Running head: STANDARDIZED TESTS ARE KILLING SOCIETY 1 Standardized Tests Are Killing Society Alyssa Masula Jonathan Alder High School STANDARDIZED TESTS ARE KILLING SOCIETY 2 ABSTRACT STANDARDIZED TESTS ARE KILLING SOCIETY Alyssa Masula This essay provides an exploration of the harm done to individuals and societies by standardized testing. In her studies, the author discovered mixed results
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Standardized Tests Sections I and II Sammy North DeVry University Standardized Tests Sections I and II Brittany, an honors student in Atlanta, Georgia, had worked hard her entire academic career to celebrate what would be her proudest moment in high school: commencement. She wanted to walk across the stage to the flash of cameras and the smiles of her family just like her classmates, and then journey off to a college in South Carolina where she had already been accepted. So she gathered her
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Standardized Testing Standardized testing has been a key part in education for awhile now, but how effective is it really? Does it truly grasp the students’ individualities to highlight their unique abilities? Of course it does not, how can it? If this is true, however, why are they still vital to earn a high school diploma? Education was once about the students, not about the score. It was about enjoying the time in the classroom, creating a desire to want to know more. Standardized tests
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’ve always thought about attending a school where students don’t have to take tests mandated by the government. I just realized that it is possible. In the article “What Schools Could Use Instead of Standardized Test”, by Anya Kamenetz, it recommends that it might come true in future years. As of right now, attorneys and legislators have been trying to draft a bill that could get rid of the desire for a federal bubble test and dismiss the renewal of the rule that states no child left behind, but switching
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High School Students and Standardized College Placement Test (SAT) Kimmy Givins NorthCentral University Dr. Boysen-Rotelli 09/28/2014 Research Study Most university process for accepting new students depends on their scores on the standardized college placement test. More than 2000 colleges and universities uses high school students SAT test scores to determine eligibility of acceptance. Because most college and universities depends on SAT test scores, students with high scores are more
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I. Standardized test give an unfair advantage to some groups, with the contrast only widening throughout the decades. A. The wealthier class are more prepared than the poor class. 1. Since the 1960s, the contrast of standardized test results between those with wealth and those in poverty have widened by 60%. 2. Students in wealthier environments have greater access to methods and classes that help them prepare specifically for standardized tests. B. Whites and Asians have an advantage over Latinos
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2. The argument’s conclusion is that standardized tests are against students who do not care about school. First, if the test is “standardized” how can it be “disadvantaging” students? There is a clear contradiction, according to the Merriam-Webster dictionary “standardized” means something that compare to a standard or that is equal. One of the premises in the video is that schools are only advantaging students that study, for example, a student that does not read through all a paper has 89% lower
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Standardized tests have always been around, they are also a widely used form to test your ability and skills. “Standardized tests are any examination that’s administered and scored in a predetermined, standardized manner.” (W. James Popham) They have always been known to or at least thought to be effective and a great way to get the true results and measurements of your skills. There are two major types of standardized tests that are commonly used, those are the aptitude tests, and achievement tests
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Have you ever wondered while waiting to receive or even while taking a standardized exam, whether this method accurately measures one’s abilities? Well, this thought has definitely crossed my mind several times while preparing for major nationalized exams. As a student myself, I wanted to investigate the reasoning, and most importantly, the effectiveness of using standardized tests on students as a whole. My position is not of an expert, but rather of a concerned student who has taken many examinations
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Standardized Tests? You only have one day, it is now or never. Then again, there is way too much of what teachers and students call, “tests.”Students should not take standardized tests. One because it takes up too much time, another is because we could be learning so much more in the time given, finally because they can stress students. Approximately 1.6 percent of class time is spent standardized testing. Students should actually have the opportunity to learn something instead of doing the same
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