The Negative Effects of Standardized Tests on Students and Teachers America is currently involved in a continuing controversy about how to best measure the education

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Juuti

Meghan Juuti

Dr. Doughty

EN 111-H14

April 25, 2005

Who is Benefiting?:

The Negative Effects of Standardized Tests on Students and Teachers

America is currently involved in a continuing controversy about how to best measure the education of high school students. According to P. Thomas, the country is “currently in the midst of a 20 year [education] movement toward statewide and national standards and high-stakes testing” (63). The increase in test-driven approaches to school reform has created an uproar between students, educators, test advocates, and many other education professionals.  These new testing practices have also resulted in a greatly expanded set of testing requirements for most schools that has ultimately initiated a national debate regarding the validity and value of traditional standardized tests and their negative effects on students and teachers.        

Extensive research raise questions about whether improvements in test performance significantly signal an improvement in student’s learning.  Recent studies, such as those of Herman and Golan, as well as Madaus and Clarke, show that rather than being a positive influence, testing, may, in fact, trivialize learning and instructional time.  Similarly, there are many resources, primarily from Kohn, Henning, and McCracken and McCracken that demonstrate the repercussions testing has on teachers.  As standardized testing becomes an increasingly popular assessment tool, it is critical to look at such applications and their overall effects.  

        The history of standardized tests lies in the recent past.  Over the past thirty-five years, the American education system has experienced many changes in the area of testing, mostly as a result of the change in political climate.  The idea of mandated testing began in 1983 when Ronald Regan articulated his view on the quality of public education in a radio broadcast.  He proclaimed that “our education system, once the finest in the world, is in a sorry state of disrepair” (qtd. in Kornhaber & Orfield 2). He also asserted that “the quality of learning in our classrooms has been declining for the last two decades” (qtd. in Kornhaber & Orfield 2).

In addition to his assessment of the nation’s education system, Reagan demanded that higher goals and tougher standards be introduced to improve the quality and effectiveness of public schools.  His administration solidified this initiative when they developed A Nation at Risk, a report presenting the state of America’s education position and the threat such a poorly managed system had on national security. Mindy Kornhaber and Gary Orfield, in their article High-Stakes Policies, assert that “this report ultimately created a widespread perception of an educational crisis so severe as to undermine America’s economy and future” (3). The response to A Nation at Risk was eminent; 54 state-level commissions formed during the year and 26 states raised gradation requirements (Levin 47). Within 3 years, 35 states had taken the measures to emphasize increased course enrollment and testing; testing became a way to impose standards on schools and students while holding them accountable for achieving results (Miner 17).
        This trend of accountability continued when politicians George Bush and Bill Clinton continued the push for standards and test-driven reform. As a promise to support state tests for grade promotion and graduation, George Bush held an Education Summit during his first year in office as vice-president. This initiative led way to America 2000, a major education proposal to produce educational gains by the beginning of the new millennium.  An important objective of this program was to develop tougher tests to produce more intelligent and highly capable citizens (Miner 17; Hauser 153).

        Although significant changes have occurred throughout the past three decades, the most dramatic modification in education occurred in 1998 in Texas.  At this time, Governor George W. Bush proposed that standardized reading tests be used for grade promotion for Texas public school children. The Texas Assessment of Academic Skills (TAAS) became the very first test to become state-mandated and to determine whether a student is able to be promoted from grade to grade. Texas’ success, sometimes termed a miracle, began the testing craze and once George W. Bush became President, he employed similar laws across the country through the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB). This act ultimately redefines and introduces concepts in an attempt to improve the education in public schools.  It mandates that states eliminate the achievement gap between students, as well as focus on the needs of those who are typically disadvantaged through a number of tests.  Among many of the repercussions of this act, the increase of nation-wide testing is, by far, the most significant and controversial (Massad 2).

        Standardized testing has become prevalent in high school districts across the nation, including Michigan. The Michigan Educational Assessment Program (MEAP) test is the state’s K-12 standardized testing system.  The MEAP test was designed in 1969 to measure how well students master the state’s curriculum and how well teachers teach it. The test was first introduced in 1978 to high schoolers and includes five testing areas: Reading, Mathematics, Science, Writing, and Social Studies. There are four categories of achievement that students fall into, depending on their test scores, from highest to lowest they are Exceeding Standards, Meeting Standards, Basic Performance, and Not Endorsed (see Table 1 in Appendix).

Test score results from last year show that the number of 2004 graduates who met or exceeded state standards increased in all testing areas.  The most dramatic increase of these two categories was seen in the Reading test scores, which jumped from 66.8% to 76.2% (See Figure 1 in Appendix).  Similar, but not so significant, results were also seen in Writing scores; the number of students who met or exceeded state standards increased from 60,066 to 60,979 (See Figure 2 in Appendix).  These results show that Michigan schools are headed in the right direction (United States).

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Although test scores are rising, there are still a number of controversial issues that are the focus of many state-wide debates. One of the most important issues relating to the MEAP test is that colleges do not consider a student’s MEAP scores for entrance; instead, they weigh heavily on the ACT.  This, in turn, affects the attitudes of many students taking the test. For example, earlier this year, seven seniors at Lake Shore High School in St. Clair Shores intentionally failed the MEAP test.  Already having passed the test the year before, these students felt that it was unnecessary to ...

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