Sunday, March 09, 2008

TAKs - or - the standardized test that means everything to the school but can't ever really accurately measure someone's intelligence

This week was far less stressful than I would have imagined. I had been drilling the kids on TAKs skills and giving them practice stories and short answer questions for about a week and a half because I really, really want the kids to pass. It's almost ridiculous how influential this one test is on a kid's school education. They need to pass the test to graduate, but I have had a good amount of my students fail one or all of their TAKs tests. And when you fail "the big test" it's easy to get distressed, depressed, and not try anymore. I won't get the scores back for several weeks, but news from all of the other proctors is that my kids looked to be practicing reading and test taking strategies (namely summarizing and previewing) that we had been working on all year and I stressed this last week. The proctors couldn't actually tell me what the kids wrote, and I couldn't either, as we're not supposed to look at their tests unless the kids asks us to read a question for them out loud so they can clarify what the question is asking. It seems ridiculous, but it's just one more way to keep test proctors from unknowingly (or knowingly) give students answers to test questions.

The feeling I got was superb when my students came in the next day and said they had summarized all the stories and did everything we were practicing in class. The confidence they showed after taking the test was something literally out of this world. Here's to hoping that the confidence was well-founded and I really did teach them something this year.

As for next week, our English department is going to be having a "Poetry Gallery" for all of the students. We're going to post all of the poems around each of the classrooms and all the kids will get to visit the other rooms in the department and read each other's poems. Some of my kids are really ecstatic about the gallery, while others... not so much. Personally, I just don't want to rush their poems, but I know that they will be since I spent more time preparing them for the test (and since I was gone for two days due to True/False). I might not have the best poems, but if I have a greatly improved test passing rate, I'll consider it more than a fair trade.

4 comments:

Unknown said...

I love the title of your post. Very accurate.

Anne said...

We have Dakota Step tests coming up in a couple weeks and I'm finding it odd how unconcerned the school seems about it. The tests don't actually affect kids individually, it doesn't determine if they pass or fail or anything. But the tests are kind of a big deal for a school that hasn't made AYP in six years... I'm doing two weeks of test prep with my kids and hoping it helps- got the big packet ready and everything! School administrators haven't said boo to us though about preparing kids. strange.

Meg said...

I hated those tests. Before TAKS, it was TAAS. Not much better, but TAKS has more tests. Poor kiddos.

Mark said...

It's really interesting to see how tests are handled here. Tests with an AYP connection (i.e. English and Math TAKS) are treated almost religiously, but other classes are turned into copper statues at a pigeon convention when it comes to tests or other less influential means of tracking student data.