Sunday, January 18, 2015

TOMMIE SAYLOR: Let's eliminate the disconnect and simply standardized testing


“The one size fits all approach to standardized testing is convenient, but lazy”  
-- James Dyson

By Tommie Saylor
Kennedy High School Principal

I believe we have a perception problem with the current State-mandated testing practices, along with the public’s understanding of what the published scores really mean. 

For the most part, the common person believes that the MME test given to juniors in the State of Michigan every year, is a basic skills test.  With this understanding, the public is shocked and angered when the test scores show that only about half of our students demonstrated proficiency.  The public is thinking basic skills. They are thinking “4 + 5 = 9.” The reality is our students are facing algebraic manipulations such as summation notation (summation notation is used to define the definite integral of a continuous function (f(i)) of one variable on a closed interval).  Because of this “communication gap,” the public is lead to believe that our schools are failing and that our students lack the most basic skills necessary to become productive citizens in our society.

Thus there is a negative perception about our “failing public school system.”

The reality is that the mandated tests are college readiness tests designed to evaluate a student’s preparedness to enter the collegiate world.  Though we hope that every student who graduates from high school is college ready, let’s be honest: Not every student is “college material. “

This isn’t always their fault. Some people just are not predisposed to sitting in a classroom discussing theory and philosophy, yet have talents in other areas.  According to recent studies, only about a third of our adult population holds a four-year college degree or above, and therefore we should not be surprised to learn that only about half of our students show proficiency on a college readiness test. 

In my book, we are still well above the curve. Half is greater than a third, thus we are graduating more students prepared for college than the national average of adults who hold a college degree. That sounds like success to me!

The failure is not in our school’s ability to prepare students for the “real world,” it is in our political leaders’ interpretation of the results, and in the media’s propagation of this negative interpretation. I believe that the public would be better served if we report three separate scores to show our students level of proficiency on three separate, yet critical areas:  Basic Skills, Job Readiness, and College Readiness. 

Day one of testing should be basic skills where basic reading, writing and mathematics are tested.  On this test I would expect more than 90 percent of our students demonstrate proficiency. 

On day two of testing, we should continue with the Work Keys test, where students are evaluated on their employability skills. Once again I would expect a vast majority of our students to be proficient in this category, 80 percent or above. 

Finally, on day three, a college readiness test should be given, be it ACT or SAT, where I would expect someplace around 50 percent or more of our students showing proficiency.  With this, each school would be given three scores: Basic Skills, Job Readiness, and College Readiness. This would eliminate the ambiguity and perception issues now faced in our current model. 

This would also keep the “high stakes” testing cycle down to only three days of intense testing, as opposed to the current model where students are being tested for almost two full weeks.

If you agree and believe that two weeks of intense testing where students must work through waves of mental fatigue is not conducive to the educational process, contact your state leaders in Lansing and let them know that our current testing model is not good for kids and parents. 

Tell them that the color system currently being utilized, a math amalgamation of multiple test scores represented by Yellow, Orange, even Purple, is meaningless to most people. And tell them that the public wants to know in a simple, easy-to-understand format the level of student proficiency in Basic Skills, Job Readiness and College Readiness.

What starts here, changes the world. Making Kennedy the school of choice. Excellence by design….

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