Standardized testing holds power over the students and teachers lives. Due to a law signed in 2002, which required schools to raise scores every year or face charges, schools are pressured to make sure that students are up to standards. Instead of making schools become better learning places, this caused schools spiral into a frenzy of teaching students how to take tests. Recently Obama has also made teachers be evaluated by the test scores, causing even more strain. Preparing students for all of the testing has caused students to be less engaged. It is boring to be taught how a test works, how to read the questions, and how to respond. The creativity has been sucked out, therefore discouraging kids to express themselves. Linda Hammond, a professor at Stanford University, did a poll and found that 64 percent of the public thinks there is too much emphasis put on standardized testing. (Layton) Even though there are no real punishments for the students who do not perform as expected, there is an unspoken fear. Schools will prioritize students who do well, they are rewarded. The other students do not get punished per se, but they are not allowed to participate in the celebrations with the passing students. All of the trouble the government went …show more content…
A teacher of a first grade class in New York tells us her view on standardized testing. Her students do not have to actually take any tests until the third grade, but they still feel the affect of the tests. The students that struggle to keep up in their classes miss out because the teachers that usually help them are busy with the tests for two week periods. The teacher goes as far to say that the students ability to learn has been “hijacked” from them. She then tells us that learning now is just not what it used to be. Students can not be as creative because almost every lesson is planned by someone outside of the classroom, making things boring for the “firsties”. The first graders are even preparing for the standardized testing academically. The teacher feels back because her coworkers rely on her to have the students ready from day one for these tests. One point this teacher makes is about the crazy preparations that need to be done. She says, “My students will take keyboarding in 3rd grade so they can take the tests online…BEFORE SOME OF THEM EVEN HAVE THE PHYSICAL HAND SPAN TO USE A KEYBOARD.” (Ravitch) Stories like this range all across the country, students have been beaten into submission with all the tests and regulations forced upon