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<text id=91TT1554>
<title>
July 15, 1991: Testing, Testing, Testing
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
July 15, 1991 Misleading Labels
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
EDUCATION, Page 62
Testing, Testing, Testing
</hdr><body>
<p>The Administration's proposals for a national exam system have
drawn fire from all sides. They probably shouldn't.
</p>
<p>By Sam Allis/Boston--With reporting by Mick Brunton/London and
Seiichi Kanise/Tokyo
</p>
<p> Americans quiz their kids more than anyone else in the
world: 46 million students from kindergarten through high school
are subjected to more than 150 million standardized tests each
year. The results of that exercise seem dismal. Only 5% of U.S.
high school seniors are deemed able to pursue higher
mathematical study. By most measures, students in a variety of
industrial countries continue to demonstrate that they know far
more than their American peers about basics in history, science
and reasoning. Who needs more tests?
</p>
<p> That question is being asked by an increasing number of
parents, school administrators and civil rights organizations
in response to the Bush Administration's proposals for a
national system of exams called the American Achievement Tests.
FairTest, an organization based in Cambridge, Mass., has already
written Congress asking legislators to withhold funding from the
Bush program, arguing that it will not improve U.S. education
and might damage it. "Politicians cannot simply mandate new
tests and expect education to improve magically," says FairTest
associate director Monty Neill. That opinion was echoed last
week in Miami Beach, at the annual convention of the National
Education Association.
</p>
<p> Who is right? Under the Bush proposals, tests would be
taken voluntarily by students across the country in the fourth,
eighth and 12th grades, yielding uniform yardsticks of
performance. What the exams would look like is unclear, although
Education Department officials vow they would not resemble the
multiple-choice exercises of the past. The achievement tests
would document the knowledge of children in five core subjects:
mathematics, science, English, history and geography. The White
House has asked Congress for $12.4 million--a pittance--to
start work on developing both the exams and the standards that
would go with them.
</p>
<p> Proponents of national testing argue that the exams would
provide a uniform means for parents to judge a school's
performance and compare it with that of other schools in the
neighborhood and across the nation. If unhappy with a particular
school, parents could take their child to another--and could
shop around for the best alternatives based on standardized
data. Thus the exams could become a vehicle to implement the
controversial "school choice" program that is one of the
cornerstones of the Bush Administration's package of education
reforms. They also become passports to be produced upon demand
for college admissions officers and employers in later life.
</p>
<p> In Britain, where performance-based tests are being
integrated into the school system, students spend one-fifth of
the school year preparing for and taking them, according to
Walter Haney of the Center for the Study of Testing at Boston
College. What's more, says Haney, these exams are at least 10
times as costly as U.S. exercises like the College Boards, which
are administered to roughly 1.5 million students annually. In
Japan national tests have been used for at least six years, but
only for junior high and high schools. (Tests for students in
lower-middle schools were abandoned in 1953, when they were
judged to have served their purpose as a means to measure
postwar curriculum reform.) Some Japanese educators are worried
that national tests lower student goals by steering them toward
the universities they think they can get into, rather than where
they really want to go.
</p>
<p> The main argument against the tests in the U.S. is that
there is no necessary link between such exercises and better
education. "You cannot test intellectual habits," argues
Theodore Sizer, an educational-reform thinker based in
Providence who heads the Coalition of Essential Schools. He
feels it would be better to leave matters where they stand.
</p>
<p> An even more sensitive issue is whether national tests
will actively harm the prospects of minority students. "It is
still an open question whether we can create a fair test," says
Thomas Romberg, a University of Wisconsin mathematics professor
who spent six years helping develop a set of widely praised
national math standards. Beverly Cole, education director for
the N.A.A.C.P., which is a member of FairTest, admits she is
"paranoid" about the idea. "There's a knee-jerk response on the
part of minorities against national testing because we've
suffered the most from them in the past."
</p>
<p> Critics of ethnic bias can point to such celebrated
examples as the use of the word regatta on a College Board exam
of a few years past--a term that had little to do with
experience in the inner city. Educational Testing Service, which
administers the College Boards, now reviews each exam question
for such assumptions. However, the desire to meet minority
concerns has also led to such skewing practices as "race
norming," the comparison of test scores only within minority
groups rather than across the board. That can lead to a subtle
undermining of minority achievement. It is, indeed, demeaning
and even racist to suggest that blacks cannot or should not be
held to the same achievement standards as whites.
</p>
<p> Education Department officials say they have never
envisioned a single national test, but rather a varied package.
According to Dr. Lauren Resnick of the University of Pittsburgh,
who has done seminal work in this area, these might include oral
projects, portfolios in which students display a body of work
completed over time, open-ended questions to explore student
thinking, writing samples and perhaps some multiple choice.
These would be part of a complicated web of standards that would
be calibrated first at the state level, then among states and
regions and, finally, nationally. Just how this uniform grading
would be accomplished, however, remains foggy.
</p>
<p> Then there is the issue of cost. To develop and administer
national tests may take a great deal of money--far more than
the Bush Administration is requesting. The Administration is
silent about who would pay for that, and how. The cost factor
could mean brutal triage--spend scarce education dollars for
proven winners like the Head Start Program or for an abstraction
to measure achievement whose value might not be apparent for
years.
</p>
<p> Given the risks involved, national testing makes sense
only if it is a solid learning tool supported by a national
consensus. The need for improved achievement by U.S. students
is undeniable; so is the need to avoid yet another expensive
educational boondoggle. The Administration's proposals,
prudently applied, seem well worth pursuing--so long as they,
too, are tested at every stage.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>