Millennial Debate Standardized Testing Debate


Cost Trades-Off with Instructional Resources



Download 1.17 Mb.
Page24/39
Date13.08.2017
Size1.17 Mb.
#31641
1   ...   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   ...   39

Cost Trades-Off with Instructional Resources

Testing trades-off with money that could be spent on instructional resources

Randi Weingarten , President, American Federation of Teachers , July 2013, Testing More, Teaching Less: What America’s Obsession with Student Tests Costs in Money and Loss Instructional Time,” http://www.aft.org/sites/default/files/news/testingmore2013.pdf DOA: 10-25-15

Based on a detailed grade-by-grade analysis of the testing calendars for two mid-size urban school districts, and the applied research from other studies of state mandated testing, our study found that the time students spend taking tests ranged from 20 to 50 hours per year in heavily tested grades. In addition, students can spend 60 to more than 110 hours per year in test prep in high-stakes testing grades. Including the cost of lost instructional time (at $6.15 per hour, equivalent to the per-student cost of adding one hour to the school day), the estimated annual testing cost per pupil ranged from $700 to more than $1,000 per pupil in several grades that had the most testing. If testing were abandoned altogether, one school district in this study could add from 20 to 40 minutes of instruction to each school day for most grades. The other school district would be able to add almost an entire class period to the school day for grades 6-11. Additionally, in most grades, more than $100 per test-taker could be reallocated to purchase instructional programs, technology or to buy better tests. Cutting testing time and costs in half still would yield significant gains to the instructional day, and free up enough dollars in the budget that could fund tests that are better aligned to the standards and produce useful information for teachers, students and parents.

Better to spend the billions we spend on tests on education

Frank Breslin, July 23, 2015, Huffington Post, Retired High School Teacher, Why America Demonizes Its Teachers – Part 5: What’s Wrong with Standardized Testing, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/frank-breslin/why-america-demonizes-its_b_7860916.html DOA: 7-23-15

The only winners in this multi-billion-dollar marketing scam are the test-making giants Pearson Publishing Co., McGraw Hill et al., and educational consultants and vendors, whose coffers have been fattened by billions in tax revenue intended for children. Pearson and Co. and its Sales Rep Extraordinaire, Education Secretary Arne Duncan, are breaking the law by dictating what is taught in American classrooms.

These billions should be going to schools to hire more teachers so that students can have individual attention in smaller classes; hire school nurses, guidance counselors, psychologists, social workers, and librarians to deal with students' physical, emotional, family, and intellectual needs; offer richer, more varied, and well-rounded academic programs; and make needed repairs to school buildings.


Progressive curriculum gets pushed out

Rethinking Schools, Spring 1999, http://www.rethinkingschools.org/archive/13_03/edit133.shtml DOA 10-26-15

Problems with standardized tests go beyond their "high stakes" use. Standardized tests can also drive curriculum and instruction in ways that harm children. Teachers are subjected to increasing pressures to prepare students for the tests, even when we know that the tests don't assess the most essential aspects of thinking and learning. Students often internalize the judgements of the tests -- as if test scores were the final word on one's knowledge or potential.

In addition, standardized tests come packaged with demands for more standardized curriculum -- again, wrapped in the rhetoric of "standards." These calls do not take place in a political and cultural vacuum. They are part of a broader movement to promote a narrow version of patriotism and "family values," and to silence the critical voices of feminists, environmentalists, labor activists, and advocates of racial justice. It is also worth noting that when the right wing pushes voucher schools or charter schools, they often want these exempted from statewide high-stakes tests, so that the schools can be free to pursue their entrepreneurial "creativity."



Commodification




Test scores commodify education, making scores buyallbe and sellable

Sarah Jaffee, January 4, 2012, Standardized Tests Hurt Kids and Public Schools, Alternet, http://www.alternet.org/story/153654/standardized_tests_hurt_kids_and_public_schools:_teachers,_parents_take_a_stand_against_corporate-backed_test_regime DOA: 10-26-15

Jonathan Keiler, a Maryland teacher writing at Education Week, explained the way test scores became a commodity—and create incentives for cheating or gaming the system along the way.

Value-added evaluations [in other words, pay increases related to high test scores] both directly and indirectly monetize student performance, and because money is a basic commodity, the process then turns student scores into a commodity. Of course, that performance is not monetized for the students; it is monetized for the teachers and administrators. By making student scores the basis for evaluation, the students and their scores create a market for the teachers and administrators whose livelihoods depend upon the results.

We are rewarding teachers for turning out kids with good test scores, even if they are not necessarily well educated.

When student scores become like orange juice, pork bellies, or yen, the people with the greatest incentive to cheat are the weakest teachers and administrators.

Where could this lead? Schools could become little more than test-preparation institutes, ignoring subjects and skills that are not assessed, with faculty members who resent and distrust one another. Meanwhile, many honest and dutiful teachers will go down in flames.

Cheating scandals have already erupted. In one notable case, in schools that Michelle Rhee, education reform darling and former Washington, DC schools chancellor, held up as a model of her brand of education.

Jeff Bryant at Campaign for America's Future said that by making test scores the primary measure of school accountability, the education reform crowd could link every financial aspect of schools to test scores -- from teacher salaries to federal funds. He wrote, “[S]tandardized test scores are now the 'currency' of education that enables all sorts of resource swaps that would have been unthinkable 20 years ago, including charter schools for traditional public schools, online learning for face-to-face teaching, and experienced, tenured teachers for Teach for America amateurs.”

Hirschmann said one of the purposes of the testing regime is to “deprofessionalize the profession of teaching.” Parents tend to trust teachers, but now, she said, “The teacher can't even teach to the child anymore because it's not child-centered, it's test-centered. Everyone's talking about what they can do, what they can bring in, what they can buy to raise the test scores.”

What they can buy, often, seems to be the point.

Robertson pointed out that the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), the right-wing policy network that cranks out model legislation for the states (now with help from the Gates Foundation) has been deeply involved in pushing testing and “merit pay” in schools. She noted that the profit motive has snuck into even the passing of national standards for teaching materials. “They've got the common core standards, now they can say these are the textbooks you need, the test prep, we're going to roll out the state test for you.”

Abby Rapoport at the Texas Observer reported that federal law requires states to use standardized tests, but doesn't specify which test, so testing companies compete for fat contracts to do the state's testing. Back in 2005, Questar, one of 17 companies at the time that created, printed and scored standardized tests, did approximately $2.2 billion in business a year. And testing has only increased since then.

Meanwhile, the same testing companies administer state tests also sell textbooks, test prep materials and much more. Rapoport wrote:

From textbooks to data management, professional development programs to testing systems, Pearson has it all—and all of it has a price. For statewide testing in Texas alone, the company holds a five-year contract worth nearly $500 million to create and administer exams. If students should fail those tests, Pearson offers a series of remedial-learning products to help them pass. Meanwhile, kids are likely to use textbooks from Pearson-owned publishing houses like Prentice Hall and Pearson Longman. Students who want to take virtual classes may well find themselves in a course subcontracted to Pearson. And if the student drops out, Pearson partners with the American Council on Education to offer the GED exam for a profit.

“There's a huge amount of money to be made off of children who have to take high-stakes tests,” Hirschmann noted, and so the testing companies think nothing of spending a bit on politicians. “Pearson has been offering trips; David Steiner, the former [New York state] commissioner of education, went on one of these junkets and Pearson has the contract.”

Meanwhile in Texas, Rapoport reported that in the most recent legislative session, an unprecedented $5 billion was hacked from the public education budget. “Despite the cuts,” she noted, “Pearson’s funding streams remain largely intact.”



Download 1.17 Mb.

Share with your friends:
1   ...   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   ...   39




The database is protected by copyright ©ininet.org 2024
send message

    Main page