Folks:
The posting below is the seventh in the monthly series called
Carnegie Foundation Perspectives. These short commentaries exploring
various educational issues are produced by the Carnegie Foundation
for the Advancement of Teaching http://www.carnegiefoundation.org.
The Foundation invites your response at: CarnegiePresident@carnegiefoundation.org.
Regards,
Rick Reis reis@stanford.edu
UP NEXT: Contingent Faculty and Student Learning: Welcome to
the Strativersity
Tomorrow's Teaching and Learning
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TEACHING TO THE TEST
April 2004 By Lloyd Bond
A recurring criticism of tests used in high-stakes decision making
is that they distort instruction and force teachers to "teach
to the test." The criticism is not without merit. The public
pressure on students, teachers, principals, and school superintendents
to raise scores on high-stakes tests is tremendous, and the temptation
to tailor and restrict instruction to only that which will be
tested is almost irresistible.
Although many view teaching to the test as an all or none issue,
in practice it is actually a continuum. At one extreme, some teachers
examine the achievement objectives as described in their state's
curriculum and then design instructional activities around those
objectives. This is done without regard to a particular test.
At the other extreme is the unsavory and simply dishonest practice
of drilling students on the actual items that will appear on the
tests.
In addition to offending our moral sense, teaching the actual
items on a test (what James Popham calls "item teaching")
is counter-productive for the very practical reason that it makes
valid inferences about student achievement almost impossible.
There is nothing special about the set of words that happens to
appear on a given vocabulary test. We assume that the words are
a sample from a larger population of words, and we want to infer
something about the students' knowledge of this larger set, their
general vocabulary. In like manner, we want to infer that students
can solve not only the particular set of math problems on a test,
but that they can solve an entire class of problems. Drilling
students on a specific set of test items destroys our ability
to generalize to this larger domain.
But is teaching to the test all bad? Emphatically not. Consider
the coach who drills young athletes on the very skills they will
perform in competition, or the typing instructor who teaches students
precisely the finger arrangements and keystrokes that will be
used in typing. These practices are not seen as unethical or unsavory
for the simple reason that in these two domains instruction and
assessment merge into a single activity. Indeed, instructing students
on anything other than the actual test itself seems illogical.
The above two examples are so obvious as to be trivial. But more
significant illustrations of the issues are easy to find. In the
ambitious New Standards Project, a national initiative that regularly
brought teachers together from around the country to learn techniques
for integrating instruction and assessment, participating teachers
learned to literally merge these two activities in such a way
that they were indistinguishable. Lauren Resnick of the University
of Pittsburgh, one of the visionaries behind the project, noted
that rather than bemoan the inclination to teach to the test,
we should take advantage of it. We should make exercises so compelling,
and so powerful as exemplars of a domain, that honing one's ability
to solve them represents generalizable learning and achievement.
Viewed in this light, teaching to the test is no longer vaguely
disreputable because the skills and knowledge are themselves general
and are the very things we wish students to acquire.
In his senior level psychology course on learning at the University
of Nebraska, professor Dan Bernstein (now at the University of
Kansas) was disappointed in the level of understanding of key
concepts that his students displayed. He decided that the fault
might not lie entirely in his students, but in the way he approached
both instruction and assessment. Over the next few years, he changed
his assessment from short abstract essay questions to problems
that asked students to apply concepts in new contexts; added out-of-class
questions about the readings to free up class time for discussion;
and provided web-based examples of responses to test problems,
so that students could learn to identify what makes some answers
better than others. In short, Professor Bernstein merged instruction
and assessment in such a way that "teaching to the test"
became an integral part of his craft. The reader is invited to
examine his approach in detail at his online teaching portfolio.
In its program of advanced teacher certification, The National
Board for Professional Teaching Standards encourages certification
candidates to practice putting together portfolios. They urge
candidates to get suggestions and critical feedback from their
colleagues and from others who have gone through the process.
Candidates are encouraged to study excellent teachers and how
they think, write about, and reflect upon their work. The National
Board advises candidates to take several videotapes of their own
teaching, to think about and write critically and reflectively
about what they see. Teachers are encouraged to anticipate the
difficulties students will have with various concepts and how
to structure and sequence instruction to minimize these difficulties.
In essence, the National Board encourages teachers to practice
and hone the very things they will be tested on.
There is a lesson here for teachers and assessment specialists
alike. The tension between the instructional and assessment communities,
as well the pejorative connotations that "teaching to the
test" entails, will continue unabated so long as testing
and assessment are seen as something quite apart from instruction
and learning, rather than an integrated reflection of what was
intentionally taught. To paraphrase A. G. Rud of Purdue University,
what is needed is a deliberate attempt on the part of all parties
to link curriculum, instruction, assessment, and standards in
a more generative and even transparent way.
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Carnegie Perspectives is a series of commentaries that explore
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