Pearson:
Compentency-based education will replace standardized testing
S Krashen
Competency-based
education (CBE) is a radical and expensive innovation that replaces regular
instruction with computer "modules" that students work through on
their own. After completing a module, students take a test; if they pass, they
continue on to the next one. Computer-based education is being pushed by
computer companies without consulting educators and without a proper research
base.
The
Pearson Publishing Company has explicitly stated that their new competency-based
programs, now in development, will replace standardized testing. "With
ongoing AIEd (Artificial Intelligence Education) analysis of a student’s
learning activities, there will be no need for the stop-and-test approach that
characterizes many current assessments. Instead of traditional assessments that
rely upon evaluating small samples of what a student has been taught,
AIEd-driven assessments … will assess all of the learning and teaching that
takes place, as it happens" (p. 36).
This statement confirms suspicions that recent
statements calling for a ceiling on standardized testing were designed to make
way for a far more intrusive (and profitable) program, while giving the
impression that they were a reaction to the successful opt-out movement.
Pearson also predicts that we won't need
international tests such as PISA and PIRLS anymore; analysis of progress from
their programs will tell us all we need to know (p. 48). Imagine: real time
data always available from every classrom on the plaent.
This will make testing fever worse than ever. We
can expect daily reports about schools, school districts, states and countries
announced on radio, television, newspapers, and on dedicated internet websites,
just like sports news, annoucing how much progress has been made in mastering
modules. This will result it even more testing pressure on the schools. We can
look forward to daily reporting like this:
"Fourth graders in Thailand have completed an
average of 43 programs this month, compared to Spain's 42, moving Thailand into
39rd place internationally.
Spain did not improve its rankings because of poor performance in
several classrooms in Madrid, especially one taught by Estela Garcia at the
Academica Arriba in which children completed only six programs this
month."
Luckin, R., Holmes, W., Griffiths, M. and Forcier, L.
2016. Intelligence Unleashed: An Argument for AI in Education. London: Pearson.
All Testing! All the Time! Minimal Personal Interaction! Human Robots of the World Unite!
ReplyDeleteAbigail Shure
this is what some Christian school education companies do---child works on each little lesson at their own pace...when they finish one they take a test, if they pass they go to next pace...it is called pace.
ReplyDeleteSo in essence you are saying homeschooling is bad since many use mastery based education.
ReplyDelete