The world of higher education, since its beginning, has become progressively more complex and convoluted. Structures and systems have adapted and transformed, partially in response to an increasingly fast-paced society, and partially as a result of increased emphasis on various subjects and disciplines. Of particular interest to this author is the prestige of a college or university, with specific regards to standardized testing as a measure. In other words: Are standardized test scores of enrolled freshmen an accurate measure of the prestige of a college or university?…
Standardized testing, the modern day war against students. This shouldn't be the attitude towards test whose “sole" purpose should be to provide fair assessments so that educators can make high stakes decisions in the admission process for individual students, to help improve teaching and learning, and to generate important data from which policy decisions can be made. However, the purpose of standardized testing whether it be the ACT or the SAT has evolved from an equalizer of opportunity to a biased tool of segregation which strips students of their identity and ability and disguises them as a barcode on a sheet of paper.…
Would taking away the mandatory FCAT impact the education of Florida’s students in a positive way? The Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test has been a staple in our state for 16 years, and started out as a learning measurement and accountability tool for all schools statewide. Looking back it is evident that it has now changed dramatically and is hindering our students. The standardized test, which takes around two weeks, is administered to public school students third through eleventh grade in the spring of each year. It gives each student a score based on how well you test on topics like reading, writing, mathematics, and science.…
A 10th grade student sits in his desk nervously tapping his foot. His pencil glides across the paper as he final gives up and blindly filled in the letter bubble marked C. He is in hour two of a four hour long test. However you might be surprised that he is not directly affected by how he scores on the test.…
Education today has sparked many controversial discussions about Standardized testing. Parents, educators, law makers, and even children are stressing the effects that Standardized testing is having on children, teachers, and sometimes even parents in today’s schools. Standardized testing measures the students’ knowledge of what they have learned in school. Some people wonder why schools take Standardized testing, while other schools think it has helped them in a lot of ways. I think that Standardized testing is not as important as some people think.…
If a teacher does not wish to be reprimanded, his or her students will all have to do well on the tests. In order to be sure that this happens, teachers will teach to the tests. They will focus not on creative writing, but rather on the type of writing that the test scorers will want to see. Instead of taking field trips, students will be practicing analogies and test taking skills. Literature will not be read intensively, but will instead be skimmed for the main points in order to answer the critical reading questions.…
There is more to learning than what is evaluated on a standardized test. With so much riding on the results of standardized testing, teachers often feel compelled to teach to the tests. In some schools, less time is being spent on the sciences, social studies and the arts to prepare students to take the tests in math, reading, and writing. A major issue surrounding education today is that teachers "teach to the test.”…
According to a study done by the Council of the Great City Schools, a nonprofit organization focusing on the nation’s urban public schools, the average U.S. public school student takes approximately 112 mandated standardized tests between pre-kindergarten and their senior year of high school (Layton, 2015). As more and more tests are introduced as a mechanism to review our children’s performance, our students are worn down by the stress of the testing but also for the preparation of each test. They become overloaded and may not perform at their fullest capability. Not only does testing have implications for our children but also for the teachers, who are forced to prepare students who may not be ready to take the test, many teach for the test and not for students to grasp and understand concepts needed to…
Every year, America’s public schools administer more than 100 million standardized exams. The testing limit should be reduced. To begin with, it stresses students out, wastes time, and we are obsessing about testing. To begin with testing stresses students out. Between preschool and 12th grade students take about 112 exams and enforced tests.…
Kayla Marlatt English III Hour 5 Ms Maggert 18 December 2016 Standardized Testing: is it Really Worth it? Students hate tests, it is a concept understood by a majority of American children ranging from seven to seventeen.…
Standardized testing has become somewhat of a staple on the American Public Education System. Anywhere in high schools around the United States, you will find students receiving standardized tests year round. Studies have shown that too much standardized testing can lead to multiple anxiety disorders. Students take multiple standardized tests in one school year, sometimes even taking more than one per semester, which causes a lot of stress and can lead to developing anxiety disorders, rather than good testing. Test anxiety is more of a performance anxiety, due to the fear of failing.…
Proponents argue that standardized tests have been deteriorating education in America, but extensive longitudinal studies and national surveys over the past year says otherwise. Standardized testing has been around since 1905 starting with the Stanford-Binet Intelligence Test. Fast forward fifteen years, the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT) was created. In the 1960s, the federal government started pushing new achievement tests designed to evaluate instructional methods and schools. Standardized testing ever since couple years of it’s introduction has stirred up controversy on the basis of racial bias, reliability, and discrimination.…
American students around the country will at the third grade begin taking the standardized tests. From there, the tests get more complex and add more fields. As students, we are being forced to be in common core classes that supposedly help with these exams. However, they seem to be a waste of our time and the time of our teachers as test scores begin to decrease year after year. Although they claim that standardized testing is helping students, they in end waste time, cause stress and are useless to many potential jobs.…
Standardized testing are words that students do not want to hear. Standardized testing is deeply rooted in the history of the United States. Standardized tests are tools used to measure students’ knowledge and progress. Almost every person that has had an education in the United States has taken a standardized test. Today, standardized testing is a widespread issue in the United States’ public school curriculum.…
The United States has made standardized testing a major concern across the country. Teachers are now required to prepare students for tests such as the ACT, SAT, KCCT, etc. Students are taught how to take these tests rather than being taught important curriculum that could help them in their futures. Most people don’t see the damage done when students and teachers are preparing for these tests. Students are not becoming more knowledgeable, through these tests, they are learning how to read questions and fill in a bubble based on “the best answer.”…