Billionaire Bill Gates believes in testing. However, it appears that he believes in āthe marketā even more. Consider Gatesā words to legislators in 2009:
When the tests are aligned to the common standards, the curriculum will line up as wellāand that will unleash powerful market forces in the service of better teaching. For the first time, there will be a large base of customers eager to buy products that can help every kid learn and every teacher get better. [Emphasis added.]
Bill Gates has no background in K-12 classroom teaching. He has no background in assessment. He does have money, lots of money. It must be his money that allows him to even write a guest editorial in the April 2013 Washington Post to share his views on the *appropriate* role of student test scores in teacher evaluation. He assumes that student standardized test scores will work as a component of teacher evaluation. He also assumes that merit pay can and will work, if only āweā would be careful as āweā ādrive the long-term improvement our schools need.ā
We?
Bill Gates has no background in teaching. Instead, he views education through the lens of business. And if the tests are interfering with business, perhaps it is time to pull back on the testing in order to save Gatesā extensive CCSS investment. To this end, in June 2014, the Gates Foundation declared the need for a āmoratoriumāā not the end of testing, mind you, and not the end of CCSSā just a break from theconsequences of testing in order to take the heat off of CCSS:
The Gates Foundation is an ardent supporter of fair teacher feedback and evaluation systems that include measures of student gains. We donāt believe student assessments should ever be the sole measure of teachingUsing A Gates Grant to Sidestep Standardized Testing in University Admissions? | deutsch29: