Should we get rid of standardized testing? - Arlo Kempf

1,212,159 views ・ 2017-09-19

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:09
The first standardized tests that we know of
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were administered in China over 2,000 years ago
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during the Han dynasty.
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Chinese officials used them to determine aptitude for various government posts.
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The subject matter included philosophy,
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farming,
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and even military tactics.
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Standardized tests continued to be used around the world for the next two millennia,
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and today, they're used for everything
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from evaluating stair climbs for firefighters in France
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to language examinations for diplomats in Canada
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to students in schools.
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Some standardized tests measure scores
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only in relation to the results of other test takers.
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Others measure performances on how well test takers meet predetermined criteria.
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So the stair climb for the firefighter
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could be measured by comparing the time of the climb
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to that of all other firefighters.
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This might be expressed in what many call a bell curve.
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Or it could be evaluated with reference to set criteria,
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such as carrying a certain amount of weight a certain distance
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up a certain number of stairs.
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Similarly, the diplomat might be measured against other test-taking diplomats,
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or against a set of fixed criteria,
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which demonstrate different levels of language proficiency.
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And all of these results can be expressed using something called a percentile.
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If a diplomat is in the 70th percentile, 70% of test takers scored below her.
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If she scored in the 30th percentile, 70% of test takers scored above her.
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Although standardized tests are sometimes controversial,
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they're simply a tool.
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As a thought experiment, think of a standardized test as a ruler.
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A ruler's usefulness depends on two things.
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First, the job we ask it to do.
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Our ruler can't measure the temperature outside
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or how loud someone is singing.
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Second, the ruler's usefulness depends on its design.
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Say you need to measure the circumference of an orange.
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Our ruler measures length, which is the right quantity,
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but it hasn't been designed with the flexibility required for the task at hand.
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So, if standardized tests are given the wrong job,
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or aren't designed properly,
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they may end up measuring the wrong things.
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In the case of schools,
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students with test anxiety may have trouble performing their best
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on a standardized test,
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not because they don't know the answers,
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but because they're feeling too nervous to share what they've learned.
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Students with reading challenges
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may struggle with the wording of a math problem,
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so their test results may better reflect their literacy
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rather than numeracy skills.
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And students who were confused by examples
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on tests that contain unfamiliar cultural references
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may do poorly,
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telling us more about the test taker's cultural familiarity
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than their academic learning.
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In these cases, the tests may need to be designed differently.
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Standardized tests can also have a hard time
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measuring abstract characteristics or skills,
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such as creativity, critical thinking, and collaboration.
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If we design a test poorly,
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or ask it to do the wrong job,
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or a job it's not very good at,
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the results may not be reliable or valid.
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Reliability and validity are two critical ideas
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for understanding standardized tests.
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To understand the difference between them,
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we can use the metaphor of two broken thermometers.
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An unreliable thermometer
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gives you a different reading each time you take your temperature,
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and the reliable but invalid thermometer is consistently ten degrees too hot.
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Validity also depends on accurate interpretations of results.
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If people say results of a test mean something they don't,
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that test may have a validity problem.
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Just as we wouldn't expect a ruler to tell us how much an elephant weighs,
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or what it had for breakfast,
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we can't expect standardized tests alone to reliably tell us how smart someone is,
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how diplomats will handle a tough situation,
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or how brave a firefighter might turn out to be.
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So standardized tests may help us learn a little about a lot of people
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in a short time,
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but they usually can't tell us a lot about a single person.
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Many social scientists worry about test scores resulting in sweeping
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and often negative changes for test takers,
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sometimes with long-term life consequences.
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We can't blame the tests, though.
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It's up to us to use the right tests for the right jobs,
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and to interpret results appropriately.
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