With the
best of intentions, President George Bush and the nation's governors
met in 1989 in Charlottesville, Virginia, to make the schools
of the United States into world-class institutions, competitive
with the best schools among industrialized countries. By calling
for the creation of high standards with tests to measure student
achievement and to hold teachers accountable, the U.S. would produce
workers to meet the needs of business in a rapidly changing, high-tech
global economy.
Two years
later, the Bush administration announced its national education
goals, called America 2000, and began the process of offering
grants to educational organizations that would establish voluntary
educational standards in the various fields. What George Bush
and the governors started, Bill Clinton carried on with the creation
of Goals 2000: Educate America Act. The goals include the lofty
mission of making the U.S. first in the world in mathematics,
preparing all children for learning by the time they enter kindergarten,
eliminating adult illiteracy, and making every school drug-free
and safe. The new goals would also save the U.S. further embarrassment
by helping us climb the global reading and math score rankings,
break out of a tie with Iceland, and forge ahead of Hungary, South
Korea, and Japan.
In conjunction
with the goals, Congress appropriated funds to the U.S. Department
of Education to put some teeth behind the standards and goals
by developing voluntary national tests. But most governors of
both parties resisted the idea of a concerted federal effort to
create national tests for all states. Instead, they believed quality
national performance would evolve as each state committed to its
own approach to assessing student achievement. By the beginning
of the current academic year more than forty states had enacted
legislation for standards, thirty-three of them also including
high stakes testing with grade twelve exit exams and benchmark
tests at various other grades to determine progress.
While it's
hard to argue against standards (it's mostly a question of whose
standards and how they are implemented), the effort to improve
education nationally with tough standards and state-generated
assessment tests, ironically, is as much cause for alarm as for
celebration. One problem with the standards movement is that the
process has devolved into a matter of political bravura, as if
politicians feel they are doing children a service by saying,
"We'll show you lazy kids who's tough, who's in charge."
In many places "high stakes" essentially translates
into punishment for many students: fail the graduating tests and
you don't get a diploma. Even though the governors emphasized
the fairness of high expectations for all children and the elimination
of economic status and race as factors for success in school,
students of color and children in poor families have been among
the chief victims of the current assessment mania. In Florida
thousands of poor students have been denied graduation solely
because they cannot pass the exit exam. In Texas a federal judge
is hearing a civil rights case challenging the state's Assessment
of Academic Skills. In Massachusetts students have staged boycotts
because of the high failure rate of the Comprehensive Assessment
System. Clearly, a backlash against the standards and assessment
movement is growing.
Another problem,
in many states, is that the tests and the standards upon which
they are based have assumed a twisted life of their own. Just
as school officials are determined to look good by myopically
focusing on improving SAT scores -- whose original intent was
as an aptitude test, simply one predictor of academic success
in the first year of college -- some states are trying to look
good with high scores in these new assessment tests, essentially
appropriating the test scores for a dubious purpose. In Ohio,
for instance, many middle schools report 100 percent of eighth
graders pass the state's Proficiency Tests by, admittedly, teaching
to the tests. In some states, where the tests serve as exit exams,
students who fail as eighth or ninth graders continue to take
the tests each year until they pass.
Other states
are emphasizing their incredibly high standards by administering
tests that the large majority of students find impossible to pass.
In Virginia more than 90 percent of the students failed in the
first two years of the new exams, and rarely can a teacher be
found who sees any correlation between the curriculum and the
state tests. Where once a test was a measure of what the teacher
taught and the student learned, some assessments based on new
standards seem to be created to drive someone's idea of curriculum
redesign and teacher education reform. Often in media accounts
of progress in standards and assessment, the words "children,"
"students," "curriculum," or "learning"
are nowhere to be found. Testing is not about teaching and learning;
it is about testing.
Proponents
of the standards movement often portray critics as being opposed
to high standards and high expectations for all students; but
in reality leading educators and reformers are dedicated to quality
and, while believing in much that the standards purport to accomplish,
are also concerned about what is being lost.
In his new
book, The Big Test: The Secret History of the American Meritocracy,
Nicholas Lemann writes, "The obsession with testing measures
chiefly one virtue -- the ability to take standardized tests,
not wisdom or originality or humor or toughness or empathy or
common sense or independence or determination -- let alone moral
worth." The current fixation with tests, Lemann continues,
"
may only make things worse, creating new industries
to help coach teachers and students to pass the next rounds of
the big test."
Well known
by independent school leaders for his book, The Human Side of
School Change, Robert Evans says, "The whole standards and
testing enterprise
targets the wrong goals in the wrong ways,
aiming at the recall of facts, figures, and formulas instead of
the ability to apply knowledge in real-life settings."
Vito Perrone,
director of teacher education programs at Harvard University,
recently observed in a lecture at The Bank Street College of Education
that those who speak most confidently about reform through testing,
"who seem to know best about children's development and needs
stand
far away from classrooms, children, and young people. The movement
is more about standardization than standards, and a great danger
is that given all the state mandates, the richness of classroom
dynamics, what is studied and talked about, will be narrowed and
stunted."
The dispute
comes home to independent schools in states like California and
Indiana where the challenge to preserving the autonomy of independent
schools is severe, with issues of institutional accreditation
and teacher certification tied into state required testing in
all schools. In New York the intrusion into independent school
standards and governance includes a legislative effort to require
a Regents diploma for all students. Frederick Calder, executive
director of the New York State Association of Independent Schools,
is taking on the state regarding both the diploma issue and testing.
In a speech this fall to the New York City Guild of Independent
Schools, Calder said, "Standardized testing in independent
schools has an important but very small function in the educational
process. And that is to take an occasional measurement for purposes
of comparability or diagnosis. Most of us believe that that is
the extent of such tests' usefulness. If, on the other hand, standardized
testing that is primarily content based becomes dominant or overarching
in a school, it destroys curricular autonomy, negates the whole
point of the Socratic method, and smothers original thought, all
antithetical to everything independent education stands for."
Where does
all this put independent schools?
First, we
should acknowledge that the standards movement, in some form,
is here to stay. We cannot conveniently ignore state mandates
on all schools, private as well as public, because there is the
real possibility of the loss of accreditation and decertification
of teachers in independent schools. When state legislators and
department of education officials discuss standards, we need to
be at the table. Once new state education laws are in place and
tests are inevitable, we have to be involved in the development
of the tests. At the same time, we should continue to drive home
the point that such tests are only one measure of what students
learn in school. In the 1980s, independent school teachers contributed
to the significant work of the National Council of Teachers of
Mathematics, the American Association for the Advancement of Science,
and the National Art Education Association, and even greater involvement
is needed now, in partnership with public school educators, to
design rational standards and fair assessments. If we remain on
the sideline, some downright absurd requirements can be foisted
on children and teachers, such as the several states that typically
have declared, "fourth graders will be able to analyze social,
economic, and political development in Incan, Mayan, and Aztec
civilizations and ancient China and India and make comparisons
with nineteenth century United States."
We need to
inform the school community -- trustees, parents, and alumni/ae,
in addition to teachers and students -- about the standards movement
in each state and the implications for independent schools, and
we have to be ready to decide on which issues we will speak together,
with one voice, in the best interests of independent education.
Selective political activism and coalition building for our schools
and for the common good are essential.
Legislators
and business leaders are right that America's future lies in the
quality of the nation's schools. But when the effort to meet state
standards trivializes learning and dictates what children will
learn, when the very integrity and independence of our schools
are assailed, we must speak out and be involved. And if your school
values the "deeper, richer, more engaging curriculum in which
students play an active role in integrating ideas and pursuing
controversial questions" that writer Alfie Kohn believes
in, while the state demands that all students in all schools memorize
irrelevant, disjointed facts and be drilled endlessly to look
good on standardized tests, we just might be in one of the biggest
fights ever for our survival.
Peter D.
Relic is president of NAIS.