Sunday, March 1, 2015

The important things standardized tests don’t measure - The Washington Post

The important things standardized tests don’t measure - The Washington Post:



The important things standardized tests don’t measure

In this photo taken Feb. 12, 2015, sixth-grade students  work through an exercise on their laptops during a practice session to prepare for the the Common Core State Standards Test at a school in Stockport, Ohio. (AP Photo/Ty Wright)

Marion Brady is a veteran educator who has long argued that public education needs a paradigm shift, though not the same one pushed by school reformers who champion the Common Core State Standards, school choice and vouchers. Brady says schools need a complete transformationl in what and how students learn. He has also been highly critical of standardized testing. Here’s his latest piece. You can see some of his earlier pieces here (Why Common Core isn’t the answer)here (One way to solve America’s major curriculum problem) and here  (‘The Procedure’ and how it is harming public education).

By Marion Brady
As my students were taking their seats, Myrna, sitting near my desk, said she’d just read a magazine article about secret societies in high school. What, she asked, did I know about them?
I knew nothing—had never even heard of them—but the matter was interesting enough to quickly engage my eleventh-grade English class, so I let the conversation continue. Someone suggested making it a research project and I told them to have at it.
The school library wasn’t much help, but somebody figured out how to contact the student editor of the school newspaper in a town mentioned in the article and wrote her a letter. She answered, other contacts were made, and kid-to-kid communication began. How did the societies get started? Who joined them? Why? How? Did they create problems? If so, what kind? Were the societies more than just temporary cliques? How were teachers and administrators reacting?
Answers generated more questions. My students thought, wrote, took sides, argued, learned. I mostly watched.
That happened in a class in a semi-rural high school in northeastern Ohio many decades ago. I’d be willing to bet that if any of the participants remember anything about the class, that research project would be it.
I wasn’t smart enough to realize it at the time, but I was seeing a demonstration of something extremely important, that real learning is natural and inherently satisfying. Myrna’s question kicked off genuine learning—self-propelled and successful not because the work was rigorous and the kids had grit, but because it was driven by curiosity, because The important things standardized tests don’t measure - The Washington Post: