As a student, I completely agree with the argument made by NASW; each student learns differently and it should be taken in to a count. By focusing on the standardized test, the education provided to the students is very limited. We should be focusing on how to improve education and how we can overcome obstacles such as poverty in the education system. Providing and improving different types of services to assure children are learning at their own rate without feeling pressure of catching up to other children.…
And if a student from another place that speaks a different language moves to a new out of country school that speaks a different language, they will not understand the language in which it was written in. Katherine McKnight phd, wrote an article about the problems that standardized testing affects non-language speaker, or the special needs, “Decades of research has demonstrated that black, Latino, and Native American students, as well as students from some Asian groups, experience problems with high-stakes testing. For many of these students, there is no pathway to success under our current test-driven system, and as a result, they are most definitely being “left behind.” (McKnight) Most children that speak a different language will have a difficult time trying to understand the test. Also children with special needs will also have a hard time trying to take the test, since that special needs students sometimes are not at the learning standards in the grade they’re in, “students with disabilities, who are often required to complete required testing in English before they have mastered the language; the chance of being suspended, expelled, “counseled out,” or otherwise removed from school due to low test scores, in an effort to boost school achievement results and escape test-based sanctions mandated by NCLB; and disproportionate misplacement of students of color in special education programs based on test results.”…
Schools in the United States use standardized tests to evaluate the students' in elementary, middle and high school. These tests are also used for entrance into college or even to find out if a student needs to take a particular class over in college. To enter into college, a student usually will take the SAT or the ACT Exams and usually there is a fee for taking these exams. In Indiana, the students' take the ISTEP + Exam.…
Standardized Tests Argument Essay Picture a stressed kid doing a long test. Could standardized tests be changed so kids wouldn’t be nervous? What do you think? This brings me to what I will be talking about today, standardized tests. Some people believe that we should change the way kids take these tests, which others believe tests are fine the way they are and aren’t worth the hassle.…
Within the education system, there are many reasons why standardized testing is flawed. While many government officials believe that standardized testing has more advantages than disadvantages, parents, teachers and students are facing oppressed teaching, a bleak education, narcissism, and a lack of respect for teaching. “We don’t need more data that continue to compare students to each other. We don’t need more standardized test data to keep telling the kids in the 95th percentile how superior they are and the kids who score below average that they still need improvement”(Nieto 58 “Still Teaching in Spite of It All”). Nieto tells about how not only students, but teachers and parents are affected by high-stakes standardized testing.…
On the first day of high school, our teachers sat us down and had us practice the ACT. They wanted to see where we were at academically, and how they would need to get us to improve. From that day on, we would take a practice ACT test twice a month. By the time I took the actually ACT my junior year, I had probably taken the test maybe 30 times. I was so burnt out I just wanted to get it over with.…
Standardized testing should not be allowed because of the health consequences that tackles children. When some students glace at the test, anxiety overwhelms them. It could be the fact that all the standardized tests have such a big weight on the outcome, thus grades are being overlooked. In the educational system, years of hard work will still not compare to a standardized test. Some people believe that if a student does well in school and pays attention, they have nothing to worry about and they can get a splendid score on any standardized test.…
What about people who are bad test takers or they are dyslexic? I think standardized testing is unfair, and not reliable. In addition to that, what is the purpose of a standardized test? "Research and experience show that standardized…
Conventional wisdom has it that standardized tests don’t efficiently measure a student’s intellectual knowledge while others believe there is no other fair way to improve America’s education system as a whole. According to ProCon.org, the use of standardized testing has been around since the mid-1800s in the American education system. The way a state standardized test works is by having individuals test every year on a selected curriculum for each grade. The main intention for such a test is to record results and evaluate the education being given in each state, then compare those results as a whole nation. It is agreed upon both sides of this debate that the education of students is the most important factor.…
Standardized Testing in Schools Standardized testing has been an inevitable part of life for countless Americans, making them question the validity of their life choices since the third grade. When taking standardized tests, one encounters some obvious drawbacks. Any student who has been forced to take one of the hundreds that exist can recount the tales of stress and feelings of inadequacy that linger after every test taken. Standardized testing does not benefit students because it objectifies certain race/ethnic groups, it doesn’t measure the test taker’s mental capacity or progress, and it is not worth the unnecessary problems for students.…
High school students planning to attend college usually have a dream school in mind. But what will determine if they get to continue their dream or have to reevaluate their college plan? A student 's standardized test scores and can either make or break their college plan. A student 's ACT score or SAT score will determine if they are at the academic level to be accepted into a college. Test scores throughout all ages are a very object and fair way to measure a student 's knowledge.…
Standardized testing has many problems that are not addressed. Testing isn’t doing what it is supposed to do. Standardized testing doesn’t reach a student's full potential. Schools need to be about learning rather than preparing for high-stake testing. No one is fixing the problems of standardized test in schools.…
Most students, if not all, notably dislike the need for standardized testing in school, and it's a perfectly reasonable opinion. Many researchers and experts say that standardized tests are a massive waste of time and effort, and they do not help students’ education at all. Both teachers and students agree that it is stressful and unnecessary. Some schools spend days, if not weeks, to test when they could be using the time to teach. Standardized tests also create unfair judgments to students and have their future based on a number.…
Standardized tests should definitely be removed because of these reasons. IV. So what can be done to get rid of standardized testing?…
Journal #1 I personally do not believe in standardized testing because not every child is the same nor have they had the same experiences. For example, take a child that has grown up in an English speaking family from America vs a child that has grown up in a non-English speaking family from another country. Who do you think is going to do better on a standardized test? Probably the child that speaks English and is American; this is not to say the other child is dumb or unable to succeed it is just that he/she has not had the same opportunities to learn the things being tested.…