Saturday, October 8, 2016

Testing

Assessment and evaluation in early childhood education has a variety of benefits. Assessment can support young children on a grand scale, like in program planning and research, and on an individual basis, like when children are diagnostically evaluated or identified for health and social services (Wortham, 2012). It also helps with accountability standards for schools, teachers, and individual students (Wortham, 2012). Assessment of young children began with Johann Pestalozzi and the child study movement, where children began to be seen as individuals rather than "pre-adults" (Berger, 2016; Wortham, 2012). It evolved as programs like Head Start and federal legislation for children with disabilities attempted to level the playing field for children. According to Wortham (2012), testing should use multiple sources of information, benefit the child and improve learning, involve the child and family, and be fair for all children. Wortham also outlines 9 principles for assessment of young children:
Assessment is ongoing
Assessment focuses on progress
There is a contextual framework for understanding the results
Methods of assessment are appropriate
Assessment includes scaffolded experiences
Assessment involves familial input
Assessments are tailored to a purpose
Major decisions do not rely on assessment results alone
Follow-up occurs after red flags are indicated in assessment.

One major concern about testing in the modern era is its influence on program funding (Fair Test, 2003). Fair Test (2003) suggest that testing young children should result in stronger teaching practices and not serve as an evaluative method. Another concern is fairness- again and again traditional testing, standardized testing in particular, proves to be inadequate for children of cultural and linguistic diversity (Wortham, 2012). The child is a holistic being, and the principles for assessment outlined above help educators and other professionals design, implement, and execute testing that shows a more holistic picture of the child and serves positive purposes that support young children and families.
I was interested in learning more about how testing of young children occurs in England. I learned that a program called National Curriculum Assessments began in the 1990's where children are tested at ages 7, 11, and 14, and has been revamped this year (Richardson, 2016). These tests focus on reading, math, spelling, punctuation, and grammar, and are described as rigorous and face stark criticism among parents, with some families even staging a walk-out of school in response to the updated standards (BBC, 2016). Ethical challenges exist in England too, where the highest performing schools on the Sats (the National Curriculum Assessments) are ranked and published (BBC, 2016). Teachers in England are advocating for a change in policy- they say the tests are too hard (Richardson, 2016). According to Richardson (2016), some of the teachers are wary that the updates to the testing process involve teachers grading their own children’s tests with little guidance on the scoring process. These tests, like many in the United States, focus on only certain aspects of development. In my opinion, these standardized tests are not appropriate for young children and certainly should not inform school ranking or funding. The testing process in England is remarkably similar to that in the United States, and we face similar ethical issues about what makes a test reliable, how to test children, and the purpose for testing children.

References
BBC (2016, May 16). Primary tests: What are the changes? BBC News. Retrieved from http://www.bbc.com/news/education-35907385
Fair Test (2003). Head Start letter. Retrieved from http://www.fairtest.org/nattest/Head_Start_Letter.html
Richardson, H. (2016, April 29). Primary tests in England too hard, say head teachers. BBC News. Retrieved from http://www.bbc.com/news/education-36160158
Wortham, S. C. (2012). Assessment in Early Childhood Education (6th ed.). Boston: Pearson.



6 comments:

  1. Hello Neisha, i enjoyed reading your post, because i have a lot of assessments with my students, from observing them daily, having parents involved with observing their child education, that if their child having any issues with developmental delays in the home setting. I then will, and IEP counselors in the school system will test them for any red flags that is observed in the classroom. I know that at the end of the assessments, there will be a follow up with the red flag that the child is having.

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  2. I agree with with some of the tests that is sometimes very difficult for young children, and some parents get frustrated with how hard these tests are and sometimes they just take their children out of public schools and let them go to private schools were some of the tests are not required. It's just ridiculous how hard these tests are. I took my daughter out of public school for two reasons, one was so that she can get one on ones with her teacher, and so that she would not have to take these type tests. I know my daughter is doing much better. I love her school, and her teachers, because she is getting the one on ones, it's only 13 students in her Junior class, and so she's getting the assistance and help in she needs in her classes. Great blog!

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  3. Hello Neisha, great post, very informative to know that England have some similarities to USA standardized testing. The goal of education, as set by the United States founding fathers, was to push students to be successful economically and socially. To be successful you must be educated and at least slightly intelligent, especially in today’s society. A successful career and a successful life require way many more skills than just those skills. Children taught in a system where standardized testing is mandatory are not being shown how to analyze, how to be creative, or how to make important connections in everyday life.
    Regards,
    Vivian Lopes

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  4. I have a clear insight of the principles for assessment of young children after viewing your post. I also agree with you in regards to standardized test. Many are not effective ways of measuring younger children performance in the educational setting. Great post!

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  5. Neisha
    I work as a head start teacher, so assessment is something that we do quarterly. We test a child on their current development and sone test helps make predictions for their future. Some test test what we perform on children helps us see where they are in their development and which direction we should go with them

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  6. Neisha
    I work as a head start teacher, so assessment is something that we do quarterly. We test a child on their current development and sone test helps make predictions for their future. Some test test what we perform on children helps us see where they are in their development and which direction we should go with them

    ReplyDelete