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The Testing Charade

Pretending to Make Schools Better: Pretending to Make Schools Better

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available


For decades we've been studying, experimenting with, and wrangling over different approaches to improving public education, and there's still little consensus on what works, and what to do. The one thing people seem to agree on, however, is that schools need to be held accountable—we need to know whether what they're doing is actually working. But what does that mean in practice?

High-stakes tests. Lots of them. And that has become a major problem. Daniel Koretz, one of the nation's foremost experts on educational testing, argues in The Testing Charade that the whole idea of test-based accountability has failed—it has increasingly become an end in itself, harming students and corrupting the very ideals of teaching. In this powerful polemic, built on unimpeachable evidence and rooted in decades of experience with educational testing, Koretz calls out high-stakes testing as a sham, a false idol that is ripe for manipulation and shows little evidence of leading to educational improvement. Rather than setting up incentives to divert instructional time to pointless test prep, he argues, we need to measure what matters, and measure it in multiple ways—not just via standardized tests.

Right now, we're lying to ourselves about whether our children are learning. And the longer we accept that lie, the more damage we do. It's time to end our blind reliance on high-stakes tests. With The Testing Charade, Daniel Koretz insists that we face the facts and change course, and he gives us a blueprint for doing better.

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    • Library Journal

      September 15, 2017

      For decades, the focus of the American education system has been on high-stakes tests with policies attached that have forced schools to take drastic measures to keep scores up. Koretz (Henry Lee Shattuck Professor of Education, Harvard Graduate Sch. of Education; Measuring Up) breaks down the simplistic thinking of testing culture to shed light on the ways in which educational reform has gone horribly wrong. Illustrating how exams create an atmosphere ripe for cheating, how the concentration on test prep has supplanted a focus on real learning, and how teachers are unfairly judged by test results, Koretz uses real-world examples as well as analogies from other industries to convey his arguments. This zeroing in on the grand failures of the testing culture highlights the most egregious abuses yet skims over some of the complexities of the issues. However, his points are sound, and his arguments convincingly presented. The two final chapters present solid principles for change that are then translated into actions for a new testing paradigm. VERDICT For readers who want to delve into testing-based accountability systems, why they have failed, and how educators can generate change.--Rachel Wadham, Brigham Young Univ. Libs., Provo, UT

      Copyright 2017 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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