Education.com

Will More Testing Improve Schools? (page 3)

National Center for Fair and Open Testing
Updated on Jul 26, 2007

If teaching to the tests is not good enough for the wealthy, it should not be good enough for poor and working-class children. The knowledge of how to provide all children with as high quality an education as the wealthy now get exists, but the will to provide it does not.

Still, some reply, the tests will jump-start improvement, will make really weak systems better. While some schools and districts have no doubt responded appropriately to accountability demands by introducing higher quality curriculum and instruction, too many have narrowed curriculum to focus on test prep. The Center for Policy Research in Education has found this is most common in "low-performing schools." Thus, schools often move in the wrong direction, merely intensifying low-level programs that fail to produce sustained or higher-order learning. Additionally, since the tests do not assess much if any higher order learning, we have no way of knowing whether the schools are successfully making meaningful changes.

The narrow focus on test scores has not and will not lead to sustained improvement for low-income and minority-group students. Civil rights activists, parents, educators and all those concerned about education must understand that the regime of testing too often leads us away from, not towards the goal of high-quality learning for all children.

An alternative. High quality assessment is indispensable to good education, and the public deserves genuine accountability. If testing won't do the job, what will? Across the nation, in some schools, networks of schools, and districts, authentic assessment and accountability exist. FairTest can provide information about these approaches.

In Massachusetts, the Coalition for Authentic Reform in Education (CARE) has proposed an authentic accountability system that focuses on the actual work teachers assign and students do in school. It also would include limited standardized testing and regular independent school reviews. Decisions about students would be made by schools and not be based on any one test score. You can obtain a copy of the plan from FairTest or at www.fairtest.org/care/accountability.html.

What you can do. Across the nation, parents, educators, civil rights activists, students and other members of the community are beginning to organize to replace high-stakes standardized testing with authentic assessment and accountability. FairTest's Assessment Reform Network links together activists from many states and districts (see www.fairtest.org/arn.htm) and provides resources to help advocates in public education, media work, and organizing. We also have research and bibliographies on standardized testing and authentic performance assessment.

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