In today's guest post, Cindy Mershon, reading specialist and literacy consultant, asks us to keep the child at the center of our thinking about standardized tests. What is our responsibiity as teachers when kids face the high stakes testing? Cindy's answer includes considering standardized testing as a genre to be taught.
by Cindy Mershon
“Educators are faced with a dilemma: our knowledge of reading processes
and reading instruction is at odds with our assessment instruments. As a result, we run the risk of misinterpreting
assessment data. If tests do not assess
what we define as skilled reading, then they cannot adequately determine
progress toward that goal. Thus, if we
equate high scores on existing tests with good reading we may be led to a false
sense of security. Conversely, low
scores may lead us to believe that students are not reading well when, by a
more valid set of criteria, they are.
Furthermore, tests have a powerful impact on curriculum and instruction;
they influence classroom practice. In short,
tests may be insensitive to growth in the abilities we most want to foster and
may be misguiding instruction.”
Valencia, S.W., Pearson, P.D., Peters, C.W., Wixson, K.K. (1989). Theory and practice in statewide reading assessment: Closing the gap. Educational Leadership, April, pp. 57-62.
It is my fault that I chose to read the local paper on
Tuesday morning. It is my fault that,
when I spied this headline – “Schools Cancel Test Incentives” – I remained in
my chair in the kitchen, cocker spaniels in attendance, read the headline, felt
the migraine button in my head switch to “on,”, and kept reading.
Seems a local school district had planned “to offer
incentives, including $5 gift cards, intended to boost student participation
and performance on the standardized PARCC exams.” This district had used such incentives in the
past, but had recently decided to cancel their plan due to increased
“sensitivity” over the heavily debated, upcoming PARCC exams. Reading on, I learned that under said plan,
students would have been able to earn points for completing tasks before and
after the exams, tasks such as arriving at school on time each morning of the
test; preparing for the test by eating a healthy breakfast and getting a good
night’s sleep; exerting effort during the test; attending school every day of
the testing; and thoroughly checking work after finishing each day’s portion of
the test. At the end of the week, the
five students earning the most points in each class would have received gift
cards from their teacher.
I swear on the head of favorite dog Phoebe I am not making
this up.
Good news is the shocked silence and throbbing migraine of
Tuesday have disappeared and I am now receiving stimuli from every book and
article I have read on standardized testing.
I am now remembering nearly 30 years of studying standardized tests and
helping fourth and fifth grade students understand and successfully manipulate
the standardized tests that are, for now, a part of their school lives. And I am angry. Again.
Still.
I am not a fan of standardized tests. I understand their hoped-for purpose but see
clearly how they – and their derived scores – are easy to misread and
misuse. As a human being and a reading
specialist, I, too, long for a quick, easy system of assessment that allows me
to plan instruction and help all students to be successful in school - I became
a reading specialist because I want all students to have a chance at
literacy. But, I have learned that human
behavior, and reading and writing acquisition in particular, is simply too
complex to be measured in a single, paper-and-pencil assessment given on four
days for 45 to 60 minutes at a time.
While these assessments – if
they are valid and reliable assessments – can add puzzle pieces to the complete
picture we hope to create of a reader or writer, they are simply too narrow a
measure of reading and writing to provide a comprehensive and accurate picture
of students as readers and writers to make judgments about instruction,
placement, or the effectiveness of teachers, schools, and districts.
And – and this is a big
and - if standardized tests are not
valid (accurately measure what they say they measure) and reliable (produce
stable and consistent results each time they are given), they cannot be used to
draw conclusions about any of these issues, and so should not be inflicted on
any child. Many, many years ago, an
article in The Reading Teacher drew the distinction between a “sow’s ear
assessment” and “silk purse data,” and talked about why the first could not
possibly produce the second. Yet many
people greet the data that results from these less-than-wonderful tests as if
Moses has sent it down from the mountain.
As “correct” and “accurate.” Test
results are published in the newspaper, are used to place children, and are
assumed to be “true.” Why? Just how, exactly, do you get good data from
a bad test? What possible reason could
we have for using bad data to make important decisions about teaching and
learning or the quality of schools and school districts?
Anya Kamenetz, in her new book, The Test: Why Our Schools are
Obsessed With Standardized Testing – But You Don’t Have to Be (reviewed by Dana Goldstein in The New York Times of 8 February),
raises even more questions regarding reliability and validity when she suggests
standardized tests are a “20th-century technology in a 21st-century
world,” that they “conceptualize proficiency as a fixed quantity in a world
where what’s important is your capacity to learn and grow.”
What angers me most about the idea of providing incentives
to students for preparation and performance on standardized tests is the lack
of respect for children that is clearly communicated by this “game.” Because standardized tests are, for the
foreseeable future, a part of students’ school lives, is it not more important
to be honest and straightforward with them about what these tests are, why they
are given, and how they work? Don’t
students need to be included in the conversation that leads to successful
experiences with standardized tests rather than offered demeaning and
artificial prizes?
I believe students need to know they are likely to take
these tests once each year, will take them as a part of their college admission
process, and will take them yet again if they decide to go to graduate school,
medical school, or law school. They need
to recognize that their scores on these tests will be recorded and shared with
teachers and parents, and that these scores will play a part in painting a
picture of them as learners and assessing their success as students. No student equals his or her standardized
test score, but those scores are kept in student folders and are typically part
of conversations when that student’s school performance is discussed, for good
or bad. Students need to understand,
too, that standardized tests have limitations, and that interested, responsible
educators continue to work to see how (if?) these tests can play a meaningful
role in assessing student performance.
Students need to know most children in the United States
take similar standardized tests, and that standardized tests, especially those
in reading and writing, are very similar in format. Students need to know that good classroom instruction in reading and
writing is always the best preparation for doing well on standardized tests of
reading and writing, but being successful on something you do only once
each year can require additional and deliberate study. Preparing students to do well on standardized
tests can be accomplished with perhaps 10 reading and writing periods devoted
to deliberate instruction of test-taking skills, or with short lessons
throughout the school year, but does not need to be the “teaching to the test”
curricula discussed in Kamenetz’s book (some schools use up to 25% of their
school year to prepare students for the tests, abandoning teaching of their
regular curricula). Just as high school
students and college undergraduates, who can afford it, attend SAT and GRE
preparation courses on weekends or for an hour each week for several weeks,
younger students need explicit teaching in understanding the format and
parameters of standardized tests without sacrificing their daily school studies
and curriculum.
What makes most sense is to teach students that reading and
writing on standardized tests is simply another genre, or type, of reading and
writing that has its own attributes. Understanding
these characteristics and how they work will prepare students for the work they
are asked to do when tasking these tests.
Students need to understand that the genre of standardized test reading
and writing is significantly different than the daily experience of reading and
writing instruction. Here are some examples:
·
On standardized tests, students work
independently for a 45-60 minute prescribed period of time for four or five
days. In reading and writing workshop,
students are accustomed to working in concert with their teacher and
classmates; units cover an extended period of time, perhaps four to six weeks,
and a series of units is studied throughout the entire school year.
·
Standardized tests in reading consist of short
passages followed by several multiple choice and one or two short
constructed-response questions with stress on a single, correct answer.
Students in reading workshop select their own full-length books to read, have an
opportunity to talk about their reading at length with the teacher and
classmate in conferences and/or book clubs, may write responses to their reading
several times each week, and are offered direct instruction in comprehension
strategies each day. (This
conversation/strategy instruction can also take place during classroom
read-alouds.) Emphasis is placed on
constructing meaning supported by evidence from the text and the possibility of
varying points of view from varying readers: multiple interpretations are
possible within the parameters of the text.
Students’ classroom reading is continually scaffolded in a variety of
ways, while their reading on a standardized test is necessarily done in
isolation.
·
Standardized tests of writing give students
prompts for writing and limit writing time to approximately 45 minutes. Students in writing workshop, like reading
workshop, often study a particular genre for four weeks or longer and choose
their own topics. They confer regularly
with both teacher and fellow students and participate in daily direct
instruction that supports their knowledge of writing strategies, crafting
techniques, and the conventions of writing.
Again, writing on a standardized test is an independent task.
·
Completed work on standardized tests will not be
available for examination and discussion by students and teachers working
together to assess what was done well and what presented challenges that need
to be explored in future work. Work on
standardized tests is sent away – to someone from “out of town” to evaluate - and becomes lost to teacher and
student for months until scores are returned.
When the test data do arrive, the scores are presented as derived
numbers that can be difficult to interpret – and easy to misinterpret – and don’t
always help teachers know how to help students improve as readers and
writers. The only reliable conclusion we
can draw from standardized test data is how well students take standardized
tests.
Test items in and of themselves present a challenge to
students, also. Multiple choice test
answers contain “distractors,” or answers that are purposely constructed to
distract students’ attention from the correct answer. Being fair, this helps to guard against too
many lucky-guess right answers. Distractors
include words or phrases pulled directly from the text but placed in the
context of wrong answers, positives expressed as negatives (and vice versa),
etc. Even good readers are sometimes
drawn to language that is familiar to them from the passage they have just read
if they do not read the entire answer carefully and realize it is not a good
choice. And, test makers frequently put
correct answers in position “c” or “d” rather than “a” or “b,” knowing that
test takers often choose the first answer they read that looks correct, or
almost correct. One of the most useful
strategies we can offer young test takers is to “read all four multiple choice
answers before choosing the one you believe is the best answer. The correct answer may be placed in any of
the four ‘a, b c, d’ positions, but test takers are counting on you to be
anxious and in a hurry and choose the first one you read that seems right –
this is a timed test and they know you want to keep moving! Read each and every answer before you make a
choice!”
Another important strategy that helps students manipulate
multiple choice questions successfully is teaching them about the kinds of
questions they will be asked to answer.
If students are not learning about Question-Answer Relationships
(Raphael) during regular comprehension instruction in reading workshop (and
they should be), they need to learn about QAR’s as part of their test preparation. Raphael suggests students have difficulty
answering questions about their reading because they cannot recognize the
difference between literal and inferential questions, and therefore do not know
how to return to a text to locate the information they need to construct an
answer. On standardized tests, as in
independent reading, if students know a question is a literal question or an
inferential question, they can learn how to search the text for an answer, or
how to combine information supplied by the text with their prior knowledge to
construct an answer. When we say to
students “Read the question carefully and think about your answer,” what we
should be saying is “Let me show the different kinds of questions you may
encounter and how you might go about figuring out how to find and put together
an answer from the text and from what you already know. Let me tell you about question-answer
relationships.”
Directions can also be confusing to young test-takers. Standardized tests of reading frequently ask
students to read “a passage,” when in classrooms we talk about reading “books”
or “texts.” Many standardized writing tests ask students to write
“compositions;” students in writing workshop are used to specific language that
asks them to write “personal narratives,” “persuasive essays,” “feature
articles,” etc. When young students are
anxiously navigating timed tests they take only once each year, unfamiliar
vocabulary can confuse them, raise their level of concern, and possibly
interfere with their ability to perform at their best. Talking to them about new and different words
they might encounter can lower their stress and prepare them for what might
appear on the test.
The way in which our instruction is presented during these
test-taking skills lessons is critical.
This is not the time for worksheets done in isolation. This is the time for think-alouds, with the
teacher and students talking out loud together,
learning from each other, sharing their thinking about test items, test answers,
rubrics, and scored writing prompts.
Research tells us the primary difference between good test takers and
poor test takers, when taking a multiple choice exam, is that the good test
takers can identify not only the right answer but know why the other three
answers are wrong.
Reviewing individual
sample test items, talking about which answers are right but also why other
answers are not, identifying distractors and how they work – this thinking work
can help students learn how standardized tests are constructed and how
successful test-takers approach testing.
Familiarizing themselves with the rubrics that will be used to evaluate
their writing and examining released samples of scored writing shows students
exactly what other writers did to earn particular scores on the test. This kind of practice and rehearsal lowers
students’ test anxiety while it increases their familiarity with the items they
will be asked to manipulate and produce (“I’ve done/seen this before!”).
These plans for teaching test taking skills – or test-wiseness
– invite students to be a part of the conversation, respect students as stakes
holders in the standardized test world, and offer students the best chance for
successful performance on standardized tests. While this preparation does not guarantee
higher scores on standardized tests, it does provide us with some assurance
that students are able to show us what they truly do know and are not hampered
in revealing their understanding by unfamiliar formats. Gift card incentives
for good preparation and performance on standardized tests skips over this
important information and provides students with no strategies for managing
standardized tests, be it the first or sixth time they encounter them.
The idea of the incentives does, however, make me think about Barbara Kingsolver’s, “Somebody’s Baby,”
included in her 1995 collection of essays, High Tide in Tucson: Essays From Now or
Never. The thrust of this essay (I
figured this out without answering a single multiple choice question) is that
people in the United States do not like kids, and that we live in “an
increasingly antichild climate.”
Extreme, I know. But every time I come up against issues in
education that seem to fly in the face of common sense as well as what research
tells us about how children learn, develop, and live, I drift back to this
essay. How much of what is happening in
education today might be traced back to the thesis of this essay? Does our country, our culture, disrespect and
dislike children enough to make decisions about testing, schools, and funding
that shortchange students instead of supporting them?
If our children are important to us, why not
include them, in this case, in conversations and preparation for standardized
test in a way that respects their role in the task? They are, after all, the people who will be
sitting down to actually take the tests.
Yes, they are young, short, and naïve, but they are also intelligent,
concerned, and contributing members of our educational community. They deserve
to know what they are being asked to do and why, to understand what is at stake when they take
part in this task, and to be prepared, in the most productive, meaningful way
available to them.
If we care about our children, why would be offer them
anything less…..and let’s be clear – gift cards are less. Test instruction
is very different than test incentives, and we need to ask ourselves, even as
we work to provide better standardized tests and data interpretation, what do
we believe about how we best handle our students’ experiences when taking
standardized tests? Maybe we need to
read, and reread if necessary, the closing line of Kingsolver’s essay: “Be careful what you give children, for sooner
or later you are sure to get it back.”
Kamenetz, A.
(2015). The test: Why our schools are
obsessed with standardized testing – but you don’t have to be. PublicAffairs.
Kingsolver, B.
(1995). High tide in Tucson: Essays from
now or never. HarperCollins
Publishers.
Raphael, T. (1986). Teaching question-answer relationships,
revisited. The Reading Teacher, 39,
516-
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