What would you recommend happening if parents fail your weird social norms test? |
It sounds like you want (and need) tracking. If that’s the case, you should be screaming that from the rafters and making sure your union hears you, because most parents/voters would support that and there’s just a noisy minority who argues against it. By keeping quiet, you are allowing them to seem like the majority. Most of us can see that is completely unrealistic to expect teachers to teach 3 classes in 1 every single class, and yet that’s what’s happening. It’s ridiculous and I don’t know why more aren’t complaining. If teachers aren’t doing that, then some kids are being ignored. |
Ours' doesn't. The kids are obviously happy and learning though. They want to stay at school as long as possible, they get unhappy about being picked up early, they show off the schoolwork they bring home, make relevant comments about current events like different forms of government monarchy vs democracy vs republic in ways I didn't consider until much older. I'd say that they're learning better without the testing |
But you have no evidence of that. You may feel that the work your child brings home is impressive to you but how do you know they are learning sufficiently without comparison to some standard? I don’t know how old your child is, but my child was studying ancient Rome and writing essays comparing Augustus Caesar to Julius Caesar in 2nd grade. I didn’t do that until high school. But if I used his deeper history lessons as a standard, I would miss that he was falling behind in reading/math skills. Schools can easily impress some parents with their many words and selective content depth. It’s harder to explain away test scores in black and white. |
Yes, government won't tell you anything about reading or math, but that example was specific to government. Surely you can tell from the math they pull out in their day-to-day or from their homework how they're doing, or from the books they're reading? Many children who are rarely tested go on to lead bright futures, brighter than ones who are tested frequently. |
I’m sure the parents at this school thought their children were getting a basic education. That is until 100% failed the standardized test! Without that test, parents would have been kept in the dark. https://www.cbsnews.com/newyork/news/new-york-city-hasidic-schools-education/ |
This is simply not true. |
Do you want you kids in a classroom with kids who can't pass simple progress tests? If the school is filled with kids failing these tests, then I would look elsewhere for my kid regardless of the reasons for the scores |
How do you know that? Just because someone can flex their hours doesn't mean they don't work hard. |
Honestly with my own kids I look at how the older kids and alumni of the school are doing. If they’re going to a good mix of colleges and are doing well in life, then I don’t really mind how they would score on someone else’s idea of what they should be doing |
Most private schools give standardized testing every year, precisely so that parents can evaluate the effectiveness of the school and teachers. They juts don't make a big deal out of it, which I suspect actually allows the kids to do better than the hoopla that the public schools do. (I have one in each. I don't notice any significant difference in the amount of standardized testing. I do notice a *very* significant difference in the amount of discussion and drama surrounding testing.) |
Tests in publics can effects students more than privates. My kid is freaking out over IAATs because she wants to take algebra next year. This is a kid who get 100% on everything math related including SOLs, but she's slow at tests so she's freaking out. |
Why give a test, if you aren't going to do anything differently with the results? We have years and years of data on our students starting at Kindergarten saying they are behind where they should be, but nothing for those students ever changes. I don't have any problem with testing students to hold teachers accountable IF you let the teachers determine the curriculum and the method of teaching. As it is, my students do make substantial progress, but only because I pay lip service to the county selected teaching curriculum and methods, but actually teach in a way that I know to be effective. |
Do they report the scores of all students to parents, or just scores of the individual student? Can you see the test scores of the whole school as a member of the general public, or if you are thinking of sending your child to that school? |
Well, teachers work maybe 180 days a year and the ones my kid's have are out sick 3-4 days/month so at best work 160 days / year. I think it's hard for those of us who work closer to 250 days per year to feel badly. |