In fact, prepping should not happen until after the curriculum is taught, he adds. ?We ask for multiple measures to get away from the focus of a single test to determine student learning. Teachers prepare students for all kinds of tests, mostly for the important test called life.?
Kusaba says CTA is concerned with the craziness that comes with standardized testing.
?It used to be that we had an entire year to teach curriculum, but from a standardized test perspective, the last day of the school year revolves around the California Standards Tests,? says Jeremy Adams, author of the teacher memoir ?Full Classrooms, Empty Selves.? ?Our calendar and pacing revolve around this reality.?
Test scores are now defining ?good? teachers, although teachers with the best scores may not always be the best teachers, says Adams.
?Average teachers may get great scores, but good teachers make lifelong learners out of students. Teacher A could teach exclusively to the standards and drill-and-kill for months leading up to the test. Teacher B might take time for projects, supplemental material and classroom discussions. Teacher A might get better scores ? but whose students are more likely to have developed an enduring love of history and thus an appreciation for learning 10 years into the future???
Test-taking strategies outrank learning and teaching new concepts
?Abigail Sims? eighth-graders at Lovonya DeJean Middle School will be tested on sixth-, seventh- and eighth-grade history on California Standards Tests (CSTs) this spring. At the beginning of the year, Sims polled students on the history they remembered from sixth grade. It wasn?t much; many sixth-grade teachers skipped teaching history, since it?s not on the sixth-grade STAR test.
?Honestly, I spend about a week and a half every month on test prep,? says Sims, United Teachers of Richmond. ?When I teach a major concept, I ask the children how they think it will appear at the end of the year in test form. I can see their anxiety build.?
Sims prefers students spend time on library research, project-based learning, field trips, artwork tied to instruction, and historical literature. Instead, she does a lot of ?drill-and-kill? to make sure her students will be able to answer multiple-choice questions correctly.
?At the beginning of the school year, I come to school with a lot of cool ideas about how I want to creatively approach subject matter,? she says. ?I have beautiful images of what I?m going to do, but those images get trampled when there is so much focus on test scores.?
Adams agrees. A Bakersfield High School economics and government teacher, he fears too much emphasis on test prep may diminish enthusiasm and creativity for teaching and learning. He believes testing should identify which parts of the curriculum are being successfully taught, so teachers can pinpoint which units need fine-tuning and which need a complete overhaul. ?It?s a deflating prospect to realize that so much of modern teaching has devolved into a process of teaching for test success instead of life success,? he says.
The Kern High School Teachers Association member prepares students for the CSTs as well as the California High School Exit Exam for graduation and sometimes Advanced Placement tests.
Adams gives students tips for passing multiple-choice exams. ?If you have a question that involves Stalin, Hitler, war or disease, the answer is likely negative. If you have a question about democracy, art or Lincoln, the answer is likely positive.? ?There is an unfortunate propensity to cover the information that is likely to appear on the CST exam, the standards, and redundantly cover it. The unfortunate consequence: There is a lack of in-depth historical analysis,? he adds. ?There is little time to read a speech by Lincoln, act out a scene from Sophocles, or partake in a class discussion about current events that are germane to the realm of history, all of which can easily get pushed aside in the pursuit of bubbling in the correct answer come April.?
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