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€uromeinke, FEJ. and Ghoulish Delight RULE!!! NA abides. |
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Beelzeboobs, Esq.
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Bias on standardized tests can sometimes be blatant.
This is an honest-to-goodness true story: In high school, during the first gulf war, we took some standardized test or another. Can't remember which one. I don't think it was the Iowa Test; I think it was some new one. It had lots of different sections, including current events. One question, I kid you not, was something to the effect of: "Why are American troops fighting in Kuwait?" Answers included: "To protect US oil interests" as well as "To spread democracy" I knew it was one of those two answers, but the "right" answer depended on who wrote the exam! As for the broader question: I don't think there's any magic bullet solution. To test a variety of different types of knowledge and thought processes, one should apply a variety of tests. Teachers should be given the freedom to assess student learning and to hold students back who have not mastered the skills of a given grade level. Sometimes I think the one-room schoolhouse folks had it right -- grades should be tied to skill mastery, not age.
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