Much of the first sections of TMoE is dedicated to tracing out how tests came to be used as social sorting tools during our first Gilded Age when grand canyons of inequality between rich and poor had turned American cities into dangerous and unhealthy place. Below is a piece posted last week at Alternet, but I want to preface that first with two quotes from an important book published 98 years ago, which served to inspire and guide the work of people like Elwood Cubberley, who is quoted just below from his remarks in the preface of his Stanford colleague Lewis Terman's seminal new book, The Measurement of Intelligence.
A former teacher from the Midwest, Cubberley was put in charge of Stanford's school administration training programs, and he literally wrote the history of American education from his perspective as a booster of white Americanism and an advocate for turning those of lesser worth working assets while keeping them from intruding upon the continuing upward journey of American progress. Both Cubberley and Terman said openly a hundred years ago what we must read between the lines to discern today in comments from Chester Finn, Bill Gates, or the KIPP wardens and corporate happiness psychologists at UPenn who have devised their character and culture tonics for the children of the poor.
Intelligence and achievement testing, along the new scientific psychology based on conditioning and modifying behaviors, were seen by Cubberley and Terman as godsends to identifying, sorting, and segregating the intellectual, racial, and social unfit from the rest of society's children, who were urged to go forth, become educated, prosper, and breed. It's all in the blood, was the watchword of the day, and the further apart the depraved could be kept from that red American blood, the better.
First a clip from Cubberley's Preface, and then the more concrete plans of Terman, whose is most famous today as the inventor of the Stanford-Binet IQ test.
The educational significance of the results to be obtained
from careful measurements of
the intelligence of children can
hardly be overestimated.
Questions relating to the choice of studies, vocational guidance, schoolroom procedure, the grading of pupils, promotional schemes, the study of the retardation of
children in the schools,
juvenile delinquency, and the proper handling of subnormals on the one hand and gifted children on the other—
all alike acquire new meaning and
significance
when viewed in the light of the
measurement of intelligence as
outlined in this volume.
. . . More than all other forms of data combined, such tests give the necessary information from which a pupil’s possibilities
of future mental growth can be foretold, and upon which his further education
can be most profitably directed.
—Elwood P. Cubberley, from foreword for
Terman’s
The Measurement of Intelligence, 1916 (p. viii)
. . . intelligence tests are rapidly extending our
conception of “feeble-mind- edness” to include milder degrees of defect than have generally been associ- ated
with this term.
The
earlier methods of diagnosis
caused a majority of the higher grade defectives to be overlooked. Previous to the development
of psychological methods the low-grade moron was about as high a type of defective as most physicians or even psychologists were able to identify as feeble-minded. .
. . It is safe to predict that in the near future intelligence
tests will bring tens of thousands of these high-grade defectives under the surveillance
and protection of society. This will ultimately result in
curtail- ing the reproduction of
feeble-mindedness and in the elimination of an enormous amount of crime, pauperism, and industrial inefficiency. It is hardly necessary to emphasize that the high-grade cases, of the type now so frequently overlooked,
are precisely the ones whose guardianship it is most important for the State to assume. –Lewis Terman, The Measurement of Intelligence, 1916, p. 7)
The Long and Narrow Rut of Standardized
Testing
Jim Horn
Last year, education scholar William Reese drew
our attention to articles published in theAtlantic Monthly and Harpers that
“vilify” schools for “inhumane, soul-destroying pedagogy” and “heap scorn on
tests.” In his book, Testing Wars in the Public Schools [3], Reese
quotes the Cincinnati schools superintendent, John Peaslee, who pointed out
that “in order stimulate teachers to greater expectations . . . [test scores]
are paraded in the daily papers, and published in school reports.”
It was a fact about which Peaslee was none too
pleased. He argued that, “attaching undue importance to [test scores] leads to
the driving and cramming process, to teaching in narrow ruts… [and] drives poor
pupils out of school.” No doubt, it is a sentiment with which many of us would
agree.
As contemporary as Peaslee’s analysis may seem,
it is worth noting that his thoughts were originally delivered during his
tenure with Cincinnati schools, which ran from 1874-1886—the same time period
during which the magazine articles from the Atlantic and Harpers appeared.
As Reese and others have documented [4],
testing mania has been with us for a long, long time—plenty long enough to
teach us that it will neither improve learning nor end inequality, nor does it
deserve the forward-sounding labels of “reform” or “innovation.”
Standardized testing, in fact, has functioned for over 100 years as the
preferred technology to label, segregate, and treat children very differently,
based on the unearned advantages of class and ethnicity.
Early Misuses of Standardized Testing
As early as the 19th century, standardized
testing served to drive less privileged children back to the farms and into the
factories and to make high school the proper preserve of children from the
economic elite, who were viewed as the ones for which higher levels of
education were obviously meant. It was called Social Darwinism at the time, and
it applied a gross misunderstanding of evolutionary theory to justify every
oppressive social policy for the poor and every benefit for the well-heeled as
ordained by nature, no less.
Forty years later during the rise of the
Eugenics movement, which came to inspire practices used in Nazi Germany,
standardized testing took on an even darker role. In 1916, American Robert
Yerkes, a leading eugenicist, developed the Alpha A and Alpha B intelligence
tests, which were used to screen and efficiently sort enlistees for the U.S.
Army leading up to World War I. The tests were scaled with the racially and
economically oppressed at the bottom and those of Teutonic origins at the top.
Those with high intelligence scores were more likely to end up with desk jobs
at headquarters, and those with low scores were more likely to end up in the
trenches of France.
By the early 1920s, immigrant children in first
and second grade were administered IQ tests that they often couldn’t even read,
and that data was then used to justify their education in industrial training
schools that taught children the dignity of unskilled labor and the benefits of
modesty and compliance.
To say that testing was out of control during
the 1920s and 1930s would not be an exaggeration. With IQ testing widespread
and achievement tests proliferating at a furious pace, education professor
Harold Rugg referred to the situation as “an orgy of tabulation.” Ellen
Lagemann at Harvard documented that “between 1917 and 1928, some 1,300
achievement tests were developed in the United States; by 1940, there were
2,600.
The Current Era of Test Abuse
As part of a research
study [5] that evaluated
high-stakes testing programs in Louisiana, in 2000, I interviewed fourth-grade
teachers in a poor Shreveport school, which was then enduring the latest
iteration of testing mania, requiring elementary school children to pass a
state test before moving on to fifth grade (Louisiana can claim the dubious
distinction of being the first state in the nation to require such a
measure).
In 2002, I interviewed the school’s
fourth-grade teachers again and found out that 60 to 70 percent of their
fourth-graders were failing the state test; so many, in fact, that at this one
school, the number of fourth-grade teachers had to be doubled.
I heard about nervous children having
nosebleeds and vomiting on test forms that had to be zipped into bags and sent
back to the state for security reasons. I heard from stressed out teachers and
about parents who were, in desperation, having “Lean on Jesus Test Rallies” in
their community church.
I heard about the boy with spina bifida who was
so ashamed to have failed the test that he left his wheelchair and hid under
the bed from his mom. And I heard about the boy who had failed two years in a
row and how the teacher who had to tell him he had failed the third time could
hear his heart beating from across her desk where he sat waiting for the news. I
saw teachers, children and parents all working their guts out, making progress
and getting further behind at the same time.
When I met with Louisiana education officials
to discuss the new state testing program, I had the temerity to ask what the
state was going to do with all the schools that would surely fail to make
expected progress. The state official responded flatly: the state doesn’t
want to do anything with them. I didn’t understand that then, but when No
Child Left Behind became law just over a year later, with its demands of 100
percent proficiency to avoid the “school failure” label and punitive
interventions, the scales began to fall from my eyes. And when I
read Elizabeth Debray’s policy history [6] of
NCLB a couple years after that, which details how the policy’s designers in
Texas had vouchers and charter schools in mind for those schools that would
surely fall short, then I really understood what this was all about.
Privatization: From No Child Left Behind to
Race to the Top
In short, No Child Left Behind was never about
closing the achievement gap; it was about closing public schools—or at least
turning them over to private management, beginning with the most vulnerable schools
with the least powerful parents.
Even though vouchers were finally stripped out
of the NCLB Act before it became law in 2002, the total compliance charter
model was winning national attention, thanks to KIPP’s primary backer, Don
Fisher, and national exposure on "60 Minutes" and at the 2000
Republican National Convention. Charter schools became the royal road to
putting publicly funded schools under private management —with scant public
oversight and huge tax advantages for venture philanthropists and
billionaires.
So NCLB was deployed in 2002, despite warnings by testing experts [7] about
what was surely going to happen. The trigger device used to blow up public
schools for the benefit of this new business model and its education industry
supporters was, predictably, another generation of high stakes tests that would
deliver, via assured failure, a continuing supply of low scoring schools that
could be either taken over, or closed and reopened as charters. The number of
charters went from 500 in the mid-1990s to over 6,400 today. Charters have
grown 100 percent since 2008, when the Gates Foundation and the Walton
Foundation essentially bought control of national education policy.
To get their piece of the $3.4 billion in Race
to the Top money proffered by the Obama administration in 2010, states closely followed the grant application guidance [8],
which offered bonus points for state systems that agreed to 1) close the lowest
performing public schools, while removing limits on charter schools growth; 2)
adopt the Common Core Standards and the new generation of tests the standards
would spawn; 3) create new data systems that would allow for increased
collection of student and teacher data; and 4) implement teacher evaluation
systems based significantly on value-added test scores.
While we now see that NCLB left many children
behind and put the testing industrial complex far ahead, it is similarly clear
that Race to the Top was, from the start, designed to run on a narrow,
corporate-friendly track, leading to a finish where participants would be
forced to hand over their prizes to the race promoters: the charter school
industry.
The Charter School Expansion Cycle
Here
is how the charter school takeover cycle works: First, we need public schools
isolated by years of neglect, segregation and poverty—schools that everyone outside the affected
communities would rather forget about. Every urban center of America has an
ample supply of these schools in the poorest neighborhoods.
These neighborhood schools make easy targets
for profiteers and ideologues convinced (or pretending to believe) that these
public schools have not met accountability expectations over the decades
because of lazy teachers, public bureaucracy, unconcerned parents, unions and
other reasons having nothing do with poverty or a sordid history of educational
inequality.
Since 2002, NCLB’s impossible demand for
schools to reach 100 percent proficiency by 2014 brought the accountability
issue to a crisis state, beginning with the poorest schools where students’
scores were the lowest. Over the past decade, parents who could afford to moved
or sent their children to schools outside of the dreaded “Needs Improvement”
zones, thus leaving the poorest schools with smaller and academically weaker
student populations, and thus, with even less capacity to make the yearly
progress on test scores that was required by NCLB.
Further deprived, then, of resources both human
and monetary, these schools are eventually labeled “underperforming” and
“under-utilized,” thus clearing the way for school closure attempts. The only thing
standing in the way are parents, students and teachers. It will take bodies to
block this juggernaut.
Waiting in the wings are the charter operators
and management companies, ready to open total compliance corporate charter
schools and staff them with temporary missionaries from Teach for America, or
one of the other organizations that emulate the TFA practice of exploiting the
idealism and naiveté of predominantly white, economically privileged young
people by placing them schools that require the most professional and mature
teachers—despite the fact that they have little experience and receive scant
teacher training.
With empty buildings from the shuttered public
schools sitting idle, the charter operators step up to claim them by offering a
token payment to the County.
The rejected or ejected students who threaten
the high profile charter chain brands end up back in the remaining public
schools in surrounding areas, which further concentrates the low scorers in the
surviving schools.
These surviving public schools are further
weakened by being forced to absorb austerity measures inflicted by their local
government, which is required to pay thousands of dollars to (often) private
operators for every public school student lost to a charter school. If another
2,000 students are lost to new charters next year in Memphis, for instance,
that amounts to $15,036,000 leaving the public schools and going to fund
“corporate welfare” schools getting fat on taxpayer dollars. Meanwhile,
ballooning school budget deficits are used to justify even deeper cuts, and
continue to weaken the surviving schools’ capacity to meet testing
demands.
Still Looking for Innovation
For years now we have heard about “innovation”
in these corporate education reform schools that are to replace public schools.
Instead of doing something to help the poorest public schools that have been
battered down by neglect, poverty and standardized tests, parents of these
children are offered “innovative choice,” the reformers say. That is, choose a
charter school, move away, or be satisfied with a public school destroyed by
austerity measures to pay for charters.
Despite such promises of innovation, I have not
found much of it in years of looking. In the early days of charters,
supporters like Arne Duncan called for “letting a thousand flowers bloom.”
Today, however, Secretary Duncan pushes charters with “proven strategies” that
can “take innovation to scale.” And yet when we look inside these schools or
talk to those who have taught there, I wonder where the innovation
is.
Is it considered innovative to ignore special
needs children’s IP Plans, which happens regularly in proven charter schools
like KIPP? Is it innovative to scream at children, put them in padded isolation
rooms, make them earn a desk to sit in, or force them to remain silent all day,
even at lunch? Or is it innovative to label them as “miscreants” for departing
one inch from the behavioral catechism that makes these schools look more like
penal farms than places to learn and grow?
Is it innovative to make children walk like
prisoners between classes, or to limit their curriculum to what they can
memorize for standardized tests? Is it innovative to economically segregate
children in schools where the racial composition resembles the early 1950s? Is
it considered innovative to issue children paychecks based on behavior, or to
issue report cards based on how stoic they can remain in the face of
mistreatment and ridiculous demands that no middle class parent would allow? Is
that what they mean by innovation?
What is innovative about ingraining in children
that any and all of their own shortcomings are entirely due to their own lack
of effort? That doesn’t look innovative to me. In fact, the pedagogy of the
corporate reform schools looks very much like extreme versions of the
traditional schools of the early 20th century that John Dewey referred to as
chain gangs.
Where I do see innovation, however, is on the
policy side, where negative, rather than positive, results continue to
accrue.
It is indeed innovative in modern schooling
annals for the federal and state government to incentivize and subsidize the
most aggressively segregated schools that one might dream up, to create an
education caste system based on junk tests that punish students for being poor.
And it is equally innovative to use public money to pay corporations to run
them with little or no oversight.
I think we could make the case, too, that it is
quite innovative to turn these economically segregated school children over to
two-year corporate enlistees who get five weeks of basic teacher training
before taking charge of classrooms that need nothing short of the most
experienced and caring professionals.
And it is also quite innovative to dispense
with libraries and guidance counselors, gymnasiums, art rooms, and recess in
schools serving children who have no other access to these basic human
needs.
But what is most innovative of all, perhaps, is
the hijacking of elected government to install officials who use primitive
business management practices to implement a scientifically discarded
educational model with a well-established history of social and economic
oppression.
If this is innovation, we don’t need it in a
democratic republic trying to remain viable. We need to make public education
to serve the public, rather than to undergird oppression, reproduce inequality,
feed corporate revenue streams, and destroy public governance of schools.
It is time to stop pretending that high stakes standardized testing will ever
accomplish any other goal other than that for which it was designed.
A version of this text was offered in a speech
March 1, 2014 at a public forum in Nashville, Tennessee sponsored by
Tennesseans Reclaiming Educational Excellence (TREE). Included are excerpts
fromThe Mismeasure of Education(2013) and an earlier commentary
published by Common Dreams, “The Charter School Takeover Cycle in Memphis
Schools.”
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