Kitsap Sun

Are standardiz­ed tests measure of all things?

- Jim Behrend Guest column

As reliably as Persephone returns from Hades every Spring to spread light and rebirth, standardiz­ed tests emerge from another Netherworl­d to spread stress and fear.

Since business CEOs, politician­s and the media have for years bemoaned Washington’s low math and language test score, Olympia passed in 1993 the Washington Legislatur­e’s Reform Act,and WASL in 1997, to improve learning outcomes. WASL changed to HSPE exams, then SBAC, and now to SBA. In 2014, Senate Bill 5246 even required schools to make test scores a component of teacher evaluation.

But neither reforms nor standardiz­ed tests resulted in higher academic performanc­es. Math SAT scores remained unchanged, hovered around 502 to 508 out of 800, from 1963 to 2023.

In 2015, “about half of Washington’s 11th graders refused to take the federally mandated SBAC tests” and, between 2011 and 2023, many students in various states refused to take standardiz­ed tests.

An unhappy Seattle Times columnist, Danny Westneat, wrote an open letter to the Secretary of Education about the “mostly pointless federally mandated” tests and suggested to “take your No Child Left Behind law and shove it”. Ouch! A guest columnist of the Kitsap Sun referred to standardiz­ed tests as “stress and torture”.

Are standardiz­ed tests really the measure of a student’s progress, knowledge, and potential? Of course not. Unfortunat­ely, as a teacher, I too had to teach-tothe-test. AP classes are the ultimate high stakes test classes and I “trained” my AP students with monthly trial tests for the national finals. We all were a wreck at test day, because the May exam determines whether or not the students get college credits. “Standardiz­ed tests take up weeks of instructio­n time” complained a fellow teacher in a Kitsap Sun opinion column published in 2021, and test anxiety can skew a test.

In 2024 the Oregon School Board of Education removed proof of mastery in math, reading and writing to graduate from high schools, because not all kids start school at he same academic level.

Former Seattle school board member Donald Nielsen wrote in his book “Every School,“that “all children are different, and all children have different learning needs and interests . . . but we expect the same learning outcome . . . this rigid approach has never worked. It’s insane”.

I can relate. During my very first year of teaching, I had, in one class, 11 out of 30 sophomores testing below 8th grade in reading and writing.

Albert Einstein reminisced: “School failed me and I failed the school . . . I wanted to learn what I wanted to know, but the teachers wanted me to learn for the exam.” Steven Jobs complained that schools “came really close to beating any curiosity out of me”. And Ian Engelbeck, an high school student, suggested in a Seattle Times guest column that “students should craft their

has given way to quantum mechanics.

Will we ever empiricall­y determine how we’re connected to the cosmos? Probably not this side of the grave. But in the meanwhile, I believe we’re meant to focus on the here and now and to trust that whatever comes after death is for the best. As Archangel Raphael has occasion to admonish Adam in “Paradise Lost”: “Heaven is for thee / Too high to know what passes there; be lowly wise.” Considerin­g how organized religion has time and again led to conflict in this world, I think that’s good advice.

An Afterword. I’ve gone on record as doubting we have a personal God we can pray to. But I’m hedging my bets. I often pray as the late, great Warren Zevon has instructed us to do: “”Don’t let us get sick, don’t let us get [act?] old / Don’t let us get stupid, all right? / Just make us behave and make us play nice / And let us be together tonight.”

“Don’t Let Us Get Sick” is the title of the song in which the prayer is found. It also contains a stanza that speaks to my condition: “I’m lucky to be here / With someone I like / Who maketh my spirit to shine.” Enough said.

If there really are saints, I nominate Warren.

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