Standardized Testing: Good Or Bad?

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standardized test good or bad? The practice of standardized test has long been in hot debate. Many people today hold one-sided opinions about it. Some deem it as the only way to access the ability of students, while others believe it should be abandoned due to the stress it put on test takers. The nature of standardized test, however, is not so simple that can belonged to either direction. Both its advantages and disadvantages have profound impacts. Feedbacks from recent researches reveal some positive aspects of standardized tests. First of all, standardized test ensures students to learn what they are required to know. It guides teachers in the school on what to teach and when to teach, according to the Margie, writer of the Bring Hub …show more content…

The most obvious problem with such test is that it pushes teachers to “teach to the tests”. Teachers, no matter they want or not, teach students test taking strategies more or less in class because of the pressure brought by standardized test. Such practice impedes the objectivity and the value of reference of standardized test. Apart from this, one inherent, inevitable limitations of standardized test is that it “only evaluates the individual performance of the student instead of the overall growth of that student over the course of the year”, noted by Derrick Meador, writer of the About Education website. “This does a disservice to both the teacher who worked hard to help their students grow and the student who worked extremely hard over the course of the year and improved tremendously, but failed to score proficient.” Another significant drawback of standardized test is the stress it put on schools, which focus only on the teaching of subjects that will be tested but ignore the importance of other subjects as a result. For example, many Chinese schools pay little attentions to the developments of students’ personalities, civic responsibility, social skills, humanities, etc. These fields, though excluded from the test, play important roles in students’ lives and prepare them to be involved in society in the future. Last but not least, standardized test can never completely show the capacity of each candidate because of the limited questions it provided. Thus, it was impossible to avoid testing bias. People who do well on the test may just happen to know the

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