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13.6: Testing in Schools

  • Page ID
    228422
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    Children's academic performance is often measured with the use of standardized tests. Those tests include, but are not limited to Achievement and Aptitude tests.

    Four children seated at individual computers
    Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\): Standardized tests are used to measure academic performance.[1]

    Achievement tests are used to measure what a child has already learned. Achievement tests are often used as measures of teaching effectiveness within a school setting and as a method to make schools that receive tax dollars (such as public schools, charter schools, and private schools that receive vouchers) accountable to the government for their performance.

    California uses the California Assessment of Student Performance and Progress (CAASPP) System since 2014 to measure student academic achievement in public schools. Maybe you have taken some of these (or equivalent of these) tests when you were in grade school. There are tests administered in English Language Arts, Math and Science.

    Similarly other states use achievement tests in each of these areas to measure student performance at specific grade level intervals and check on teaching and learning in K-12 public schools.

    The term aptitude seems fairly simple conceptually, but is clearly difficult to test. How can you test whether someone has the potential for something if they have not yet developed it? What exactly would you be testing? And might those test scores be reflecting something other than pure potential? Could those test scores be influenced by familiarity with the test and learning strategies for how to take those tests? Conversely, might we be disadvantaging those students who do not have access to those strategies particularly because their parents do not have the means to send them to expensive classes to learn them? These are the kinds of questions that formed the basis of recent decisions by many US universities to no longer require SAT or ACT scores for admissions applications. Did you know that even before this year (and in fact for many years before this), many people did not know that the A in SAT stood for “aptitude.” The College Board had long since eliminated advertising this fact, precisely because of these questions raised here!

    Attributions:

    Child Growth and Development by Jennifer Paris, Antoinette Ricardo, and Dawn Rymond, 2019, is licensed under CC BY 4.0 (changes by Bhadha, 2023)

    [1] Image by Marine Corps Base Hawaii is in the public domain

    [2] Sociology: Brief Edition – Agents of Socialization by Steven E. Barkan is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 3.0

    California Assessment of Student Performance and Progress (CAASPP) System by the California Department of Education is in the public domain


    13.6: Testing in Schools is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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