….so the natural thing to do is require it for colleges and universities, too. /snark
Be sure to click on the link Diane has provided. The speech she gives is outstanding in outlining exactly what is wrong with testing, testing, testing.
One of her points is that they are subjective social constructs.
Another important point she makes is that we can’t fully comprehend what will happen when children are subjected to this nonsense testing year after year, trained like Pavlov dogs to get the “only” correct answer. And the weight of the world upon that “only” correct answer–if they are fond of their teacher, their principal, their school, but fail to get the correct answer and that teacher loses her/his job, and the school is closed…well, that’s a lot of pressure to put upon a child who will then blame him/herself for failing a test that was designed for them to fail.
About ten minutes in, Diane brings up the very important point that a university professor would expect the student to come to college prepared for it–to be able to comprehend complex texts and use critical thinking skills to analyze the ideas. She states that the students won’t be able to ask “why”?
I don’t know about other universities, but Purdue was already gravitating towards lecture-only courses that were not designed to have robust classroom discussions. That was one of the things I looked forward to when I began my college career….I was very disappointed with the lack of classroom discussion on the subjects–very few of the courses I took made sense to have lecture-only. Most would have enriched the subject and expanded one’s worldview by new ideas being discussed. As I write this, I can only think of five classes where we had good discussions. And one of those classes–sociology, where I had open classroom discussion, had changed when one of my children took the very same class—it had been turned into ALL lecture and she did not have to read the five books I was required to read for it. I was shocked. Diane touches on this point at about 20:00 in to the speech–cram as many students you can into a lecture hall to have cost savings and….more profits. Meanwhile….we’ll build a million dollar new sports stadium….
Diane brought up something the charter school movement would rather people not hear–that teachers are demoralized by the testing, too. They hate what it has done to their profession. In other words–teachers care and want their students to do well. And it’s not because of the pay!
As I’m listening to this, it pops into my head what my college adviser had told me when I said I wanted to be a teacher–she discouraged me because she said there would not be that many jobs. How did she know this?
And I for one cannot figure President Obama out–I know that he cares about this country. I know he is an intelligent man. What I can’t figure out is why he is promoting this failed policy? Why isn’t he listening to these impassioned teachers?