Standardized Testing In Schools Schools all over the nation have introduced standardized testing as a way to evaluate what the students have learned over the course of the school year. Exams can be administered online or on paper, depending on the subject. Test can be taken at different points of the school year; results can be used as a way to determine what areas are weaker than others. Most results are viewed by the school board, administrators, and teachers. In some schools students take one end of the year test with different subjects, other just takes one test. These tests can be graded by groups of people are computers. Standardized testing has become a part of America’s educational system and many don’t see the benefit of the test at all. At Mac Gregor Elementary my fifth grade students take online test sent from the district every Friday. The test includes a math, reading and vocabulary subjects. The teacher often attempts to create a lesson plan based around the things that are going to be on the test. Many of activities include critical thinking, grade level vocabulary words, and math problems. The curriculum has been almost completely affected by these testing and the standards. In order to pass the students have certain requirements that they have to be reached, if not an intensive meeting with the student and his or her parents will take place so that everyone is on the same page. Standardized tests have been a part of American education since the
Standardized tests. Like them or not, they are everywhere. And everybody has their opinion about it, whether they are useful or not. Many say that they are harmful as they put kids under pressure and stress. Others say they help kids learn and scale kids with other school systems and nations. Lots of evidence shows that they are indeed useful, but I believe there are also several weaknesses, and improvements that can be made to fix them; the biggest being a pre and post test. Standardized tests can also have more focused lessons that lead to more undemanding goals, which can let teachers use their own teaching methods to eventually meet with the same goal.
Tenth grade standardized testing in Pennsylvania is so unnecessary that makes a student complete in order to view their progress. This testing technique produces unpredictable results that allows one to review and come across their own judgment when accessing these tests. High school teachers sometimes tell students how their job depends on the results of the test. High school administrators tell the students that if they do not pass these tests, then they can not graduate on time. They make it seem like these tests are very important and make it a mindset to students that they need to try to conquer these tests just to meet the necessary graduation requirements. The shadows of the tenth grade Pennsylvania standardized testing needs to be overlooked
At eleven months old, my parents found me inside the house shaking. Immediately, I was rushed to the hospital and was diagnosed with Epilepsy. Eventually, I was placed in special needs classes and I was able to develop with the help of my parents, teachers, doctors, and therapists. For that reason, standardized testing has never been an accurate indicator of my academic outcome. For example, I took the SAT twice and the ACT once. Unfortunately, both scores were not helpful. In the end, I had to take the PERT exam, where I was able to obtain high scores and be exempted from pre-college courses. Although I have invested and studied for the LSAT for over eight months, I was still unable to receive the average score due to my fear of failing and
Although standardized tests aid in providing students, teachers, and even school board members with a guideline for the learning process, in the end the overall effects of such tests become questionable as they deter student’s potential growth. The list of standardized tests has grown tremendously throughout the years, originally beginning with the SAT and the ACT. These two tests alone have become a small part of this checklist of tests every student must face before reaching college. In today’s society it’s difficult to locate a student in a household who hasn’t experienced a standardized test. Initially administered to evaluate and compare student performance throughout the rest of the state, the
Standardized tests are not for everyone. Some students are naturally good at taking tests, while others struggle. These tests start as early as the third grade. Students should not have to worry about their future being determined by a test. Standardized testing also causes many problems to some students, such as lowering their confidence level. Schools and teachers have started protests, refusing to participate in in-school testing. ”Anti-testing protest is extending beyond Seattle. Across the country, 61 schools, including 47 in New York City, are refusing to participate in the latest round of tests” (Vogt). Most of these problems that occur, would stop if standardized testing was taken out of schools.
Standardized testing has become a test that has a lot of emphasis placed on it. It has become a test that allows extreme pressure to be placed on the teachers, the district and the students that have to take these tests.Many people argue about the importance of the test, that it doesn't show the progress of the student throughout the school year, and that is only one of the many reasons people think that standardized testing is unfair to administrators ,teachers, and students.That brings us to the question.
Standardized tests are one of many menaces to the school system. The Board of Education use this testing method to determine students education level. The tests grade on the students adequate yearly progress. To see how much and how well they have learned from the year's curriculum. However, the tests are severely misjudged. The government initiated test is also used to grade on how well the teachers teach to curriculum. Standardized testing is highly biased, and irrelevant to how education is brought in the school. Students should be judged on how well they analyze and decipher information. Not on how well they can use low-level skills on a standardized multiple choice test.
Do you think schools spend to much time on testing? I think schools don’t spend a lot of time on testing. How ever other people argue with my claim. I think Standardized testing is helpful because it helps teacher know when to move to the next section to learn, It helps kids work harder to get better grades, and it also takes up little class time.
Standardized testing has its pros and cons I do not believe in it but I will give you proof for and against the testing. We will cover some the history and where the testing came from and why we do it. I will talk a little bit of how I feel about testing and how much we should focus on how the students do on the test. I have interviewed a few teachers that I had when I went to school and some personal friends that are teachers now and how it effects how they teach.
Standardized testing is a form of testing used by our educational system to measure the success of a school’s students and faculty. A typical student takes 112 mandated standardized tests between PreKindergarten and twelfth grade. The use of these tests became mandatory in 2002 as part of the No Child Left Behind Act. Although there are some individuals who support these tests, many parents, students, and teachers experience the negative effects year after year. Standardized tests impact students emotionally and do not provide accurate results of a child’s education level or teacher’s performance. They take away from students learning new things for months prior to the test date as teacher’s focus primarily on this one test to satisfy our government.
What would students do if they didn’t have to take a standardized test - would they be happy, or would the students be upset that they didn't get an opportunity that others did? Students who decide that they do not want to learn in school and choose to be homeschooled do not have to take these standardized tests. This makes it difficult to know whether or not homeschooled students are actually getting an education at home. Taking standardized tests is a record of your learning. If there are kids who don't have records of what they learned or how they are doing, then it can affect their future for college and jobs. Homeschooled students should be required to take standardized tests so there is a record of how well they are learning so that it can.
Is the use of standardized testing improving education? Standardized testing is a controversial topic that has invited a great amount of debate in the United States. Many parents, students, and teachers oppose the need and reason for standardized test, while others such as myself find standardized test to be effective as it enhances student learning, monitors progress and eliminates cultural bias.
The halls are bare. The bells are off. The children march in a line eerily quiet. Desks are in perfect rows. Teachers speak through a monotone script. Students and teachers alike shudder when the time comes near. Teachers add an extra shot of espresso to their morning coffee. Students watch "Ferris Bueller's Day Off" again to figure out "the key to faking out the parents" for a sick day. The two scariest words in Education, Standardized testing. End of the school year testing is a major factor in a child's future. It is also criticized to be ineffective and unfair. Students are pressured to do well on these tests, seeing as it is the only major circumstance to affect their future education. Teachers alike can be negatively affected by their students test scores. The system needs to be changed. Standardized testing in schools can be a detriment to student and teacher success, but multiple problems factored into student test scores can be minimalized.
Right now, in schools all across America, many students are stressing about a standardized test. Standardized testing has only begun to boom over the past decade. Many schools use the final standardized test grade to determine whether a student has failed or passed his or her classes. It has also forced many teachers to basically teach to the test. That means that they try to jam the material into their students’ heads just until they take the exam. Standardized tests are a major issue in public schools today and the government should get rid of them.
Standardized tests get their name because “all students answer the same questions under similar conditions and their responses are scored in the same way” (“The Dangerous Consequences,” 2007, para. 2). These tests are created by people that may not fully understand that all students do not learn in the same way, and do not learn as efficiently. Standardized tests are crucially unfair to students with “learning disabilities, whose first language is not English, or who attend vocational schools” (“The Dangerous Consequences,” 2007, para. 7). Pushing tests upon alienated students who have either come to the country halfway through a semester or cannot speak or understand proper English is also a problem because they are more prone to do poorly on these tests. Also, these tests are unfair because many students are undereducated. Some teachers do not notice that their