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Randi Weingarten

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Fixing the Fixation on Testing

Posted: 02/21/2012 9:27 am

President Obama got high marks from teachers and parents when he said in his recent State of the Union address that schools should stop teaching to the test and instead give teachers latitude to teach with creativity and passion.

I immediately recalled times as a teacher when I thought my students learned the most. It wasn't when we were intensely preparing for the Regents exams or any other standardized tests. My students were most engaged during project-based learning, when they worked in teams and wrestled with complex topics, such as the decision to drop the atomic bomb during World War II. My proudest moment as an educator was watching my students compete in the We the People civics competition and observing--after all their preparation--the confidence with which our teams debated constitutional issues.

Those are the kinds of educational experiences that excite students and teachers alike. Teachers don't want to spend valuable time endlessly preparing for "the test." They want to guide their students to ask insightful questions, offer well-reasoned opinions, and work diligently until they master content. Those are the types of classroom experiences that unleash students' ingenuity and reveal their understanding of the material.

And that's the kind of learning that is being stamped out by the current pervasive fixation on testing. Test-based accountability is out of balance, and parents, teachers and public officials--from President Obama to California Gov. Jerry Brown to Texas Commissioner of Education Robert Scott--are speaking out about it.

Obama was right when he spoke last year about using standardized tests appropriately--to diagnose students' strengths and weaknesses, not to punish students or schools. Yet, numerous policies enacted by the U.S. Department of Education since No Child Left Behind have skewed the emphasis toward testing and sanctions.

Look at the difference between private and public schools in our country. Most private schools do not administer high-stakes tests, and that is reflected in their curriculum and culture. Freedom from test fixation allows them to provide enriching experiences and in-depth instruction in an array of subjects.

Public schools, in contrast, are required by federal and state laws to administer what numerous experts consider to be too many low-quality standardized assessments, which have significant consequences. This, in turn, drives an excessive focus on the tests, test preparation and tested subjects.

Indeed, evidence supports teachers' and parents' concerns. An examination of National Assessment of Educational Progress results by Richard Rothstein of the Economic Policy Institute shows that disadvantaged students have made significant progress in the last generation, but that such progress has stalled in the decade since NCLB and its unprecedented test-based accountability measures were enacted.

Proper accountability is extremely important. But current public school accountability mechanisms don't gauge good teaching or deep acquisition of knowledge. The Common Core State Standards, and the assessments being developed as part of their implementation, can help bridge that divide by focusing on deeper understanding of core content that students then can apply broadly.

Nations that outperform the United States have gotten this balance right--emphasizing teaching and learning versus testing and blaming. In Singapore, for example, where I spent time with teachers and students last week, schools are focused intently on growth and achievement. However, as I observed numerous diverse groups of children deeply engaged in learning, nothing I saw could be construed as teaching to the test.

Test mania won't get our children or our country where we need to go. Obama made a good case for this when he recently honored science fair winners from across the country at the White House. The president was clearly impressed by the innovative projects--he even shot a marshmallow from a small but powerful air cannon. The ingenuity on display at the White House should be cultivated in every public school in America.

We hope that the views expressed from the bully pulpit of the presidency will be matched with state and federal action that moves away from the excessive fixation on testing and toward the appropriate use of assessments to support teaching and learning. That's what parents of advantaged kids seek when enrolling them in private schools, and that's what the highest-achieving countries do. And it's what we can and should do in every American public school.

 

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07:55 PM on 02/23/2012
The so-called "educational reform movement" has revealed itself as the con job that it is--a way for bought and paid for politicians to pass laws that benefit test making corporations. The only thing our country has gained from the infamy of high-stakes testing is budget cuts for American schools, due to billions of dollars being siphoned out of education to insure record profits for test-making corporations, the abusive badgering and bullying of teachers by administrators who want maximum results on bare bones budgets. Educational leaders no longer believe in supporting teachers by handling discipline and keeping order in the schools so that teachers can concentrate on teaching. Instead, they are data obsessed, occasionally venturing out of their offices when the test date is approaching to raid teacher classrooms and give them the shake down, interrogating them about how they are teaching to the test and if they are not, why the hell not? It's disgusting and disheartening what has happened to public schools in America.
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Tauna Rogers
11:57 PM on 02/21/2012
Excuse me Ms. Weingarten, but you yourself have capitulated to a great deal of the ed deform wreaking havoc, chaos, and destruction in our schools and communities.

What for? A seat at the table with the Billionaires Boys' Club?

Stand up to them and speak the truth!

There is a time to compromise and there is a time not to compromise. You give the elite "reformers" an inch and they take miles. And they take and they take and they take.
02:19 PM on 02/21/2012
My five-year-old will be starting kindergarten this fall and I am praying for admission to private school so we can escape the nonsense of NCLB and the public schools' absurd emphasis on standardized testing. We don't really have the financial resources for private school, but every time I worry about our decision, my son demonstrates the kind of critical thinking and analytical skills that I know the publics won't nurture in their mad rush to fit all children into one mold, and I know we're making the right choice. When defining educational "success," I would far rather see a kindergartener who can ask insightful questions, seek out the answers on his or her own, and draw thematic comparisons than an automaton who can read phonetically but doesn't comprehend the content.

Incidentally, I'm no statistician or even a mathematician, but basing performance on average scores seems like a tail-chasing exercise: the bottom portion of the group will always fail, no matter how high you set the bar.
11:12 AM on 02/21/2012
My heart is heavy for the recent developments in NYS. Cuomo is essentially breaking the unions and our unions are going right along with him. He is not advocating for the children. He is opening up opportunities for businesses to work their way into schools.
As an educator I'm saddened by what lies ahead and as a parent this is not the type of education I envisioned for my child.
Hoping other NY staters will start realizing that standardized testing is just a tool and should not be the end all be all. We need to address be educational programs to assist all type of learners, multiple intelligences.
My high school son is worried about it and I haven't even said a word. I told him "I don't care about any test scores" they do not tell me anything about you as a learner, you are so much more than that. Unfortunately, more teaching now will be drill and kill and you can kiss any "project", "thinking" "process" based teaching goodbye.
07:26 PM on 02/21/2012
You are so right-Randi and the teachers union have allowed the raiders to take over our schools. Dems like Cuomo, Duncan, and Obama are just as bad as the Repubs. As Christie said, Obama and Duncan are his best allies in deform.