.
Typically, the US spends 1.7 billion per year under direct contracts for state standardized testing. The PARCC contract by itself was worth over a billion dollars to Pear$on in the first three years, and you have to add the cost of SBAC and the other state tests to that. No one, to my knowledge, has accurately estimated the cost of the computer upgrades that were (and continue to be) necessary for online testing of every child, but those costs vastly exceed the amount spent on the tests themselves. Then add the costs of test prep materials and staff doing proctoring and data chats and so on. Then add the costs of new curricula that have been dumbed down to be test preppy. Billions and billions and billions. This is money that could be spent on stuff that matters—on making sure that poor kids have eye exams and warm clothes and food in their bellies, on making sure that libraries are open and that schools have nurses on duty to keep kids from dying. How many dead kids is all this testing worth, given that it is, again, invalid as assessment and of no diagnostic or instructional value?
The tests dramatically distort curricula and pedagogy.
The tests drive how and what people teach and much of what is created by curriculum developers. These distortions are grave. In U.S. curriculum development today, the tail is wagging the dog. To an enormous extent, we’ve basically replaced traditional English curricula with test prep. Where before, a student might open a literature textbook and study a coherent unit on The Elements of the Short Story or on The Transcendentalists, he or she now does random exercises, modeled on the standardized test questions, in which he or she “practices” random “skills” from the Gates/Coleman bullet list on random snippets of text. There’s enormous pressure on schools to do all test prep all the time because school and student and teacher and administrator evaluations depend upon the test results. Every courseware producer in the U.S. now begins every ELA or math project by making a spreadsheet with a list of the “standards” in the first column and the place where the “standard” will be “covered” in the other columns. And since the standards are a random list of vague skills, the courseware becomes random as well. The era of coherent, well-planned curricula is gone. I won’t go into detail about this, here, but this is an ENORMOUS problem. Many of the best courseware writers and editors I know have quit in disgust at this. The testing mania has brought about devolution and trivialization of our methods and materials.
The tests are abusive and demotivating.
Our prime directive as educators should be to nurture intrinsic motivation in order to create independent, life-long learners. The tests create climates of anxiety and fear. Both science and common sense teach that extrinsic punishment and reward systems like this testing system are highly DEMOTIVATING for cognitive tasks. See this:
https://search.yahoo.com/search?fr=mcafee&type=C111US662D20151202&p=daniel+pink+drive+rsa
The summative standardized testing system is a backward extrinsic punishment and reward approach to motivation. It reminds me of the line from the alphabet in the Puritan New England Primer, the first textbook published on these shores:
F
The idle Fool
Is whip’t in school
The tests have shown no positive results; they have not improved outcomes, and they have not reduced achievement gaps.
We have been doing this standards-and-standardized-testing stuff for more than two decades now. Richard Rothstein, the education statistician, has shown that turning our nation’s schools into test prep outfits has resulted in very minor increases in overall mathematics outcomes (increases of less than 2 percent on independent tests of mathematical ability) and NO IMPROVEMENT WHATSOEVER in ELA. Simply from the Hawthorne Effect, we should have seen some improvement. Rothstein also showed that even if you accept as valid the results from international comparative tests, if you correct for the socioeconomic level of the students taking those tests, US students are NOT behind those in other advanced, industrialized nations. So, the rationale for the testing madness was false from the start. The issue is not “failing schools” and “failing teachers” but POVERTY. We have a lot of poor kids in the US, and those kids take the tests in higher numbers than elsewhere. Arguably, all the testing we’ve been doing has actually decreased outcomes, which is consistent with what we know about the demotivational effects, for cognitive tasks, of extrinsic punishment and reward systems. Years ago, I watched a seagull repeatedly striking at his own reflection in a plate glass window, until I finally drove him away to keep him from killing himself. Whatever that seagull did, the one in the reflection kept coming back for more. It’s the height of stupidity to look at a clearly failed approach and to say, “Gee, we should do a lot more of that.” But that’s just what the Gates-funded disrupters of U.S. education–those paid cheerleaders for the Common [sic] Core [sic] and testing and depersonalized education software based on the Core [sic] and the tests are asking us to do. Enough.
In state after state in which the new generation of standardized tests has been been given, we have seen enormous failure rates. In the first year, fewer than half the students at New Trier, Adlai Steven, and Hinsdale Central–the best public schools in Illinois–passed the new PARCC math tests. In New York, in the first year of PARCC, 70% of the students failed the ELA exams and 69% the math exams. In New Jersey, 55% of students in 3-8 failed the new state reading test, and 56% the new math test. The year after, Florida delayed and delayed releasing the scores for its new ELA and math exams. Then they announced that they weren’t going to release only T-scores and percentiles but were still working on setting cut scores for proficiency. LOL. Criterion-based testing, as opposed to norm-referenced testing, is supposed to set absolute standards that students must meet in order to demonstrate proficiency. I suspect that what happened that year in Florida–the reason for the resounding silence from the state–is that the scores were so low that they couldn’t set cut scores at any reasonable level without having everyone fail.
Decades of mandated federal high-stakes testing hasn’t improved outcomes and hasn’t reduced achievement gaps. NAEP results improved a tiny, tiny bit in the first years of the testing because when you teach kids the formats of test questions, their scores will improve slightly. Then, after that, NAEP results went FLAT. No improvement, whatsoever, for a decade and a half. But the testing has had results: it has trivialized ELA curricula and pedagogy and wasted enormous resources that could have been used productively elsewhere.
The test makers are not held accountable.
All students taking these tests and all teachers administering them have to sign forms stating that they will not reveal anything about the test items, and the items are no longer released, later, for public scrutiny, and so there is no check whatsoever on the test makers. They can publish any sloppy crap with complete impunity. I would love to see the tests outlawed and a national truth and reconciliation effort put into place to hold the test makers accountable, financially, for the scam they have been perpetrating.
Anyone who supports or participates in this testing is committing child abuse. Have you proctored these tests and seen the kids squirming and crying and throwing up? Have you seen them FURIOUS afterward because of the trickiness of the tests? I have.
Standardized testing is a vampire. It sucks the lifeblood from our schools. Put a stake in it.
NB: I would love to be able to post, here, analyses of the sample release questions from ELA tests by the major companies, but I can’t because I would be sued. However, it’s easy enough to show that most of the questions are so badly written that AS WRITTEN, they don’t have a single correct answer, have more than one arguably correct answer, or are unanswerable.
It’s time to make the testing companies answerable for their rapacious duplicity and for stealing from any entire generation of kids the opportunity for humane education in the English language arts.
LikeLike
Comprehensive analysis, Bob. A refreshing contrast to media blurbs and glosses. And even some leavening! Biology knowledge, vs “skills like slide-staining” (giggle) — and — in responding to yr post I may not agree/ disagree/ substantiate but limit myself to how your use of figurative language affects its tone & mood, ROFL!! On the nose!
CCSS ELA 11-12.4b “Identify and correctly use patterns of word changes that indicate different meanings or parts of speech…” Patterns of word changes? The only thing that makes this garble comprehensible is the [sole] example, “conceive, conception, conceivable.” And you’d be hard-pressed where to take it from there & why.
I don’t concede that grammar is an unnecessary topic (nor do you, most likely). But this example demonstrates that ignorance of what’s known about language acquisition/ internalized grammar. They chose a relatively sophisticated word to lend
weightiness to the supposed “skill.” Back it off to 3rd-gr level & find me a 3rd-grader who would mix up which form goes in “He laughs” vs “He let out a laugh” vs “that’s laughable.”
Some study of native-lang grammar helps immensely with learning other languages. Also, later on, with deciphering convoluted writing styles in native-lang. But memorizing parts of speech is a cumbersome & inefficient approach.
I’ve said it before: bring back diagramming sentences! It’s a fun puzzle-challenge that enables kids to visualize sentence structure. I would argue you’re better off using it w/an absolute minimum of grammar-lingo. Otherwise you risk kids sticking a word in the wrong place because they forgot the meaning of, say, “adjective.” Just ask them what describes what & let internalized grammar rip. The great benefit is in separating the meaning-logic from word order. Word order varies from one Western language to another. And does handsprings in lengthy run-on sentences. Many students may not end up reading Henry James, but they’re sure to encounter that challenge as adults, via legal et al technical writing.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I loved diagramming sentences. It was like a game. I also liked knowing the names of the parts of speech. It is valuable to know the difference between an adjective and an adverb.
LikeLike
There are reasons to teach formal models of grammar. They aren’t the reasons imagined by Coleman (and others).
LikeLike
BOB. You said: “I would love to see the tests outlawed and a national truth and reconciliation effort put into place to hold the test makers accountable, financially, for the scam they have been perpetrating.”
The other scam that makes testing possible are not just the COMMON GORE STANDARDS, but their spawn. From some spreadsheets I constructed in 2016, here is the current inventory of standards our infallible students are expected to meet. There is no way a coherent curriculum can be organized around these standards.
Standards Year Domain or Discipline and Grade Level Distribution
747 2010 Common Gore English Language Arts and Literacy. K-8 (each grade)
285 2010 Common Gore Mathematics. K-8 (each grade)
85 2011 Computer Science. K-8 (overlap: K-3, 3-6, then 7-8) in revision for 2016
99 2012 National Sexuality Standards. K-2, 3-5, 6-8
12 2012 Common Career Technical Core: Career Ready Practices. “continuous, ungraded” for 16 Career Clusters and their 79 Career Pathways.
85 2013 Social and Emotional Learning (SEL). Early elementary, late elementary, middle/junior high)
208 2013 Social Studies. K-3, 3-5, 6-8
144 2013 Next Generation Science Standards. K-8 (each grade, except for 3 grade spans for engineering), Add 410 connections to the Common Gore.
453 2013 Physical Education Literacy. K-8 (each grade)
1,038 2014 National Core Arts Standards. Pre-K-8 (each grade) Dance=210, MediaArts=180, Music=272, Theater=226, Visual arts=150
240 2015 Personal Financial Literacy. K-8 (K, 1-3, 4-8)
98 2015 National Health Standards. PreK-2, 3-5, 6-8
11 2015 World-Readiness Standards for Learning (Foreign) Languages. ungraded
? 2016 International Society for Technology in Education standards are being revised now. Nine topics: Communication and Collaboration; Creativity and Innovation; Research and Information; Technology Operations; Critical Thinking; and Digital Citizenship. More at iste@iste.org See Computer Science 2011 for the present version
? 2016 21st Century Skills. Eleven “core” subjects (English, reading or language arts, world languages, arts, mathematics, economics, science, geography, history, government and civics) PLUS… FIVE TO SEVEN Interdisciplinary literacy themes: Global Awareness; Financial, Economic, Business and Entrepreneurial Literacy; Civic Literacy; Health Literacy; Environmental Literacy.Plus FOUR TO SIX Learning and Innovation Skills: Creativity and Innovation; Critical Thinking and Problem Solving; Communication; Collaboration.Plus THREE TO FIVE Information, Media and Technology Skills: such as: Information Literacy; Media Literacy; Information, Communications and Technology Literacy. Plus FIVE TO TEN Life and Career Skills: Flexibility and Adaptability, Initiative and Self-Direction, Social and Cross-Cultural Skills, Productivity and Accountability, Leadership and Responsibility (In my opinion, 21st Century Skills are a conceptual mish-mash—word salad—successfully marketed by Ken Kay a lobbyist for the tech industry)
35 2014 School Counselors. I could not access the grade level standards for 35 keyconcepts.
18 2014 School Social Workers. Four grade level competencies—identified as early elementary, late elementary, early high school, and late high school
3,558 MINIMUM TOTAL Many are redundant, contradictory, based on wild assumptions. State standards suffer from many of the same problems.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Beautifully done, Laura! Insane, isn’t it?
LikeLike
Test and punish has been the vehicle that the disrupters have used to undermine public education. It has allowed states to take over “failing” school districts, and it has enabled the privatization of public education. Test and punish has been a useless, clueless charade of falsehoods that have not benefited out students one iota.
The pandemic is leaving the states with economic hardships. While this is a great opportunity to eliminate standardized testing, we have to be careful. Tech moguls are moving in on the states peddling “personalized learning” schemes. This is yet another way to privatize our schools from the inside out. Instead of separate standardized testing, this is embedded testing all the time. It generates “liquid gold,” aka, data for tech companies, but it fails our young people. We must reject this new way to monetize our schools. Instead of test and punish, depersonalized learning is “test and boredom.”
LikeLike
I haven’t talked to a single parent that is a fan of the online learning that was forced upon us by the pandemic. Parents may not know that the tests are embedded, but they are keenly aware that their kids are doing “drill and kill” drivel disguised as an education. They are acutely aware that their children were/are unhappy and have allowed them to run free instead of tying them to a schedule of computer generated, “home school” workdays. Parents may opt for online education due to circumstances of viral spread for the coming year, but I don’t think they will be happy about it…..the kids have already “spoken”.
LikeLiked by 1 person
nicely said: “drill and kill drivel disguised as an education”
LikeLike
I taught reading to struggling first and second graders on Long Island, New York for years-where the birth of the Opt-Out parents movement was formed!!! I was expected to proctor all the Parsons elementary grades’ reading testing sessions, 4 times a year, on computers for weeks including the makeups, which meant my students were missing instructional time and interfering with some classroom teachers’ group sessions and schedules.
I remember my very first time with kindergarteners and first graders crying at the computer; some couldn’t even hold the mouse. The little clock up in the corner showing the time left to choose a multiple choice answer was a new distraction for these children who had never been timed for any school activity in their young lives! All of our IEP students, even those severely disabled, “had” to take their grade level exam regardless of their reading levels. Some who could not read the passages just went through the questions and chose any answer and we’re excited to shout out, “I’m done!” which through off some students! It was a complete mess.
I personally wrote and hand delivered a letter to the superintendent and principal about this travesty. I don’t know if my letter made any difference but kindergarters were quietly excused from testing the rest of that year, and from all future testing and the first graders were excused from all standardized testing after that first year.
LikeLike
Thank you, Joanne, for standing up against this ridiculous child abuse. What’s astonishing to me is that teachers haven’t, en masse, done this. The perpetrators of this invalid, insane testing should long ago have been laughed off the national stage.
LikeLike
“Understanding what a system is, and is not, is central to improvement…”
Breaking the cycle of fantasy requires deviating from the approved narratives.
Calling “semantic reductionism” (the pass/fail credentialing instrument
based on TESTING) the product of misguided (uneducated) intent, seems to avoid
an inconvenient conclusion.
Bureaucratic standardization is nothing new.
Emerson: “I am ashamed to think how easily we capitulate to badges and names,
to large societies and dead institutions.”
LikeLike
Amen!
LikeLike
I love this comment, NoBrick. I have often fantasized about Rumi or Blake or Emerson or Joyce writing an answer to the prompt on one of this stupid state ELA exams.
LikeLike
Silence about the invalid and destructive standardized testing is complicity in child abuse.
LikeLike
Every time I read a reference to test scores in a piece by an “Education Reformer,” I howl with derision and disgust. This moron thinks that these tests actually measure what they purport to measure. So, there are two possibilities: a) he or she is writing about something he or she knows nothing about, having never actually examined one of these tests closely; or b) he or she is a flack paid to say this nonsense by the Gates organization, which wants computer-based education and testing and Orwellian databases because $$$$$$.
LikeLike
The moment one of these people refers to the effects of something on the test scores, I know I am listening to a clueless idiot or to a members of the Gates mercenary army or both.
LikeLike
End the testing.
Create a national truth and reconciliation committee to investigate the scam and require the test makers to make reparations.
Remember the Vichy collaborators with the testing occupation of our schools.
LikeLike
Let this be the year when schoolchildren everywhere to leave their tests blank and simply write on them:
Sorry, my mind is not standardized enough to generate the requested responses.
LikeLike
Well stated!
LikeLiked by 1 person
So many great comments, Bob.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Bob thanks for your criticisms. It’s the one reason that I do not send my children to ChgoPubSchools. When I was a CPS student in the 80s, we had ITBS in June, that was it. Fast forward to 2020 and the list of testing for the dual language school I work at is three pages long, taking up more than ten weeks of time and corresponding schedule and curriculum disruption. We teachers were asked for our input on next year’s testing schedule, it’s like letting someone maybe choose the cupholders for our car! We need to follow L Island’s example and get the parents and kids to shove this crap out of the way. Unfortunately, too many teachers want to feel good about test score bumps. I am tired of trying to convince some of my colleagues that the testing is only further demonstrating their irrelevancy. Do the work of teaching and stop using a $6’n screen to do your job for you.
LikeLike
Bob, thank you for your comment. You are so right about standardized tests!
Assessment 101: testing should drive instruction. Every teacher knows this and yet, as you note, we are not aloud to see test questions or answers, question the validity, reliability or even the ambiguity of questions or even see any results to “drive our instruction.”
As a reading specialist, I am well qualified and trained to assess students’ writing and reading abilities in the context of real reading and writing. I took daily running records (Clay) and administered specific formative assessments when needed, to know what lessons to develop to help (not punish or rank) my students in their literacy growth.
The “disrupters” seem to think that no testing was ever done in public schools, until Gates and Coleman came along! I always resented their involvement in my specialty when I have 50 credits above my Masters degree in literacy and 30 years of teaching experience. I attended dozens of classes and conferences on teaching phonics, phonemic awareness, assessment, comprehension, book clubs, literacy circles, childrens literature, learning conditions and have amassed an amazing library of resource books. As a literacy coach I held literacy workshops in my school on specific topics that teachers wanted to learn more about. Some years I joined teachers in their classrooms to demonstrate lessons or collaborate teaching . And I know that my teaching was effective, and my young students made progress, way before the CCSS came along. And yet nobody asked a teacher…..
LikeLike
Instruction should drive testing.
LikeLike
Read the Valerie Strauss article, then read the comments.
LikeLike
I would love to direct those commenters straight to this discussion! Especially “Conditional Probability.”
LikeLike