
Students,
parents and teachers have long lamented the hours that kids spend
taking standardized tests, especially since the introduction of the
Common Core academic standards. But just how much time each year is it?
A. Between 10-15 hours.
B. Between 20-25 hours.
C. Between 30-35 hours.
The
correct answer is “B,” according to a comprehensive study of 66 of the
nation’s big-city school districts by the Council of the Great City
Schools. It said testing amounts to about 2.3 percent of classroom time
for the average eighth-grader in public school. Between pre-K and 12th
grade, students took about 112 mandatory standardized exams.
The
study analyzed the time spent actually taking the tests, but it did not
include the hours devoted to preparation ahead of the testing required
by the federal government, states or local districts. It also did not
include regular day-to-day classroom quizzes and tests in reading, math,
science, foreign languages and more.
In
connection with the study’s release Saturday, President Barack Obama
called for capping standardized testing at 2 percent of classroom time.
Even while acknowledging that the government shares some responsibility
for an over-emphasis on testing, the president said federal officials
would work with states, schools and teachers to “make sure that we’re
not obsessing about testing.”
The
Obama administration still supports annual standardized tests as a
necessary assessment tool, and both House and Senate versions of an
update to the No Child Left Behind law would continue annual testing.
But the rewrite legislation would let states decide how to use test
results to determine what to do with struggling schools. Differences
between the two bills still need to be worked out.
“Learning
is about so much more than just filling in the right bubble,” Obama
said in a video released on Facebook. “So we’re going to work with
states, school districts, teachers, and parents to make sure that we’re
not obsessing about testing.”
To
drive the point home, Obama and Education Secretary Arne Duncan
scheduled an Oval Office meeting Monday with teachers and school
officials working to reduce testing time.
“How
much constitutes too much time is really difficult to answer,” said
Michael Casserly, the council’s executive director. He said the study
found plenty of redundancy in required testing — supporting concerns
from teachers and other critics about the tests consuming too much
teaching and learning time.
For
example, Casserly said that researchers found some states and school
districts were mandating not only end-of-year tests, but end-of-course
tests in the same subjects, in the same grade.
“Having
states and school districts jointly reviewing redundancy and overlap in
their testing requirements will be an important step in reducing
unnecessary assessments,” he said.
The council reviewed testing for more than 7 million students in about three dozen states during the 2014-2015 school year.
A “testing action plan” released by the Education Department over the weekend said too many schools have unnecessary testing.
The
department pledged to work with states and schools on ways to reduce
time spent on testing, with federal guidance to the states expected in
January. The plan also said the agency has adjusted its policies to
provide more flexibility to states on how much significance to place on
student test results in evaluating teachers.
Aiming
to close achievement gaps and assess learning, the No Child Left Behind
Act signed by President George W. Bush in 2002 mandated annual testing
in reading and math for students in grades three through eight and again
in high school. States and local school districts decide which
standardized assessments to use to gauge student learning and progress
in those two subjects and others.
This
past spring saw the rollout of new tests based on the Common Core
college-ready academic standards in reading and math. About 12 million
students in 29 states and the District of Columbia took the tests
developed by two groups — the Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium and
the Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers
(PARCC).
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