Should we get rid of standardized testing? - Arlo Kempf

1,216,875 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
0
9061
3101
00:12
were administered in China over 2,000 years ago
1
12162
4180
00:16
during the Han dynasty.
2
16342
1881
00:18
Chinese officials used them to determine aptitude for various government posts.
3
18223
5260
00:23
The subject matter included philosophy,
4
23483
2089
00:25
farming,
5
25572
1065
00:26
and even military tactics.
6
26637
2326
00:28
Standardized tests continued to be used around the world for the next two millennia,
7
28963
4827
00:33
and today, they're used for everything
8
33790
2092
00:35
from evaluating stair climbs for firefighters in France
9
35882
3956
00:39
to language examinations for diplomats in Canada
10
39838
3485
00:43
to students in schools.
11
43323
2591
00:45
Some standardized tests measure scores
12
45914
2110
00:48
only in relation to the results of other test takers.
13
48024
3760
00:51
Others measure performances on how well test takers meet predetermined criteria.
14
51784
5671
00:57
So the stair climb for the firefighter
15
57455
2258
00:59
could be measured by comparing the time of the climb
16
59713
2881
01:02
to that of all other firefighters.
17
62594
3010
01:05
This might be expressed in what many call a bell curve.
18
65604
3839
01:09
Or it could be evaluated with reference to set criteria,
19
69443
3971
01:13
such as carrying a certain amount of weight a certain distance
20
73414
3590
01:17
up a certain number of stairs.
21
77004
2920
01:19
Similarly, the diplomat might be measured against other test-taking diplomats,
22
79924
4778
01:24
or against a set of fixed criteria,
23
84702
2443
01:27
which demonstrate different levels of language proficiency.
24
87145
3909
01:31
And all of these results can be expressed using something called a percentile.
25
91054
4731
01:35
If a diplomat is in the 70th percentile, 70% of test takers scored below her.
26
95785
5989
01:41
If she scored in the 30th percentile, 70% of test takers scored above her.
27
101774
5561
01:47
Although standardized tests are sometimes controversial,
28
107335
3411
01:50
they're simply a tool.
29
110746
1779
01:52
As a thought experiment, think of a standardized test as a ruler.
30
112525
4171
01:56
A ruler's usefulness depends on two things.
31
116696
2699
01:59
First, the job we ask it to do.
32
119395
2762
02:02
Our ruler can't measure the temperature outside
33
122157
2829
02:04
or how loud someone is singing.
34
124986
2460
02:07
Second, the ruler's usefulness depends on its design.
35
127446
3419
02:10
Say you need to measure the circumference of an orange.
36
130865
3281
02:14
Our ruler measures length, which is the right quantity,
37
134146
3251
02:17
but it hasn't been designed with the flexibility required for the task at hand.
38
137397
4841
02:22
So, if standardized tests are given the wrong job,
39
142238
3128
02:25
or aren't designed properly,
40
145366
1871
02:27
they may end up measuring the wrong things.
41
147237
4390
02:31
In the case of schools,
42
151627
1280
02:32
students with test anxiety may have trouble performing their best
43
152907
3771
02:36
on a standardized test,
44
156678
1730
02:38
not because they don't know the answers,
45
158408
1708
02:40
but because they're feeling too nervous to share what they've learned.
46
160116
3619
02:43
Students with reading challenges
47
163735
1683
02:45
may struggle with the wording of a math problem,
48
165418
2660
02:48
so their test results may better reflect their literacy
49
168078
2800
02:50
rather than numeracy skills.
50
170878
2640
02:53
And students who were confused by examples
51
173518
2060
02:55
on tests that contain unfamiliar cultural references
52
175578
3590
02:59
may do poorly,
53
179168
1449
03:00
telling us more about the test taker's cultural familiarity
54
180617
2792
03:03
than their academic learning.
55
183409
2289
03:05
In these cases, the tests may need to be designed differently.
56
185698
5392
03:11
Standardized tests can also have a hard time
57
191090
2329
03:13
measuring abstract characteristics or skills,
58
193419
3219
03:16
such as creativity, critical thinking, and collaboration.
59
196638
4020
03:20
If we design a test poorly,
60
200658
1720
03:22
or ask it to do the wrong job,
61
202378
1922
03:24
or a job it's not very good at,
62
204300
2253
03:26
the results may not be reliable or valid.
63
206553
3296
03:29
Reliability and validity are two critical ideas
64
209849
3090
03:32
for understanding standardized tests.
65
212939
2680
03:35
To understand the difference between them,
66
215619
1681
03:37
we can use the metaphor of two broken thermometers.
67
217300
3089
03:40
An unreliable thermometer
68
220389
1900
03:42
gives you a different reading each time you take your temperature,
69
222289
3253
03:45
and the reliable but invalid thermometer is consistently ten degrees too hot.
70
225542
5649
03:51
Validity also depends on accurate interpretations of results.
71
231191
4269
03:55
If people say results of a test mean something they don't,
72
235460
3311
03:58
that test may have a validity problem.
73
238771
3163
04:01
Just as we wouldn't expect a ruler to tell us how much an elephant weighs,
74
241934
4508
04:06
or what it had for breakfast,
75
246442
1860
04:08
we can't expect standardized tests alone to reliably tell us how smart someone is,
76
248302
5879
04:14
how diplomats will handle a tough situation,
77
254181
2142
04:16
or how brave a firefighter might turn out to be.
78
256323
4299
04:20
So standardized tests may help us learn a little about a lot of people
79
260622
4790
04:25
in a short time,
80
265412
1150
04:26
but they usually can't tell us a lot about a single person.
81
266562
4451
04:31
Many social scientists worry about test scores resulting in sweeping
82
271013
4719
04:35
and often negative changes for test takers,
83
275732
3114
04:38
sometimes with long-term life consequences.
84
278846
3542
04:42
We can't blame the tests, though.
85
282388
2001
04:44
It's up to us to use the right tests for the right jobs,
86
284389
3790
04:48
and to interpret results appropriately.
87
288179
2884
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7