yf, I'd glad you're interested. I skipped a few details in my OP thinking no one would be interested, yet here you are.
The state standardized tests are pretty long, but not long enough to make all your tests from. Teachers have to give tests every few weeks (partly because students will forget things after too long, but also because the administration demands assessments, assessments, and more assessments). So what happens is, some chapter tests are standardized. The students do ok on these, since they've been prepped over and over for them. However, teachers need to make their own tests too, of course, and these were the ones I was originally referring to (where, if you require critical thinking, too many students fail).
> Perhaps the current standardized tests are a poor measure of performance.
They are a good measure of how well students perform on standardized tests.
> I can't see any reason why standardized tests would be worse than non-standardized ones.
Good teachers know how to ask good questions. Sometimes those questions change depending upon the students, any extra/different material covered in class, and so on. Regardless, good teachers can ask students to perform critical thinking and can tell if the student can really do it or not -- but it takes time. Administrators want lots of assessments. So many that good teachers will drown under all the grading if they are making students do real critical thinking and providing detailed assessments of it all.
> Additionally, teachers do not have the ability to "race to the bottom".
The forces in place now are resulting in bad patterns. Patterns like good teachers leaving, and the only ones staying are the ones willing to play the game and do all the assessments. "Race to the bottom" means teachers becoming robots who
* cover the required material ("electricity is movement of electrons!"),
* assign homework on it ("what is electricity?"),
* quiz on it ("is electricity, a. movement of protons, b. movement of neutrons, c..."),
* review it ("does everyone remember what electricity is?")
* test on it ("what is electricity? a. movement of electrons b. ..."),
then move on to the next topic. That's what standardized testing gets you and why it's a race to the bottom: find teachers who can shovel the most of that to the most students in the shortest amount of time and get the highest scores.
The state standardized tests are pretty long, but not long enough to make all your tests from. Teachers have to give tests every few weeks (partly because students will forget things after too long, but also because the administration demands assessments, assessments, and more assessments). So what happens is, some chapter tests are standardized. The students do ok on these, since they've been prepped over and over for them. However, teachers need to make their own tests too, of course, and these were the ones I was originally referring to (where, if you require critical thinking, too many students fail).
> Perhaps the current standardized tests are a poor measure of performance.
They are a good measure of how well students perform on standardized tests.
> I can't see any reason why standardized tests would be worse than non-standardized ones.
Good teachers know how to ask good questions. Sometimes those questions change depending upon the students, any extra/different material covered in class, and so on. Regardless, good teachers can ask students to perform critical thinking and can tell if the student can really do it or not -- but it takes time. Administrators want lots of assessments. So many that good teachers will drown under all the grading if they are making students do real critical thinking and providing detailed assessments of it all.
> Additionally, teachers do not have the ability to "race to the bottom".
The forces in place now are resulting in bad patterns. Patterns like good teachers leaving, and the only ones staying are the ones willing to play the game and do all the assessments. "Race to the bottom" means teachers becoming robots who
* cover the required material ("electricity is movement of electrons!"),
* assign homework on it ("what is electricity?"),
* quiz on it ("is electricity, a. movement of protons, b. movement of neutrons, c..."),
* review it ("does everyone remember what electricity is?")
* test on it ("what is electricity? a. movement of electrons b. ..."),
then move on to the next topic. That's what standardized testing gets you and why it's a race to the bottom: find teachers who can shovel the most of that to the most students in the shortest amount of time and get the highest scores.