Kindergarten Entrance Exam (image from Flickr, by emrank) |
It is already crazy how
much we test high school students. In addition to the usual internal quizzes
and exams used by teachers to assess whether their students are grasping the
concepts and skills being taught in their classes, there are increasing numbers
of high stakes standardized state and federal exams like No Child Left Behind
and high school exit exams.
The teacher-initiated
exams generally take up less than a class period and are a useful self-check of
learning and teaching. The high stakes exams, on the other hand, take up days
or weeks of instructional time and have little or no benefit to students or
teachers. They are almost entirely a manifestation of right-wing paranoia that
teachers are spending instructional time teaching communism and the homosexual
lifestyle to children instead of the 3 R’s and thus need some sort of tool
(regardless of whether it works) to hold them accountable for teaching what
really matters (bubbling in multiple choice answers to math problems and vocabulary
questions).
In reality, student test
scores are a measure of what students know, not how they learned it, and are
therefore meaningless as an accountability tool. The high stakes test scores
correlate far more strongly with students’ socioeconomic backgrounds than with
their teachers’ skill.
Of course the testing
mania is also terrible for children. High stakes tests are extremely stressful for
students. Their teachers and administrators need them to perform well so their
schools do not get closed down, converted to charters or have to fire everyone.
Even when not intended, the stress and anxiety of the adults is often passed on
to the children, who want to make their teachers and parents happy and do well
on the tests. The tests themselves take away instructional time that could be
used for real teaching and learning, rather than data collection. Furthermore,
the high stakes involved compels many schools and districts to slash even more
instructional time and replace it with test preparation. Consequently, many
districts no longer offer science, art, music or physical education.
There is also a question
of age-appropriateness. Are K-3rd graders really capable of reading
and understanding multiple choice questions and accurately bubbling in their
answers? And is it fair to the kids to be put under this kind of pressure and
have song-, play- and inquiry-based learning replaced by rote memorization,
drills and testing? Yet, if a district is requiring teacher evaluations to be
based on these tests, then even kindergarteners would have to take the tests so
that kindergarten teachers would face the same level of pseudoscientific scrutiny
as their colleagues.
Unfortunately, more and
more school districts are testing earlier and more often. WHTC.com reports that at least 25 states now require at least one formal
assessment during kindergarten, while many local school districts now implement
their own tests starting just a few weeks into the academic year. The Obama
administration’s Race to the Top program has offered $500 million competitive
grants to promote early childhood education. In order to win these grants,
though, states must pledge to assess all kindergarteners.
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