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Rational responses to high stakes testing: the case of curriculum narrowing and the harm that follows
434
Citations
18
References
2011
Year
Curriculum InquiryEducational PsychologyEducationTest ScoresPsychologyProgram EvaluationTeacher EducationClassroom AssessmentLearning SciencesTest DevelopmentEducational TestingCurriculum NarrowingValidity TheoryEducational StatisticsEducational MeasurementCurriculum DevelopmentCurriculumPerformance StudiesRational ResponsesStudent AssessmentSecondary EducationHigher Education AssessmentEducational EvaluationEducational AssessmentEducation PolicyHigh Stakes
High‑stakes testing drives cheating, gaming, and especially curriculum narrowing, a rational response that focuses teaching on test content at the expense of broader learning. Curriculum narrowing limits students’ perceived talent, curtails creative and enjoyable teacher and student activities, hampers thinking skills, retards later achievement, undermines construct validity, and ultimately deprives students and economies of essential 21st‑century skills.
The inevitable responses to high stakes testing, wherein students’ test scores are highly consequential for teachers and administrators, include cheating, excessive test preparation, changes in test scoring and other forms of gaming to ensure that test scores appear high. Over the last decade this has been demonstrated convincingly in the USA, but examples in Great Britain abound. Yet the most pernicious response to high stakes testing is perhaps the most rational, namely, curriculum narrowing. In this way more of what is believed to be on the test is taught. Curriculum narrowing, however, reduces many students’ chances of being thought talented in school and results in a restriction in the creative and enjoyable activities engaged in by teachers and students. The tests commonly used with narrower curricula also appear to restrict thinking skills. In addition, responses to high stakes environments can easily retard the development of achievement in later grades as a function of the restrictions on learning in earlier grades. Finally, narrowing compromises interpretations of construct validity. The dominance of testing as part of American and British school reform policies insures that many of the skills thought to be most useful in the twenty-first century will not be taught. Thus students and their national economies will suffer when nations rely too heavily on high stakes testing to improve their schools.
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