More Standardized Tests Doomed to Fail PA Youth

“Education is not the filling of a pail, but the lighting of a fire.”

While a student at Bloomsburg University, I remember stumbling across this banner, and being floored by its message. These words, which I later learned was a quote by Irish poet William Bulter Yeats, have served as the flag of my classroom.

I am a firm believer that students learn by doing, but more importantly by wanting to do. Give them a torch and a sense of guidance, and they will find their way. But give them a pail, and you’ll find how much they hat being compared to other students on assessments such as the Pennsylvania System of School Assessment (PSSA).

After learning about the PA Board of Education’s decision to make PSSAs standard as a graduation requirement, I gave them the torch of my classroom to discuss the proposals. Here’s what I learned:

—- A mere mention of the acronym PSSA automatically conjured an array of emotions. Some students were filled with revile. They hate the PSSA. But they detest our school’s 4SIGHT remedial test, its evil step-brother, even more. Just yesterday one of my “problematic” 9th grade students was pulled from my class during a test review – which he was fully participative and thoroughly enjoying – to fulfill his 4sight requirement. He pleaded to stay, but I explained the state supercedes me as boss. His response? “Mr. Miller, I’m going to finish in 5 minutes.” He was back in four.

There are many students like this young man who have learned to be apathetic about tests. After years of taking tests with no review of their answers, they do not know how to improve themselves and achieve the coveted “Advanced” or “Proficient” rankings. So they’ve learned to be unconcerned.

—- Others are entirely consumed by them. One student told me that when he was in 3rd grade he “used to get nauseous the day before the PSSA because he had been brainwashed to succeed.” Instead of finding success, some unearth stress. Approximately 49% of students suffer from test anxiety; giving them more tests shows how little their apprehension matters.

—- Special education students are also a concern. One of my students explained to the class, “if we have these standardized tests, a student like me might be forced to drop out.” Her face turned sour as explained, “I need teachers’ help on tests, and I feel lost when I take the PSSA.”

—- What about vocational-technical students? “I’m not going to college,” professed one of my very blatant students. “I just want to learn a trade. But with this proposal, I’ll be forced out of something I love to do into college prep courses. That is crap.”

—- “Imagine that your son or daughter has problems the year they are to take one of the two English PSSAs (language arts and reading/writing, which must both be passed),” said another student. “It doesn’t matter the problem – whether a bad teacher, a teacher on maternity leave, or the student has personal issues. They’ll be forced to take a test they need to pass but are doomed to fail.”

I love feeling floored by statements like that.

But if teachers are forced to teach to tests, conversations – like this one where students discuss and solve problems – will be replaced by the memorization of answers. In effect, we will force a continual extinguishing of the fire by examining the filling the pail that is standardized testing. It’s a light we cannot afford to lose.


Get used to it. Life is a test.

Feeling nauseous prior to a test? Damn! Ain’t that a pity. Wait until you enter the real world, where you are tested every day. Where unyielding bosses demand you complete work under unmanageable deadlines.

That’s reality, dude.

“Test anxiety?” No kidding! You SHOULD be anxious prior to a test. That’s normal. Anxiety is normal. Life if not a video game. Life is well…a test.

And you want some kid to blame the teacher? The truth is, the responsibility is on the student. It’s their job to learn and to succeed. The teacher is there as a mentor. A docent. But in the end, the kid who WANTS to learn, will learn, despite the teachers perceived faults.

I am sick and tired of the “I don’t test well” crap from students. Education is a series of tests. You learn the material or you don’t. It’s not that complicated.

Agreed, “learning is more than just reciting back information,” but reciting…and retaining, that information IS important. It gives people the building blocks from which they can draw conclusions and project outcomes. There must be a baseline of information. Period.

Testing students is a legitimate way to discover what information they’ve accumulated…and articulated…during their years in school. This isn’t a mystery.

As someone mentioned to me recently, “My daughter had to do a paper on what her favorite color was…and why.” That’s the other side of this coin, wherein we succumb to a pathetic educational system which demands nothing other than the “You’re OK, I’m OK” paradigm which has, for the most part, been totally discredited.

Piltdown Man

Do you really know what you are talking about?

Do you really know how this test is formulated and decided upon? Your opinion of it may change when you read that some of the answers are graded by humans in a rather subjective manner. Your opinion may change when you realize that colleges are beginning to discount standardized testing as unpredictive of a student’s future potential. (Grades, activities, and community service are actually more important predictors of student success-no suprise to most of us.) Go to www.pssablog@blogspot.com to read more about the history and the facts of the PSSA.
Chadfaith

The tests are fine...

It’s what schools do with the results that make them the enemy they are. I’ve seen the reading/writing test for years now. They do a fine job of testing reading comprehension, which we all know is vital to anything a person wants to do in and out of school. They also test basic writing skills, which likewise are essential in college, tradeschools, and the workplace. If teachers, administrators, and the media helped students see this, they would also see the test for exactly what they are—indicators of their ability. They would want to do well. Unfortunately, salaries, jobs, and politics are attached to the tests—things that blow out the torch for students.

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