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Britain: SATs school tests criticised by official report
By Harvey Thompson and Linda Slattery
3 July 2008
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In May, millions of school children throughout England undertook
their Standard Assessment Tasks (SATs) in English, mathematics
and science.
The statutory tests are widely considered to be flawed and
almost universally reviled by teachers and children alike.
Numerous educationalists are critical of the Labour governments
fixation with increased testing, which is distorting the curriculum
and having a detrimental effect on the long-term education of
children.
The recent Report by the House of Commons, Children, Schools
and Families CommitteeTesting and Assessment (Session 2007-2008)
paints a disturbing picture of the climate generated by testing
and target-setting in schools.
The report declares its commitment to a system of national
testing, but then draws attention to a number of studies
conducted in recent years, including one by the National Union
of Teachers (NUT) published in 2003, that found the use
of test results for the purpose of school accountability had damaging
effects on teachers and pupils alike. Teachers felt that the effect
was to narrow the curriculum and distort the education experience
of pupils.
It adds that excessive time, workload and stress for
children [are] not justified by the accuracy of the test results
on individuals.
The National Association of Head Teachers (NAHT) considered
that Key Stage tests provide only one source of performance
data for both students and teachers, and that it is hazardous
to draw too many conclusions from this data alone. They argue
that A teachers professional knowledge of the pupil
is vitalstatistics are no substitute for professional judgment.
The Association of Colleges stated that performance tables
composed from examination results data do not adequately reflect
the actual work of a school and that the emphasis on performance
tables risks shifting the focus of schools from the individual
need of the pupil towards performance table results.
The fact that the results of these tests are used for
so many purposes, with high-stakes attached to the outcomes, creates
tensions in the system leading to undesirable consequences, including
distortion of the education experience of many children,
the report acknowledges.
In addition, the data derived from the testing system
do not necessarily provide an accurate or complete picture of
the performance of schools and teachers, yet they are relied upon
by the Government, the QCA and Ofsted [the examinations board
and the school inspectors body] to make important decisions affecting
the education system in general and individual schools, teachers
and pupils in particular.
The City and Guilds awarding body is quoted as saying that
there is considerable obligation on the designer of tests
or assessments to make them as efficient and meaningful as possible.
Assessment opportunities should be seen as rare events during
which the assessment tool must be finely tuned, accurate and incisive.
To conduct a test that is inaccurate, excessive, unreliable or
inappropriate is unpardonable.
The present Key Stage tests fail on all these counts.
The National Curriculum in England is divided into four Key
Stages, or areas of learning, for school children (Key Stage 1,
5-7-year-olds; Key Stage 2, 7-11-year-olds; Key Stage 3, 11-14-year-olds;
and Key Stage 4, 14-16-year-olds). The governments stated
intention is to improve the average achievement across a school
at the end of each.
Schools are given targets based on ensuring that children meet
the expected levels for their age in the core subjects of English,
mathematics and science. Key Stage tests are used to generate
data on pupil performance, which is then collated and used, in
the words of the report, to measure trends across time,
across schools, and by almost every conceivable characteristic
of the pupils.
The results for each school are aggregated into performance
tables, which encourage comparison (and ultimately competition)
between schools.
Government claims challenged
The reports authors say that witnesses to its study have
challenged the governments assertions that its agenda of
tests, targets and performance tables have helped drive
up standards.
The National Association of Schoolmasters Union of Women Teachers
(NASUWT) states that there is little evidence that performance
tables have contributed to raising standards of attainment. The
report also contends that a growing number of international
studies show that other comparable education systems, including
those in Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland, have reached and
maintained high educational standards without use of the performance
tables.
The NUT drew attention to the Evidence for Policy and Practice
Information study (2004), which concluded that repeated testing
and examination de-motivated pupils and reduced their learning
potential, as well as having a detrimental effect on educational
outcomes. Evidence showed that teachers adapt their teaching style
to train pupils to pass tests, even when pupils do not have an
understanding of higher-order thinking skills that tests are intended
to measure and that National Curriculum tests lower the self-esteem
of unconfident and low-achieving pupils.
The Association of Teachers and Lecturers (ATL), noting the
governments assertions of improving standards, questioned
whether this means that our pupils are learning more and
better. It referred to research at Durham University suggesting
that pupils who reach the projected Level 4 at Key Stage 2 do
not retain what they have learned over a period of six months
to a year.
The Association of School and College Leaders (ASCL) considers
that the aggregation of individual test scores creates a high-stakes
testing system that it says will inevitably create a false picture
of progress. It argues that the government has produced
no evidence to support the assertion that targets and performance
tables have driven up standards, a contention that has taken
on the aspect of a dogma.
Results are now used to inform school decisions about performance-related
pay, to inform Ofsted decisions about whether schools should be
given light or heavy touch inspections and, combined
with targets, to inform judgments about the advisability of educational
initiatives.
The government is criticised for putting in place accountability
structures that are strongly based on pupil performance
in national tests. The distorting effect of these changes places
competitive stress on schools and worsens the educational opportunities
for most children: Test results are not the output of education,
but a proxy for the education taking place every day in classrooms
across the country.
One of the most destructive effects of this approach is teaching
to the test, whereby the curriculum is narrowed to those
areas likely to be the subject of examination. The report notes,
The Association of Colleges stated that, whilst a pupil
may have the necessary grades to progress to the next level, if
that learning is shallow, focussed only on passing the test, they
may not have a full grasp of the necessary concepts or sufficient
intellectual rigour to deal with the demands of the next level.
They conclude that This raising of false expectations resulting
in a sense of inadequacy may well account for the high drop out
rate at 17.
By narrowing the taught curriculum to what is tested, it is
also possible for schools to inflate test scores without actually
improving the underlying education of children taking the tests.
The reports authors also take issue with the official
language of success and failure, saying
that it highlighted a problem with the standards agenda
which the Governments reasoning does not address.
The NAHT states that children learn at different rates and
in different ways. Schools should focus on assisting children
to reach the goals appropriate for them as individuals.
The authors conclude their study by endorsing the Governments
view that much can and should be done to assist children who struggle
to meet expected standards, But they express concern that
the Governments target-based system may actually be contributing
to the problems of some children.
Tested to Destruction
Coinciding with the release of the report, the BBC screened
an episode of its Panorama documentary series titled Tested
to Destruction, which highlighted the disturbing effects
of increased testing on the education of primary school children
in England.
It explained that the SATs regime has only illustrated the
underlying social and economic inequality in England today. The
better results are achieved in schools in the more prosperous
suburbs, and children who live in areas of deprivation tend to
achieve lower marks.
Panorama interviewed pupils at the Phoenix Primary school
in Liverpool, and invited some of them to draw pictures based
on their thoughts and feelings about tests. This produced some
very dark and negative images, epitomised in one childs
SATs Monster.
Professor Wynne Harlen of Bristol University said that the
tests were a way of telling you that you are less worthwhile,
and that childrens confidence and self-esteem are constantly
under threat with every practice test they take. Moreover, the
nearer to SATs the more education was narrowed down to maths,
English and science.
By way of rebuttal, Schools Minister Jim Knight made
the claim on the programme that children dont even
notice they are taking SATs.
While the other subjects were sidelined in the SATs year
group, the programme posed the question whether concentration
nevertheless led to an improvement in core subjects tested. Specialists
insist that the opposite is true. Professor Margaret Brown said
that because teachers were teaching to the tests, this was to
the detriment of learning. Whole areas of maths, for example,
are ignored as education is reduced to practising solving short
test questions.
Chief Inspector of Schools Christine Gilbert recently announced
that one in five 11-year-olds leaves Primary school unable to
read, write and add up, and that overall standards had stalled.
According to Professor Brown, the government have pointed
to rises in the test results. Teachers are good at coaching children
to the test and its got to a ceiling.
Rather than admitting the failure of government education policies,
Gilbert outlined a more punitive inspection regimen beginning
in September 2009. Snap inspections are to be introduced with
no notice to schools and parents. Evidence of bored
children can also trigger an inspection. Schools judged either
satisfactory or inadequate will be inspected
within a three-year cycle, while those performing better will
be inspected every six years.
The SATs exist alongside a whole raft of exams that children
in England have to take, including tests at seven, 14, 16 and
18 if they stay on at school. In response to the unpopularity
of SATs, the government is piloting a supposedly more child-friendly
single-level test, to be taken when the teacher deems a pupil
is ready. Teachers on the programme said these revisions would
be for the worse, as the worry caused by the tests would be ever-present
and not just in the run-up to SATs.
Barry Sherman MP, chairman of the Commons Select Committee,
said that there was a broad range of evidence showing that SATs
were de-motivating and spoiling childrens enjoyment of education.
Testing he said, is ever present in schools.
The success of a child, teacher and school is linked to testing,
testing, testing.
See Also:
Britain: University Students
face worsening conditions, rising debt
[21 May 2008]
Britain: Labour makes massive
cuts in higher education
[25 March 2008]
Britains teachers and
civil servants to take one-day strike action
[23 April 2008]
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