On Standardized Testing: An ACEI Position Paper. On Standardized Testing: An ACEI Position Paper.

On Standardized Testing: An ACEI Position Paper‪.‬

Childhood Education 2007, Fall, 84, 1

    • 2,99 €
    • 2,99 €

Publisher Description

Following the whirlwind standards movement of the 1980s, the beginning of the 1990s ushered in an overwhelming interest in and use of testing to document students' progress. In 1991, the Association for Childhood Education International (ACEI) issued its second position paper calling for a moratorium on standardized testing in the early years of schooling (the first one on that topic was published in 1976) (ACEI/Perrone, 1991). Citing the rising use of tests to label children, place children in special programs, and retain underachieving children in a grade level, ACEI denounced the use of these tests in the early grades and questioned their use in later grades as well. It was the hope that more discussions would ensue concerning the negative effects of standardized testing on children's learning and their motivation to learn. The Association leadership further hoped that schools would more actively pursue assessment alternatives that honored children's individuality and developmental growth. While discussion has certainly increased in both content and intensity and alternatives have been explored, we have not seen a significant change in the use (and, in many cases, the misuse) of testing. With the advent of the No Child Left Behind law, enacted in 2002, quality developmentally appropriate teaching and learning practices have taken a backseat to the more focused attention on low-level skills that can be assessed easily on a standardized multiple-choice test. Standardized tests are now used to hold up children and schools for comparison; the scores are used to discriminate rather than diagnose, punish rather than reward. Equally disturbing is the misuse of these tests--and these tests alone--to unjustly hold teachers and schools accountable and then punish those who have not met adequate yearly progress, as deemed by people other than those working with children on a daily basis (e.g., politicians).

GENRE
Professional & Technical
RELEASED
2007
22 September
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
20
Pages
PUBLISHER
Association for Childhood Education International
SIZE
191.8
KB

More Books by Childhood Education

Successful Transition to School for Australian Aboriginal Children: The 2005 International Focus Issue of Childhood Education Focused on the Education of Aboriginal and Indigenous Children. Guest Editor Jyotsna Pattnaik Located Too Many Excellent Articles on That Important Topic to Include in One Issue. Therefore, She will Continue to Provide These Theme-Related Articles, Here and in Future Issues. Successful Transition to School for Australian Aboriginal Children: The 2005 International Focus Issue of Childhood Education Focused on the Education of Aboriginal and Indigenous Children. Guest Editor Jyotsna Pattnaik Located Too Many Excellent Articles on That Important Topic to Include in One Issue. Therefore, She will Continue to Provide These Theme-Related Articles, Here and in Future Issues.
2006
Creating Friendly and Supportive Environments for Teachers. Creating Friendly and Supportive Environments for Teachers.
2010
Teachers Search and Research: Questioning Educational Practices (Teacher As Researcher) Teachers Search and Research: Questioning Educational Practices (Teacher As Researcher)
2009
Books for Children (Buyers Guide) Books for Children (Buyers Guide)
2009
Learning English with Ipods. Learning English with Ipods.
2008
Learning to Read and Write Using the Internet: Sites You Don't Want to Miss!(Technology in the Classroom) Learning to Read and Write Using the Internet: Sites You Don't Want to Miss!(Technology in the Classroom)
2006