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Re: Figures Don't Lie - Iowa Rules! & Warren Buffet


  • Subject: Re: Figures Don't Lie - Iowa Rules! & Warren Buffet
  • From: Mike Kluznik <mkluznik@HOTMAIL.COM>
  • Date: Thu, 1 Feb 2001 13:22:13 -0500
  • Reply-to: Assessment Reform Network Mailing List <ARN-L@LISTS.CUA.EDU>
  • Sender: Assessment Reform Network Mailing List <ARN-L@LISTS.CUA.EDU>

Excellent points, Monty.
Isn't there one state out of the 50 that doesn't use high-stakes testing?
And isn't that state Nebraska?
For sake of argument, let's say it is Nebraska. The latter state is where
Warren Buffet lives. He is considered the most succesful investor in
history. I recently finished a book about him. There are many simplistic
ways of evaluating a company and its stock. However, Buffet eschews such
simplistic methods. He would never judge a company by using only one
factor. He looks at a wide variety of factors, including simply whether he
feels comfortable in evaluating a particular company. For example, he has
stayed away from high-tech stocks such as Microsoft, partly because he says
he simply doesn't understand them. On the other hand, he understands what
Dairy Queen is all about, so he bought it.
When he evaluates a company, he expends a lot of time and energy doing a
comprehensive and thoughtful analysis.
I doubt that Warren Buffet would ever evaluate a school based on one set of
test scores. In any case, we would do well to incorporate his philosophy
into evaluating schools. We should look at many factors.
When the Why-Aren't-Schools-Run-More-Like-Businesses crowd whines about
public schools, they conveniently forget about business people like Buffet.
Good luck on the Today show.
Mike
P.S. For those of you who don't know anything about investing, Warrn Buffet
didn't sing "Margaritaville" and he doesn't wear jeans & loud Hawaain (sp?)
shirts. That's his brother Jimmy Buffet.

From: Monty Neill <monty@FAIRTEST.ORG>
Reply-To: Assessment Reform Network Mailing List <ARN-L@LISTS.CUA.EDU>
To: ARN-L@LISTS.CUA.EDU
Subject: Re: Figures Don't Lie - Iowa Rules!
Date: Thu, 1 Feb 2001 11:46:55 -0500

I would not argue causation. Most lower-scoring states with more tests
and higher stakes are southern states with historically weaker education
systems. They moved to testing to "improve" schools on the cheap (and
had state-centralized systems, making it easier to implement), and in
some cases leveraged the tests for more money for schools. Improvements
have been marginal however, so the point is not that testing causes
lower scores in these states but that 1) it does not induce improvement,
and 2) why adopt an improvement strategy from states that have the worst
systems and can't show improvement on independent measures and have the
worst dropout rates?

Monty Neill

Laura VaN wrote:
>
> >From: Monty Neill <monty@FAIRTEST.ORG>
> >FairTest has also shown that states with less testing and lower stakes
> >also tend to make better progress on NAEP than state with more testing
> >and higher stakes. Monty Neill
>
> I wonder whether this is because they don't test, or because their
> population is such that they haven't felt the "crises" (real or
imagined).
> Iowa (the example I know about) I believe still does test the students -
and
> the test scores come out fairly well so that I wonder if they just
haven't
> felt the need to attach high stakes to the tests. MOre simply - is this
> causation or correlation?
>
> remember to speak out again the silencing of dissent
> goto http://angelfire.com/fl4/eca
>
> _________________________________________________________________
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