Will standardized tests accurately assess students amid an unprecedented school year? Educators explain what they think should happen
News 12's Elizabeth Hashagen was joined by Dr. Robert Zywicki, the superintendent of Mount Olive Township School District, and Kara McCormick-Lyons, the president of the White Plains Teachers Association, to answer your standardized testing questions.
News 12's
Elizabeth Hashagen was joined by Dr. Robert Zywicki, the superintendent of
Mount Olive Township School District, and Kara McCormick-Lyons, the president
of the White Plains Teachers Association, to answer your standardized testing
questions.
The Biden
administration recently announced that students must take standardized tests
this school year. Will the test prep for students look the same this spring?
McCormick-Lyons
says test preparation needs to be different because of the hardships many
students have been through because of the pandemic. Dr. Zywicki also says his
schools are focusing on prioritizing the students’
wellbeing over preparation of standardized tests.
Can
standardized tests actually provide an accurate assessment of students,
especially in such a unique year for learning? Dr. Zywicki says he doesn’t
think so.
McCormick-Lyons
says she respects the choice of many parents opting their children out of
standardized tests, and she will be doing so
with her own children.
Has remote
learning not been as successful as in-person learning? McCormick-Lyons gives
her input below.
Should standardized
testing be eliminated altogether? Dr. Zywicki says he thinks they should be
because schools spend their own funds on internal assessments, making
standardized testing is unnecessary.
Do students
need a full year back in a traditional setting before any standardized
evaluations of schools start back up?
Dr. Zywicki
says students may even need two full years in a traditional setting before
things can start to look normal again. He also says the Department of Education
should send districts surveys about their finds of their own internal
assessments, instead of a one-size-fits-all all test for students.
Many parents
say students have had trouble learning from some teachers remotely.
McCormick-Lyons says it's important for parents to reach out to teachers to
discuss any difficulties. As well, she says teachers have had to pivot into a
new learning form and it is difficult to evaluate them off just remote
instruction.