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Science Testing for AYP


  • To: arn-l@interversity.org
  • Subject: Science Testing for AYP
  • From: "S.A. Davidson" <sadavidson05@charter.net>
  • Date: Tue, 09 Oct 2007 00:31:15 -0400
  • User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US; rv:1.7.2) Gecko/20040804 Netscape/7.2 (ax)

<>NCLB will now require states to test students once a year in science within three grade spans -- 3-5, 6-9, and 10-12 . <http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2007/10/10/07science.h27.html?tmp=119471313> Excerpts from Education Week article (10/5):
* The attention paid to science in classrooms, particularly in
elementary and middle schools, has eroded over the nearly six
years since the federal education law was enacted, critics
say. They say schools were forced to cut back on science
lessons in their attempts to raise achievement in reading and
math...
* The NSTA...and the...American Chemical Society...planned to
send a letter this month to House education leaders in both
parties, asking them to add science to the mandatory mix for
judging annual progress. That letter also has been signed by
the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the National Association of
Manufacturers, and the Business Roundtable. "Including
science as a required component of the No Child Left Behind
accountability system is a critical element in ensuring U.S.
competitiveness," the letter says.
* In addition to establishing science tests this year, states
will be required to report publicly the results of those
exams, as they now do in reading and math. So far, only five
states have had their science tests approved by the U.S.
Department of Education.

First, when one sees who has signed on to this letter and second, as one reads (yet again) the "global competitiveness" argument, we are boringly reminded of who is writing the same stanzas to the same songs of the NCLB musical.

Here are just some of the problems with this new testing regimen:

1. If there is new test which must be taught, there will be even
more de-emphasis on the remaining academic and
extracurricular/elective subjects -- or even a disappearance
of them?
2. Science is not an hierarchical subject, such as math and
reading. What is taught in seventh grade is not dependent on
what is taught in sixth grade, etc.
3. Testing science in a typical testing format will not show
science competency -- only what unrelated facts that some
students have been able to memorize at whatever grade level a
student is in based on whatever curriculum adopted by a
particular state for a particular grade...
4. Will the "important" subjects of reading/language and math
(important because they were the first to be tested, I guess)
have their teaching times reduced because of the new science
testing?
5. Are we ready to add more pressure to the classroom teachers
whose jobs are tied to test scores? And provide more
opportunities for schools/systems to "fail?"

I understand the reason NSTA wanting science to be tested. They don't want to be left out. If it is tested, it must be important! Are the fine arts not important, too? How about social studies and history? Drafting? Auto mechanics? Electronics? First grade?

Here we go again. In a few years we are going to find a "less-learned" generation (I didn't say dumber or more stupid) because, nation-wide, teachers have been forced to teach what is tested. One of the great memories as an elementary student was having teachers who taught us about the relevancy of our lives in the world of science and the influences of the science world upon our lives. That has shaped my philosophy of education to "be relevant" in my teaching. As a teacher of middle school science, I want my students to see the application of everything they learn as an integral part of their lives as young people and adults.

The only good I see from this is that now science will become one of the "big three" and be returned to schools' curricula. I guess a foot wide (not even a mile) and an inch deep is still better than an inch wide and an inch deep!

~Steve




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