References and Resources
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Two books on
standards:
WILL STANDARDS SAVE PUBLIC EDUCATION?, a
short essay by Deborah Meier followed by comments from
other thinkers, published by Beacon Press; and
ONE SIZE FITS FEW: The Folly of Educational Standards,
by Susan Ohanian, published by Heinemann.
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A collection of essays
about the destructive effects of (and dubious intentions behind) NCLB:
MANY CHILDREN LEFT BEHIND (Beacon Press), with contributions
by Meier and Kohn as well as Ted Sizer, Linda
Darling-Hammond, George Wood, Stan Karp, and Monty Neill
of FairTest. Also on NCLB:
WHEN SCHOOL REFORM GOES WRONG by Nel Noddings (Teachers College Press); and
ENGLISH LEARNERS LEFT BEHIND: Standardized Testing as Language Policy by
Kate Menken (Multilingual Matters).
Also see NoChildLeft.com and this excellent
summary
of the law and its effects.
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Other books
about testing:
- Phillip Harris et al.,
The Myths of Standardized Tests (Rowman & Littlefield, 2011)
- Sharon L. Nichols & David C. Berliner,
Collateral Damage: How High-Stakes Testing Corrupts America's Schools
(Harvard Education Press, 2007)
- Sherman Dorn,
Accountability Frankenstein: Understanding & Taming the Monster
(Information Age, 2007)
- M. Gail Jones et al.,
The Unintended Consequences of High-Stakes Testing
(Rowman & Littlefield, 2003)
- Linda McNeil,
Contradictions of School Reform: Educational Costs of
Standardized Testing (Routledge, 2000)
- Marita Moll, ed.,
Passing the Test: The False Promises of Standardized
Testing (Canadian Centre for Policy
Alternatives, 2004)
- Kathy Swope and Barbara Miner, eds.,
Failing Our Kids: Why the Testing Craze Won't Fix Our
Schools (Rethinking Schools, 2000)
- Gary Orfield and Mindy L. Kornhaber, ed.,
Raising Standards or Raising Barriers?: Inequality
and High-Stakes Testing in Public Education
(Century Foundation Press, 2001)
- Peter Sacks, Standardized Minds (Perseus, 1999)
- W. James Popham, Testing! Testing!: What Every
Parent Should Know About School Tests (Allyn and
Bacon, 2000)
- Gerald Bracey, Put to the Test: An Educator's and
Consumer's Guide to Standardized Testing (Phi Delta
Kappa, 1998).
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A book about Nebraska's
recently aborted attempt to build assessment from the classroom up, thereby challenging
the top-down premise not only of NCLB but of the whole "accountability"
movement of which it's a part: Chris W. Gallagher,
Reclaiming Assessment:
A Better Alternative to the Accountability Agenda (Heinemann, 2007)
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Information from and
about FairTest, the leading national organization
offering a critical perspective on standardized testing.
Its website,
www.fairtest.org, includes an evaluation of every
state's testing policy and links to a listserv called
the Assessment Reform Network. A related group, the
Coalition for Authentic Reform in Education (CARE),
which opposes the new testing program in Massachusetts,
has drafted an
alternative assessment proposal -- a very useful
document for anyone who wonders (or is asked), "If not
standardized tests, then what?" For a more recent answer
to that question, see Ken Jones's article
"A
Balanced School Accountability Model: An Alternative to
High-Stakes Testing" in the April 2004 issue of
Phi Delta Kappan.
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A remarkable
collection of examples of, and essays about, the
destructive effects of standardized testing and related
policies at
www.susanohanian.org.
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A list of state and
national websites devoted to challenging the tests can
be found about halfway down the page devoted to
practical strategies. Note in particular a new (2011) group called "United
Opt Out National," with a website and
Facebook page, devoted to organizing people
to refuse to take the tests.
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Audio- and videotapes
of presentations by Alfie Kohn on these topics: click
here for more information.
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A powerful
study that
finds no evidence of improvement on national exams (such
as the NAEP and the SAT) for states that use high-stakes
testing. Rising scores on state tests appear to reflect
only training to do well on those particular tests;
indeed, by some measures, students in high-stakes states
actually fare worse on independent measures of
achievement.
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A devastating
analysis, based on the high-stakes TAAS test in Texas,
of how efforts to raise scores effectively undermine the
quality of teaching and learning -- and how this effect
is most pronounced in schools that serve poor and
minority students. This chapter, by Linda McNeil and
Angela Valenzuela, is included in the book mentioned
above,
Raising Standards or Raising Barriers?. For
the most comprehensive analysis of the effects of
testing in Texas, click
here to be linked to a lengthy article by Walt
Haney.
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Research
demonstrating that when teachers are held accountable
for raising standards and test scores, they tend to
become so controlling in their teaching style that the
quality of students' performance actually declines:
Flink et al., Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, vol. 59, 1990: 916-24.
Deci et al., Journal of Educational Psychology, vol. 74, 1982: 852-59.
Pelletier et al., Journal of Educational Psychology, vol. 94, 2002: 186-96.
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