Behold a Failed Horse

in #education6 years ago

"I have never let my schooling interfere with my education" - Mark Twain

Behold a Failed Horse

Are Educational Standards Measurable Over Time?

There are good arguments for public education. There are also good arguments for mandatory education. But, as the humilitainment trend seems to highlight, putting the two of them together as "mandatory public education" appears to be a singularly poor idea. But why? As the research of Gatto and Iserbyt have detailed in depth, mandatory public education is about indoctrination and control, not education and empowerment.

This post was originally inspired by the desire to know just how much educational standards have changed over time. I believed it might be possible to determine this based on the difficulty of standardized testing over time. By comparing testing difficulty over time, I hypothesized, it would be possible to determine if educational standards were flat, increasing, decreasing or perhaps laterally transformative (i.e. equally difficult with a different focus or applying different scoring or weighting criteria).

Many educators will relate, based on their own experience, observe that educational standards have decreased over time. Further, the increased emphasis on standardized testing means that isolated knowledge sets are more important in modern testing than the ability to apply critical thinking skills, making schooling success about memorization and regurgitation, not competency. (Note, I do not say educational success, but schooling success, because education and schooling are two very different things.)

I am of the opinion that standardized testing doesn't actually measure educational quality. There is a wealth of literature to support this perspective, but given the argument from the other side of the aisle on this topic that standardized testing is the only reliable metric, I considered it worth at least trying to investigate the changes in testing over time to see if there was a noticeable change in competency at an intergenerational level.

I considered this worth doing because there are a number of old exams floating around the internet being used as examples of how educational standards have decreased over time. The most popular are an 8th grade exam from 1912(included at the end of this post) and an 8th grade exam from 1895, both of which use terminology that is unfamiliar to many although the concepts are familiar when expressed differently. Are they then really evidence of reduced standards?

The best way to investigate this topic, I postulated, was to examine the changes in standardized testing difficulty over time. I was surprised how, despite almost endless qualitative articles on how standardized tests like the SAT and GRE were changing in difficulty, I was unable to identify any quantitative research addressing standardized testing difficulty over time. There were however a number of discussions as to why comparing standardized testing difficulty over time is invalid.

If it isn't possible to compare the difficulty of testing over time, how are we to know the actual results of the education system over time in any reliable way? If the ideal is that each generation enjoys greater competency than the previous, how are we to ascertain if our education system is fulfilling its function? Given there are no quantitative metrics and only qualitative descriptions of changes, I asked myself if there was any way to approximately determine the current state of affairs without instituting a large scale study.

My work around was to compare reading, math and science scores over time with dropout rates. This is, admittedly, not reliable in the sense that it is a quantitative and qualitative study that examines test books over the years and establishes a baseline against which change can be measured. It does however allow us to compare scores (competency) to failure rates (dropout rates). There are of course factors other than exam difficulty that contribute to dropout rates, but the general trend may allow us to gain a general impression of competency over time.

As we can see in the graphic below, reading, math and science scores were either flat or negative from 1970 to 2012. For over 40 years, math and reading scores appear relatively flat, though we may speculate an increase of ca. 1%. Science scores are only available through ca. 2000, but show a noticeable decrease of ca. 5% overall.

In order to compare resources invested vs. these results, note the skyrocketing increase in total costs (adjusted for inflation), the modest increase in enrollment of ca. 10%, and the impressive bloat in the number of employees (almost doubling), the majority of which are non-teachers.

The next graphic shows dropout percentages in various ethnic populations over time from 1966 to 2014. Notable is that all populations have experienced more than a 50% decrease in dropouts. How is it possible to have reduced dropout rates if achievement in reading, math and science is net negative since 1970? There are certainly other contributing factors, but it appears relatively clear that educational standards have decreased significantly over time.

This result suggests that the schooling system as it exists today is failing our children more than our children are failing it. If the objective of our schooling system is supposed to be to educate children to be better informed, more competent and more productive than their parent's generation, to give them a steed, if you will, to carry them into a more successful future, well... behold a failed horse.

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All of the eighth grade students I taught would fail that test. Standardized tests are bad because they make you teach to the test and ignore everything else and the material on the test is not all that important or useful. Also if you put any sort of incentives or punishments on the teachers then they will cheat almost 100% of the time. If the choice is between helping a couple of kids pass and losing your job teachers and administrators consistently choose the former. I bet they didn't spend much money hiring diversity coordinators back in the day.

I agree. Standardized testing is not about developing a well-rounded knowledge base and critical thinking skills. As I am fond of saying, educational standards and standardized testing are less about mandating what students must learn than determining what teachers won't have time to teach. A perfect example is that less than one person in a thousand graduates from high school knowing how the monetary system actually works despite it being perhaps the most influential external factor in every single person's life (not that one in a thousand teachers understands it, but I hope you get my point).

I also agree that teachers and administrators will cheat for their schools or students so as not to be defunded by poor results on standardized tests. There are actually a number of such instances that have reached the press, one of the largest of which was in Atlanta, spurring an investigation that revealed widespread teacher cheating on standardized exams in at least 39 states.. I considered including that aspect in my contribution above, but have been trying to keep my posts short and on point - the cartoon I would have included if I had?


source

Thanks for your reply and thoughtful commentary!

it's my pleasure

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I remember taking the ACT in high school and thinking that it didn't really test my ability or competency in determining how well I could do in colleague. In fact, I'm a crappy standardized test taker even when I have studied for them. I always get average scores, yet, I've done well in college.

My engineering bachelor degree got more difficult as I progressed through it, yet I did better grade wise. I ended up with a 3.334 gpa out of 4, a solid B+ for a tough degree.

In engineering grad school I did absolutely average on the GRE. The result was a gpa of 3.87 out of 4 in top engineering graduate program.

Then I took the GMAT for business school and again did dead average on it. Yet, I completed the 17 month program at a big 10 university in Michigan, while working as a full time engineer and finished with a 3.6 our of 4.

What say ye about the value of standardized tests? What purpose do they fulfill? I would argue they are used only because it provide a single simple number that is damn easy to filter people with. But what good is a filter if it does a shitty job of correlating to the success of the student and its educational performance... You risk filtering out people who could end up doing well and achieving great things in that field when they enter the job market.

I agree standardized testing is about providing a filter that focuses on a very, very limited set of skills. We all have our own talents and very few of them are actually useful in a school setting.



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Awesome comic! Boy does that make your point.

@cupidzero you were flagged by a worthless gang of trolls, so, I gave you an upvote to counteract it! Enjoy!!

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