If School Computer Use Reduces Standardized Test Scores, Doesn’t That Prove the Tests are Inadequate?
October 11, 2015 stevenmsinger Bill Gates, Budget,Common Core, computers, Corporate Education "Reform", School Funding,Schools, Standardized Testing,Technology, Toxic Testing#LetTeachersTeach,#StandUpForPublicSchools, annual testing, Apple, Bill Gates, Budget,common core, Computers, corporate,Corporate Education Reform, imovie,International, ipads, keynote, Mac,obsolete, OECD, pages, PISA, public schools, school funding,standardization, standardized testing,standards, technology
Melvin’s hand is up.
He’s a 13-year-old African American with too much energy and not enough self-control.
He’s often angry and out of his seat. He’s usually in trouble. But today he’s sitting forward in his chair with his hand raised high and a look on his face like he’ll explode if I don’t pick him right this second.
So I do.
“Mr. Singer! Can I show myimovie now!?”
This is a first. He hasn’t turned in a lick of homework all month.
“Wow! You’re really excited about this, aren’t you?” I say.
“Yeah,” he responds. “I was up all night finishing it.”
I start to doubt this, but he does look awfully tired underneath that urgent need to share.
“Airdrop it to me from youripad,” I say, “and I’ll put it up on the SMART Board.”
This takes a few minutes.
Let’s face it.
We live in a world of high technology.
Our cell phones have more computing power than the Apollo missions to the moon.
The best, high paying jobs opening up on the world stage require increasing levels of computer literacy.
Yet according to a new study, America’s students don’t succeed as well academically if they have access to computers at school.
How can this be?
How can exposure to new technologies cause a nation of young people to fail at a system supposedly designed to prepare them for the jobs of the future?
Doesn’t real world experience usually make you betterprepared?
A future chef would be helped by more time in the kitchen.
A future doctor would be helped by more access to dissection.
But a future computer-user is hurt by more time at a computer!?
Something is very wrong here.
But according to a new study by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), students who use computers more at school earn both lower reading and math scores on theProgram for International Student Assessment (PISA).
The organization studied 15-year-olds across 31 nations and regions from 2012. The study just released in Septembereven controlled for income and race.
Yet here in my classroom I see the exact opposite. Computer use increases my students test scores – on my teacher-created tests.
Melvin’s movie was ready. He had been tasked with explaining the differences between external and internal conflict. I pressed play.
High adrenaline music poured from the speakers. Pictures flashed across the screen of boxers and football players.
“This is external conflict,” came rushing forward followed by a brief definition. Then an image of Homer Simpson with an angel and devil on his shoulders. “This is internal conflict,” came zooming by our eyes.
The film might not win any Academy Awards, but it was pretty impressive work for 40 minutes of class time and however long Melvin decided to spend at home.
It’s the kind of thing my students never could have done before they each had ipads. And when they took my test, few of them got the questions wrong about conflict.
Yet according to the OECD, I was somehow hurting my students academically!?
Even in my high poverty district, students have always had access to technology. But the nature of that technology and how we use it has changed dramatically this school year.
I used to have eight computers in my classroom, but they were slowly becoming obsolete and inoperable. Some days they functioned best as extra illumination if we shut out the overhead light to show a movie.
Still, I tried to incorporate technology into my lessons. I used to have my students make their own Webpages, butreserving time in the computer lab became almost impossible. And even then, the district couldn’t afford to keep the devices in the lab updated enough to run anything but the most rudimentary software.
The one lab in the building that had new devices was reserved almost exclusively for a drill and kill test prep program we had received a state grant to operate. THIS was the apex of school technology – answering multiple choice look-a-like questions. It bored students to tears and didn’t even accomplish the stipulated goal of increasing standardized test scores. Yet we wereblackmailed by the state government into initiating the program so we could gain additional funding to keep the school operational.
THIS is the kind of technology use you’ll find at most poor schools like mine. And it’s one of the reasons the authors ofthe OECD study came to their conclusion. It’s also one of the reasons why teachers like me have been skeptical of technological initiativesoffered to impoverished districts.
However, the best use of technology is something quite different.
This year my district received a gift of ipads for all the students, and it’s changed everything. No longer do I have to beg and plead to get computer lab time for real high tech lessons. I don’t need it. The technology is already in the classroom in the palm of their hands.
But policymakers clutching their pearls because of this study have already began to make changes to international school curriculum. Schools in Asia have begun cutting back on student computer time. Should America follow suit?
Absolutely not.
The problem clearly is not computers. It’s the antiquated method we use to measure success.
Standardized testing has been around since 206 BC as an assessment for civil servants in ancient China. The same process spread to England in the 19th Century and then to the United States during WWI. Through all that time, the main process of rewarding rote learning through multiple choice questioning has remained the same.
But the world hasn’t. We’ve moved on a bit since the Han Dynasty. We no longer live in a medieval society of peasants and noblemen where the height of technology is anabacus. We live in an ever-changing interconnected global community where a simple search engine provides more information than could be stored in a thousandLibraries at Alexandria.
How can we possibly hope to rely on the same assessments as the ancients? Heck! Even as far back as 970 AD, standardized testing was criticized as being inadequate.
But a global multi-billion dollar industry relies on these primitive assessments. It’s the basis of an exceedingly lucrative business model.
So it shouldn’t be surprising that the same people who promise standardized testing and Common Core will best prepare students to be college and career ready are passing the blame.
They claim this report isn’t an indictment of their cash cow industry. It’s a warning againstover-reliance on computers. And, yes, they’re right thattechnology is not a panacea. The mere presence of a computer won’t make a child smarter. Likewise, the mere presence of a book won’t make a person wiser. One must know how to use said computer and book.
But what I’m seeing in my classroom primarily is an opportunity – not a danger. Students like Melvin are more engaged and willing to take chances. They have greater freedom, intrinsic motivation and excitement about learning.
Many times when sharingKeynote presentations, after one or two, students ask to have their work back so they can improve them. That doesn’t happen with test prep.
They often elect to take ipad assignments to lunch and work on them between bites. That doesn’t happen with Pearsonworksheets.
I’m not saying it’s easy. It’s up to me, my colleagues and administration to ensure technology is used to its full potential. Never should these devices be time fillers or babysitters. Nor can they ever replace the guidance of a thoughtful, creative educator to determine their best use. Teachers need to create and assign lessons that promote creativity and critical thinking skills.
Education professionals are constantly advised toindividualize their lessons to meet the needs of diverse learners. Technology allows them a unique opportunity to do so. With district ipads I can talk to an English Language Learner in his own language. A struggling reader can have the device read test questions aloud. A student with poor motor control can type journal responses and have his writing be understood.
And these opportunities for enrichment don’t even need to be planned ahead of time. For instance, when discussing a short story about a character that was exceedingly proud, one of my students brought up the Seven Deadly Sins. She wasn’t exactly sure what they were or how exactly they related to pride, but one of her classmates quickly looked it up on her ipad. Then another found a medieval woodcarvingto which someone else found a related manga text. The subsequent discussion was much deeper and relevant to these children’s lives than it would have been otherwise. And none of it was pre-packed, planned or standardized. It was individualized.
This is really no surprise. Administrators in charter orprivate schools aren’t asking themselves if they should close their computer labs and put their devices on ebay. They know the value technology can provide in the classroom, but they aren’t constrained by high stakes testing.
Even rich public schools don’t have to worry to the same degree because their students already score well on federally mandated assessments – after all, standardized tests aredesigned to favor children with wealthy parents over those from impoverished or minority backgrounds. It’s only in poor school districts where technology is either second hand or a charitable donation that administrators and school directors are being pressured to cut back.
As usual, best practices for the privileged become questionable when applied to the poor and minorities. You want technology? Prove it will boost your test scores!
It’s nonsense.
Think about it. Even the best use of computers won’t boost standardized scores. Computer skills aren’t on the tests.
Knowing how to pick themost reliable sources on the internet – not on the test. Creating a presentationthrough imovie, keynote, powerpoint, pages, word or notes – not on the test. Project-based learning – not on the tests. Critical thinking – not on the tests. Nor could these things ever be assessed effectively in this manner.
Yet such skills are exactly what education researchers tell usdemonstrate the deepest levels of understanding and an ability to meet the demands of the best jobs of the future.
I wonder what Bill Gates thinks of this report. The Microsoft co-founder is also one of the biggest advocates for school standardization. If he had to pick between his two favorite children, which would he choose – laptops or Common Core tests? Maybe we needn’t wonder. His own children go to a private school with no standardization and a plethora of technology.
There comes a time when you have to admit the truth staring you in the face: standardized tests are poor measures of academic achievement. They are suitable only for turning our children into factory drones. They are for pawns, patsies and robots.
If we really want to prepare the next generation for the jobs of the future, we need to scrap high stakes testing. We need to invest in MORE technology, not less. We need to ensure technological lessons are being overseen by trained educators and the devices aren’t used as a babysitting tool. As such, we need to provide teachers with support and professional development so they can best take advantage of the technology they have.
America can prepare its children for the world’s high level management and administrative positions or we can prepare them to do only menial work that will soon by replaced by machines.
Computers do the former. Tests the latter.
Choose.