Education
policymakers in the U.S. seem to think that more tests will produce higher
achievement, but there is no evidence for this assumption. As this article from the Center
on International Education Benchmarking shows, the U.S. tests more
frequently than any of the world’s high-performing nations.
Jackie
Kraemer writes:
“Unlike
the top-performing countries on the 2012 PISA, the United States stands out for
the amount of external testing it requires for all students. As the chart below
shows, the United States is the only country among this set to require annual
testing in primary and middle schools in reading and mathematics.
"In some of these cases, the secondary school exams are
used to determine placement in the next level of schooling such as in Singapore
and Shanghai where the lower school-leaving exam determines placement in upper
secondary school. And in Poland, Shanghai and Singapore the upper secondary
academic exam functions as an admission exam for university. This differs from
the United States where annual tests are used primarily for school and teacher
accountability purposes.”
“How
tests are used is also different among the high performers. South Korea and
Japan test only for diagnostic purposes in the primary schools, and South Korea
continues to test for diagnostic purposes through 10th grade.
"It is at the
secondary level that they introduce the high stakes exams for students, with
Japanese students required to take an entrance exam for upper secondary school
and students in both countries required to take tests at the end of upper
secondary school that will determine what kind of higher education institution
they can enter.
"These tests are recognized as very high pressure for students
and both countries are trying to address that issue. In both Korea and Japan,
some students enter a vocational training system at the upper secondary level
and take tests to qualify for vocational credentials rather than the tests for
entry into university.
“Hong
Kong and Finland have no required testing until the end of upper secondary
school. Taiwan is a bit of a hybrid, with no required testing in primary
school, but a Basic Competency Test at the end of lower secondary (along with
three required tests a year in each of three subjects during lower secondary)
that determines admission to upper secondary school.”
We
can’t test our way to success. The more time devoted to testing, the less time
available for instruction. tests are best used for diagnostic purposes. tests
with stakes attached are delayed in these nations until secondary schools. We
should learn from the leaders of the pack.