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Talking to Your Child's Teacher About Standardized TestsAuthor: Carolyn Boccella |
CreditsSourceERIC ContentsWhat Are Standardized Tests?Why Do Schools Use Standardized Tests? How Do Schools Use Standardized Tests? How Can You Help Your Child? What Should You Ask Your Child's Teacher? Where Can You Go for More Information? References ForumsEducation and KidsRelated ArticlesWhat Should Parents Know About Standardized Testing In Schools?On Standardized Testing |
Teachers learn about students by using a variety of methods. They assess students by:
This digest highlights one tool that teachers use--standardized tests. It explains basic features of testing and suggests questions that you might ask your child's teacher. By understanding the role of testing, you can help your child succeed in school and can develop a better relationship among you, your child, and your child's school. What Are Standardized Tests?Standardized tests are designed to give a common measure of students' performance. Since the same test is given to large numbers of students throughout the country, a common yardstick or "standard" of measure can be derived to tell evaluators whether school programs are succeeding or to give them a picture of the skills and abilities of today's students.Standardized tests are objective tests that are usually created by commercial test publishers. Some names of standardized tests that you may be familiar with include the California Achievement Tests (the CAT), the Stanford Achievement Test (the SAT), the Iowa Test of Basic Skills (the ITBS), or the Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale, to name a few popular tests. Why Do Schools Use Standardized Tests?Standardized tests can help teachers and administrators make decisions. They help schools to measure how students in a given class, school, or school system perform in relation to other students who take the same test. Using the results from these tests, teachers and administrators can evaluate the school system, a school program, or a particular student.Schools do not use standardized tests to label students as incapable of learning, to place students in a grade or class, to give report card grades, or to evaluate teachers. How Do Schools Use Standardized Tests?Different types of standardized tests have different purposes. Standardized achievement tests measure how much students have already learned about a school subject. The results from these tests can help teachers develop programs that suit students' achievement levels in each subject area, such as reading, math, language skills, spelling, or science. Standardized aptitude tests measure students' abilities to learn in school -- how well students are likely to do in future school work. They do not measure subjects taught in school, but rather they measure a broad range of bilities or skills that are considered important to succeed in school. The results from aptitude tests help teachers to plan instruction that is neither too hard nor too easy for students. These tests can measure verbal ability, mechanical ability, creativity, clerical ability, or abstract reasoning. Remember that standardized tests have limitations. They are not the perfect measure of what individual students can or cannot do. Paper tests cannot measure everything that students learn. Also, your child's scores on a particular test can vary from day to day and many factors can affect a particular score -- whether your child guesses, receives clear direction, follows the directions carefully, is comfortable, and so forth. |
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How Can You Help Your Child?Here are a few tips to remember:
What Should You Ask Your Child's Teacher?Before the test...
Where Can You Go for More Information?This digest highlights some important points about testing; it doesn't tell you all there is to know about standardized tests and test results. For more detailed information about testing, you may want to contact these organizations:
American Federation of Teachers
ERIC Clearinghouse on Assessment and Evaluation
National Education Association
National Congress of Parents and Teachers ReferencesAnastasi, Anne. Psychological Testing. New York: MacMillan Publishing Co., Inc., 1982.Herndon, Enid B. Your Child and Testing. Pueblo: Colorado: Consumer Information Center, October 1980. Illinois State Board of Education. Assessment Handbook: A Guide for Assessing Illinois Students. 1988. National School Public Relations Association. A Parent's Guide to Standardized Aptitude and Achievement Testing. Arlington, Virginia: NSPRA, 1978.
Weinstein, Claire E. et al. How to Help Your Children Achieve in School. Washington, DC: The National Institute of Education, March 1983. For More Information Contact:
ERIC Clearinghouse on Assessment and Evaluation CreditsTHIS DIGEST WAS CREATED BY ERIC, THE EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES INFORMATION CENTER. FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT ERIC, CONTACT ACCESS ERIC 1-800-LET-ERIC Back to the Top |