Gates/Scholastic Teacher Survey Challenges Assumptions About Test-Based Reform
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The big headline from the recent Gates/Scholastic survey of teachers is that only 28% of teachers see standardized tests as an essential or important gauge of student assessment, and only 26% say they are accurate as a reflection of student knowledge. Another question reveals part of the reason this may be so - only 45% of teachers think their students take these tests seriously, or perform to the best of their ability.
We have been stuck in an accountability rut for the past decade, with most reform initiatives revolving around test scores of one sort or another. Even the concept of student learning has been subtly redefined to mean "achievement on end of year tests."
There are several assumptions that have driven this.
One. Standardized tests are an adequate, if imperfect means of measuring learning.
Two. Teacher performance can be captured by the growth of their students on
The big headline from the recent Gates/Scholastic survey of teachers is that only 28% of teachers see standardized tests as an essential or important gauge of student assessment, and only 26% say they are accurate as a reflection of student knowledge. Another question reveals part of the reason this may be so - only 45% of teachers think their students take these tests seriously, or perform to the best of their ability.
We have been stuck in an accountability rut for the past decade, with most reform initiatives revolving around test scores of one sort or another. Even the concept of student learning has been subtly redefined to mean "achievement on end of year tests."
There are several assumptions that have driven this.
One. Standardized tests are an adequate, if imperfect means of measuring learning.
Two. Teacher performance can be captured by the growth of their students on