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Interview With Monty Neill
- To: ARN State <ARN-state@yahoogroups.com>, ARN-L List <arn-l@interversity.org>, arn2-strategy <arn2-strategy@yahoogroups.com>
- Subject: Interview With Monty Neill
- From: Peter Campbell <campbellp@mail.montclair.edu>
- Date: Tue, 6 Jun 2006 12:45:36 -0500
In this interview, Dr. Monty Neill, Executive Director of FairTest,
begins by discussing the recent flap over the SAT. According to this
NY Times report from 3/10/06, "The mistakes, which the company,
Pearson Educational Measurement, acknowledged yesterday, raised fresh
questions about the reliability of the kinds of high-stakes tests
that increasingly dominate education at all levels. Neither Pearson,
which handles state testing across the country, nor the College Board
detected the scoring problems until two students came forward with
complaints."
I asked Dr. Neill why, despite all the evidence that standardized
tests are flawed, we still rely on them so heavily.
He replied, "Certainly some people believe there’s a general
mystification of the role of numbers, that numbers somehow mean more
than the data that backs them up, what goes into the numbers, which
of course cannot be true. So if what goes into the numbers is flawed,
the numbers are flawed. But they have this veneer of science and
technical accuracy that is often very incorrect and misplaced. The
test makers have sold a bill of goods that tests help produce a level
the playing field. But . . . for students with disabilities, whose
first language isn’t English, for African-Americans, Latinos, these
tests have a harmful effect on their capacity to compete fairly, as
it does poor people in general who . . . can’t afford all the
coaching programs."
He added, "This old story has been used to argue that by holding
everybody to the same standard, we will assist people who have been
denied a high-quality education. That argument fails because it
requires a little more than standardized tests to produce equity.
Equity begins with equitable access to things that kids need and
that’s clearly not being provided. . .You can’t begin to pretend
you’re going to get equity in one thing when the rest of society is
so drastically inequitable."
--
Posted by Peter Campbell to Transform Education at 6/06/2006 12:19:00 PM
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