Testing Issues - Korea and Everywhere!

What are the issues involved with so much testing?  Why?

Fueled by Technology, Nation's Attempt to Create a Level Playing Field Has Had a Rocky History

By Jay Mathews

Washington Post Staff Writer

Tuesday, November 14, 2006; A06

Second in a series of occasional articles on testing.

In ancient Greece, Socrates tested his students through conversations. Answers were not scored as right or wrong. They just led to more dialogue. Many intellectual elites in the 5th and 4th centuries B.C. cared more about finding the path to higher knowledge than producing a correct response. To them, accuracy was for shopkeepers.

Today, educators often hold up the Socratic method as the best kind of teaching.

So how did we go from that ideal to an educational model shaped -- and perhaps even ruled -- by standardized, normed, charted, graphed, regressed, calibrated and validated testing? Students in the Washington area are likely to know more about the MSA (Maryland School Assessments), the SOL (Virginia's Standards of Learning) and the D.C. CAS (D.C. Comprehensive Assessment System) than they do about Socrates and his illustrious student Plato.

Critics say standardized testing has robbed schools of the creative clash of intellects that make Plato's dialogues still absorbing. "There is a growing technology of testing that permits us now to do in nanoseconds things that we shouldn't be doing at all," said educational psychologist Gerald W. Bracey, research columnist for the Phi Delta Kappan education journal.

Historians call the rise of testing an inevitable outgrowth of expanding technology. As goods and services are delivered with greater speed and in higher quantity and quality, education has been forced to pick up the pace.

Standardized exams have many sources. In imperial China in the A.D. 7th century, government job applicants had to write essays about Confucian philosophy and compose poetry. In Europe, the invention of the printing press and modern paper manufacturing fueled the growth of written exams.

By 1845 in the United States, public education advocate Horace Mann was calling for standardized essay testing. Spelling tests, geography tests and math tests blossomed in schools, although they were rarely standardized.

At the outset of the 20th century, educators began to experiment with tests that took shortcuts around the old essay methods. French psychologist Alfred Binet developed an intelligence test about 1905.Frederick J. Kelly of the University of Kansas designed a multiple-choice test in 1914. Scanning machines followed. Many Americans accepted these tests as efficient tools to help build a society based on merit, not birth or race or wealth.

Still, modern testing had a clumsy start as psychologists experimented with exams to help employers, schools and others rate applicants. In one early case, testing expert H.H. Goddard identified as "feeble-minded" 83 percent of Jews, 80 percent of Hungarians, 79 percent of Italians and 87 percent of Russians among a small group of immigrants assessed at Ellis Island.

"Consider a group of frightened men and women who speak no English and who have just endured an oceanic voyage in steerage," Harvard University science historian Stephen Jay Gould wrote of the Goddard study. "Most are poor and have never gone to school; many have never held a pencil or pen in their hand." Yet Goddard's interviewers expected them to sit down with a pencil and "reproduce on paper a figure shown to them a moment ago, but now withdrawn from their sight."

Eventually, testing experts focused on standardizing the measure of learning, not of innate intelligence.

The College Entrance Examination Board, founded in 1900, played a huge role. Now called the College Board, it "created the best, most consistent and most influential standards that American education has ever known," New York University educational historian Diane Ravitch wrote in March in the Chronicle of Higher Education.

The board's early exams were written and graded by teachers and professors and had no multiple-choice questions. These essay exams, Ravitch wrote, led "everyone who went to high school, whether they were the children of doctors or farmers or factory workers . . . to study mathematics, science, English literature, composition, history and a foreign language, usually Latin."

Many educators who value depth and rigor lament what followed. In 1926, the multiple-choice SAT was introduced as a much faster way of testing college applicants. On Dec. 7, 1941, several members of the board, during a previously scheduled lunch, decided that the outbreak of world war would require faster decisions and less leisurely testing. They eventually canceled the board's old exam format. The SAT ruled.

Essay questions, however, made a comeback in 1955 when Advanced Placement exams began.

The launch of Sputnik, the Soviet space satellite, in 1957 fueled a space race and increased pressure on U.S. schools to show improvement. But rating schools through tests did not advance much until themid-1970s, when the College Board revealed that average SAT scores had been falling since 1963. Then, in 1983, a national commission declared in the report "A Nation at Risk" that public school standards were too low. Over the next two decades, testing took off.

In the 1980s and early 1990s, several governors argued that they had to test all their students to raise school standards and improve their economies. Among them were Democrats Bill Clinton of Arkansas and Richard W. Riley of South Carolina, who would soon become president and U.S. education secretary, respectively. (Later in the 1990s, Republican Gov. George W. Bush of Texas also was a big proponent of testing.)

Some educators said a better way to improve schools was to spend more on teacher training, salaries and smaller classes. They dwelled on educational inputs; the politicians, on outputs.

The politicians prevailed. In 1988, Congress created the National Assessment Governing Board. It established new standards for the National Assessment of Educational Progress, a test that has been given to a sampling of students since 1970. In 2002, President Bush signed the No Child Left Behind law. For the first time, it required annual testing of all public school children in certain grades and required states to use results to help rate schools.

The National Education Association and other teacher organizations argue that it is unfair to rate schools through such tests when teachers lack adequate training and pay. In a 2004 essay for the Hoover Digest, Ravitch wrote that the advocates of inputs and the champions of outputs "are in constant tension, with first one and then the other gaining brief advantage."

"How this conflict is resolved," she wrote, "will determine the future of American education."

On Testing

Some of the Korean teachers here agree that it also stymies creativity and orients education too much towards simply doing well on tests rather than developing their minds. When I tried a simple creative activity for the demo class, my "advanced" students actually had a difficult time coming up with things, even for a five-sentence story.

There's also a huge testing debate going on back home in California; personally, I think the standardized tests are crud. Some of the laziest students get high test scores while some of the more honestly hard-working ones have only average scores.

Testing in Korea is ridiculous

testing here is ridiculous. it's funny though because they are all very big on class rank. this starts very early long (elementary school) and when you start getting into the 2nd year of junior high you are placed in your class according to rank--ie, this happens before to average the classes, but then it changes to having the highest kids together, etc. also, some high schools you have to test into.

in high school, testing is very intense and i'm sure most of the high school teachers are finding that the 3rd year high school students are crazed with studying for their exam. you have to do really well to get into a good college here (the top school being in Seoul, mostly, and a top tech school in Dae-jun). It's funny though because a common joke here is that high school students study much more than college students, because no one really gets kicked out of uni. so you can do well in uni, obviously, by studying a lot, but most get in and then don't have to study as hard.

the kids are very bright though, i just feel bad because i have to teach for the test and so all of my lessons are book lessons. also, i dont think the book teaches the best methods for learning english and, they definitely don't teach the testing tricks, which i've always found to be much more helpful with english. the students just try to memorize these things without understanding why something is the way it is in english, and thus, a lot of kids fail slightly tricky questions on the tests. i've even tried pulling out common mistakes and letting them know easy ways of always gettng those questions right--they didn't even really want to hear it though, although it would really help them in later exams!

Testing and Studying cont'd

On the student page of my website I provide links for studying (one in English, one in Korean). I used this site for my last stint at the university and found the site useful to me. I am hoping that it will be so for my students as well.

http://leelalka.googlepages.com  

 

Lee Lalka

이신한

李新韓

Please check the link above.

Thanks for the link, but it doesn't work on my computer. Can you check it? Thanks. You have been giving lots of very helpful information - especially your very creative ideas.

RE: link

Googlepages is in beta, so sometimes it is brought down, which is a pain.

Still, it is free, and I don't need to know code, Smile 

 Remember not to use www if you are typing it in. Also, if you are trying to access it from school you may not be able to. Some computers I can access it, others I can't in my school.

I am adding content today, so some pages will be down during that time.

The website link again is: http://leelalka.googlepages.com Feedback is always welcome, hehe.

Lee Lalka

이신한

李新韓

Class Rank and Grades

One of my Korean friends at school keeps getting calls from the mother of one of his 3rd grade students. She keeps bothering him because her son, although having the best grades in the whole 3rd grade, did not get 100% right on his last test. The lady if freaking nuts and I feel sorry for the boy.

I mentioned to my friend that she probably feels HER life is inadequate and out of her control so she tries to compensate by trying to make her son's life perfect. It makes be question her right to have children.

www.teachenglishinasia.net

Your source for info about living and working in Asia.

Aw I know! This is so normal

Aw I know! This is so normal though! One of my girls is the first in her class, but didn't do that well on her English test. She got 100% on the rest of her exams though and is still first, but her mom FREAKED. This is just so normal of Korean parents. It's crazy because some of the kids don't try at all, but I know their parents want to push them and push them, but you can't get everyone--a lot of the kids follow the korean way though and study study study!

NCLB - No Child Left Behind - Global Issues with Testing

Here's a link to a great, up-to-date logical examination of NCLB - No Child Left Behind. It addresses the testing issues in the USA and worldwide. It can also be downloaded. Although it focuses on the USA, it adds clarification to the global issues involved in testing. Testing is an international issue that needs to be addressed with more than emotions!

http://www.epi.org/webfeatures/viewpoints/rothstein_20061114.pdf

Thank you

I have previewed the document, and it is indeed worth looking at. I need to reflect on it more. Thanks Cal. 

Lee Lalka

이신한

李新韓

website: http://leelalka.googlepages.com Specifically orientated to my students and teachers in Uljin and Jukbyeon. Hopefully useful to all.

Testing in US

Regarding testing in the US, follow the money:

from:Business Week http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/06_42/b4005059.htm

 

 

Across the country, some teachers complain that President George W.
Bush's makeover of public education promotes "teaching to the test."
The President's younger brother Neil takes a different tack: He's
selling to the test. The No Child Left Behind Act compels schools to
prove students' mastery of certain facts by means of standardized
exams. Pressure to perform has energized the $1.9 billion-a-year
instructional software industry.

Now, after five years of
development and backing by investors like Saudi Prince Alwaleed Bin
Talal and onetime junk-bond king Michael R. Milken, Neil Bush aims to
roll his high-tech teacher's helpers into classrooms nationwide. He
calls them "curriculum on wheels," or COWs. The $3,800 purple
plug-and-play computer/projectors display lively videos and cartoons:
the XYZ Affair of the late 1790s as operetta, the 1828 Tariff of
Abominations as horror flick. The device plays songs that are supposed
to aid the memorization of the 22 rivers of Texas or other facts that
might crop up in state tests of "essential knowledge."

Bush's Ignite! Inc. has sold 1,700 COWs since 2005, mainly in Texas,
where Bush lives and his brother was once governor. In August,
Houston's school board authorized expenditures of up to $200,000 for
COWs. The company expects 2006 revenue of $5 million. Says Bush about
the impact of his name: "I'm not saying it hasn't opened any doors. It
may have helped with some sales." (In September, the U.S. Education
Dept.'s inspector general accused the agency of improperly favoring at
least five publishers, including The McGraw-Hill Companies, which owns BusinessWeek.
A company spokesman says: "Our reading programs have been successful in
advancing student achievement for decades; that's why educators hold
them in such high regard.")

The stars haven't always aligned
for Bush, but at times financial support has. A foundation linked to
the controversial Reverend Sun Myung Moon has donated $1 million for a
COWs research project in Washington (D.C.)-area schools. In 2004 a
Shanghai chip company agreed to give Bush stock then valued at $2
million for showing up at board meetings. (Bush says he received
one-fifth of the shares.) In 1988 a Colorado savings and loan failed
while he served on its board, making him a prominent symbol of the
S&L scandal. Neil calls himself "the most politically damaged of
the [Bush] brothers."

While hardly the first brother to embarrass a President -- remember
Billy Carter's Billy Beer or Roger Clinton's cocaine? -- Neil could be
the first to seek profit from a hallmark Presidential crusade. And also
that of a governor: Jeb makes school standards a centerpiece in
Florida, too.

Neil says he never talks shop with his brothers. He attributes his
interest in education to his struggles with dyslexia. His son, Pierce,
also had difficulties in school, he says. "Not one of our investors has
ever asked for any kind of special access -- a visa, a trip to the
Lincoln Bedroom, an autographed picture, or anything."

By Keith Epstein

 

(poster ellen)