Discussion about this post

User's avatar
E Blount's avatar

Great article. Just throwing this out as food for thought not a deeply considered/researched point...If in an imaginary world we had a list of 20 topics that might be on a standardized test it’s true that some schools might be cramming wombat facts and Aztec civilization dates in preparation for a test and of course there would be egregious cases along with many normal lovely classrooms. There is an element of well these (typical standardized) tests can’t be stressful because there is nothing to study for, that would immediately be challenged if there was an actual list of topics. I don’t personally believe that they’re not stressful but there is a “do your best, just have a good breakfast” fantasy around some tests. But I do wonder if suddenly many classes/schools populated with underprivileged kids did well on the test, maybe even better than a tony suburb, if people would actually hate those results. That there is an element of it having to show the wealth gap or the results would unsatisfying for some. That said I would very much my kids were memorizing some marsupial facts to weeks of amorphous “find the main idea” exercises which all too often seem like “read the test takers mind and guess in which ways they are trying to be tricky.”

Expand full comment
Kelli's avatar

Personally, I have a difficult time defining reading comprehension. Is the reader making connections to previous knowledge? Is the reader building new schema? Is the reader incorporating non-textual information such as graphs, maps, or illustrations? Will the reading be impactful in any way after the reader completes the text?

I think this is why people love phonics: the question "Can the reader do symbol - sound correlation?" is so much easier to test.

Expand full comment
1 more comment...

No posts