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Whose Idea Was All This Testing?
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- Subject: Whose Idea Was All This Testing?
- From: Bob Schaeffer <bobschaeffer@earthlink.net>
- Date: Tue, 14 Nov 2006 12:07:53 -0500
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JUST WHOSE IDEA WAS ALL THIS TESTING?
FUELED BY TECHNOLOGY, NATION'S ATTEMPT TO CREATE A LEVEL PLAYING FIELD
HAS HAD A ROCKY HISTORY
Washington Post -- November 14, 2006
by Jay Mathews
Second in a series of occasional articles on testing.
In ancient Greece, Socrates tested his students through conversations.
Answers were not scored as right or wrong. They just led to more
dialogue. Many intellectual elites in the 5th and 4th centuries B.C.
cared more about finding the path to higher knowledge than producing a
correct response. To them, accuracy was for shopkeepers.
Today, educators often hold up the Socratic method as the best kind of
teaching.
So how did we go from that ideal to an educational model shaped -- and
perhaps even ruled -- by standardized, normed, charted, graphed,
regressed, calibrated and validated testing? Students in the Washington
area are likely to know more about the MSA (Maryland School
Assessments), the SOL (Virginia's Standards of Learning) and the D.C.
CAS (D.C. Comprehensive Assessment System) than they do about Socrates
and his illustrious student Plato.
Critics say standardized testing has robbed schools of the creative
clash of intellects that make Plato's dialogues still absorbing. "There
is a growing technology of testing that permits us now to do in
nanoseconds things that we shouldn't be doing at all," said educational
psychologist Gerald W. Bracey, research columnist for the Phi Delta
Kappan education journal.
Historians call the rise of testing an inevitable outgrowth of expanding
technology. As goods and services are delivered with greater speed and
in higher quantity and quality, education has been forced to pick up the
pace.
Standardized exams have many sources. In imperial China in the A.D. 7th
century, government job applicants had to write essays about Confucian
philosophy and compose poetry. In Europe, the invention of the printing
press and modern paper manufacturing fueled the growth of written exams.
By 1845 in the United States, public education advocate Horace Mann was
calling for standardized essay testing. Spelling tests, geography tests
and math tests blossomed in schools, although they were rarely standardized.
At the outset of the 20th century, educators began to experiment with
tests that took shortcuts around the old essay methods. French
psychologist Alfred Binet developed an intelligence test about 1905.
Frederick J. Kelly of the University of Kansas designed a
multiple-choice test in 1914. Scanning machines followed. Many Americans
accepted these tests as efficient tools to help build a society based on
merit, not birth or race or wealth.
Still, modern testing had a clumsy start as psychologists experimented
with exams to help employers, schools and others rate applicants. In one
early case, testing expert H.H. Goddard identified as "feeble-minded" 83
percent of Jews, 80 percent of Hungarians, 79 percent of Italians and 87
percent of Russians among a small group of immigrants assessed at Ellis
Island.
"Consider a group of frightened men and women who speak no English and
who have just endured an oceanic voyage in steerage," Harvard University
science historian Stephen Jay Gould wrote of the Goddard study. "Most
are poor and have never gone to school; many have never held a pencil or
pen in their hand." Yet Goddard's interviewers expected them to sit down
with a pencil and "reproduce on paper a figure shown to them a moment
ago, but now withdrawn from their sight."
Eventually, testing experts focused on standardizing the measure of
learning, not of innate intelligence.
The College Entrance Examination Board, founded in 1900, played a huge
role. Now called the College Board, it "created the best, most
consistent and most influential standards that American education has
ever known," New York University educational historian Diane Ravitch
wrote in March in the Chronicle of Higher Education.
The board's early exams were written and graded by teachers and
professors and had no multiple-choice questions. These essay exams,
Ravitch wrote, led "everyone who went to high school, whether they were
the children of doctors or farmers or factory workers . . . to study
mathematics, science, English literature, composition, history and a
foreign language, usually Latin."
Many educators who value depth and rigor lament what followed. In 1926,
the multiple-choice SAT was introduced as a much faster way of testing
college applicants. On Dec. 7, 1941, several members of the board,
during a previously scheduled lunch, decided that the outbreak of world
war would require faster decisions and less leisurely testing. They
eventually canceled the board's old exam format. The SAT ruled.
Essay questions, however, made a comeback in 1955 when Advanced
Placement exams began.
The launch of Sputnik, the Soviet space satellite, in 1957 fueled a
space race and increased pressure on U.S. schools to show improvement.
But rating schools through tests did not advance much until the
mid-1970s, when the College Board revealed that average SAT scores had
been falling since 1963. Then, in 1983, a national commission declared
in the report "A Nation at Risk" that public school standards were too
low. Over the next two decades, testing took off.
In the 1980s and early 1990s, several governors argued that they had to
test all their students to raise school standards and improve their
economies. Among them were Democrats Bill Clinton of Arkansas and
Richard W. Riley of South Carolina, who would soon become president and
U.S. education secretary, respectively. (Later in the 1990s, Republican
Gov. George W. Bush of Texas also was a big proponent of testing.)
Some educators said a better way to improve schools was to spend more on
teacher training, salaries and smaller classes. They dwelled on
educational inputs; the politicians, on outputs.
The politicians prevailed. In 1988, Congress created the National
Assessment Governing Board. It established new standards for the
National Assessment of Educational Progress, a test that has been given
to a sampling of students since 1970. In 2002, President Bush signed the
No Child Left Behind law. For the first time, it required annual testing
of all public school children in certain grades and required states to
use results to help rate schools.
The National Education Association and other teacher organizations argue
that it is unfair to rate schools through such tests when teachers lack
adequate training and pay. In a 2004 essay for the Hoover Digest,
Ravitch wrote that the advocates of inputs and the champions of outputs
"are in constant tension, with first one and then the other gaining
brief advantage."
"How this conflict is resolved," she wrote, "will determine the future
of American education."
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