Standards, not standardization
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FLO MARTIN
California school kids are fast approaching the month when they sit
down, No. 2 pencil in hand, to take numerous tests to prove that
they’re learning. School administrators will tremble in their shoes,
knowing that, come fall, all the schools’ test scores will become
public information, and public tongues will start wagging.
At the high school where I taught for 22 years, preparations for
these tests ranged from the comical to the ridiculous. Every
September, our first faculty meeting entailed listening to the
principal drone, explaining norm-referencing and mean, median and
mode scores. My eyes would glaze over, and my brain would go dead
trying to understand the charts. Every February, the advertising
blitz for testing started, with a barrage of announcements over the
classroom loudspeakers. We always attended a schoolwide assembly in
the gym and listened to some high school dropout who had “seen the
light” and had ended up with a doctorate in nuclear physics (wink,
wink). Even our principal got into the act, literally, by whooping
and hollering, a la Howard Dean, to get the students pumped up about
the tests. Huge poster-paper banners decorated the campus, announcing
that year’s test score goals. Every April, the kids sat for a full
week, for four hours every day, reading, computing, maybe even
thinking and then bubbling in the “correct” answers. We were obsessed
with tests.
Our California governor wants to base all public school teachers’
salaries on these test results. My questions for him and for any
voter who supports this plan would be: “Is your salary based on the
result of some multiple-choice and true-false test you took last
year? Do multiple-choice, true-false exams figure anywhere in your
job today?”
A few weeks ago, with those questions in mind, I walked over to
the Costa Mesa City Hall and took the elevator to the personnel
office. There, the gal at the counter handed me some papers. I looked
at pay ranges for all employees in the city, including fire fighters
and police officers. Salaries reflect years of service and annual
performance reviews.
I also talked on the phone with officers in charge of police
training and with several fire fighters at their stations. The
evaluation of their work is based on job performance, not on some
discrete-item test.
My first teacher’s salary was based on education and prior
experience. For the next three years, school administrators monitored
and reviewed my performance very closely. The fourth year, these
administrators decided, based on performance review, to offer me a
permanent position. From that point on, the review occurred every
other year. Teachers who didn’t meet expectations received official
notice of poor performance and ended up, somehow, out the door. Make
no mistake -- school administrations have ways of removing inferior
teachers.
Now, let’s get back to testing. Our love affair with marking
single “correct” answers has to stop. This narrow, educationally
obscene way of testing kids makes everyone crazy -- principals,
teachers, students, parents, newspaper reporters, governors,
everybody!
Multiple-choice, true-false is not real life. Writing letters is.
Reading newspapers or magazines, or even books -- that’s real life.
So is balancing a checkbook or filling out income tax forms or
interviewing for a job. Showing your kid how to change a tire is
real. Visiting a school and talking about your job -- that’s life.
Deciding which car to buy is life. Convincing your friend to join you
on some adventure is life. Keeping a professional portfolio or
leading a multimedia presentation for colleagues is life. Designing
some gizmo or starting up a company is life.
Education doesn’t stop at the end of high school or college. We
need to find out what happens to our grads once they’ve been out of
school for about 10 years. That’s the time to track them down and
talk. No multiple-choice questions then. How about: “What are you
doing these days? What kind of work are you doing? Do you pay taxes?
Do you get along with other people? Do you have a significant
relationship with someone? Do you have a family? Have you ever been
arrested or in jail?” Then, according to the results, the schools
these adults attended should receive the merit pay. School bonuses
should reflect authentic, long-term results, not short-term,
simplistic tasks
My occupation these days is observing and evaluating performance,
specifically of future high school teachers. Two weeks ago, I
happened to notice a poster on a classroom wall. The school’s mission
statement read: “To prepare students for a productive school life, to
foster democratic values, to encourage appreciation of cultural
diversity and to promote a desire for lifelong learning.” The mission
for Newport-Mesa Unified School District is “to graduate students who
have acquired the knowledge, skills and attitudes necessary to
achieve significant career, educational, civic and personal goals,
which will enrich our society.”
The true test of learning is performance. The better the
performance, the greater the learning. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger
needs to take his focus away from the craziness of current testing.
The governor needs to be a champion for real-life change.
* FLO MARTIN is a Costa Mesa resident and faculty member at Cal
State Fullerton.
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