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Harper, Christopher; Vanderbei, Robert J. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
In this article, two professors retake the college-entrance exam and arrive at very different conclusions about its performance. Even though Christopher Harper has worked as a college professor for 15 years, he decided last winter to take the SAT and ACT examinations that his students needed to enter the institution where he teaches, Temple…
Descriptors: Standardized Tests, College Admission, Admission Criteria, Test Validity
Knaus, Christopher – Peter Lang New York, 2011
Less than fifty percent of African American students graduate from high school. Their educational failure is built into the racial structure of curriculum, standardized testing, teacher preparation programs, and even teacher recruitment pathways. "Shut Up and Listen" argues that African American students should be taught to navigate and resist the…
Descriptors: African American Students, Black Studies, Urban Schools, Standardized Tests
Roemer, Ann – College and University, 2011
Ever since the founding of this country, equality, freedom, and justice have been the underlying values of America's political and educational systems. More than 150 years later, higher education policymakers in the United States began to incorporate these values into their admissions decisions by including ethnic and racial diversity as a stated…
Descriptors: African Americans, Higher Education, Campuses, Second Language Learning
Duckworth, Angela L. – American Psychologist, 2009
Sackett, Borneman, and Connelly's article and recent meta-analyses (e.g., Kuncel & Hezlett, 2007) should lay to rest any doubt over whether high-stakes standardized tests predict important academic and professional outcomes--they do. The challenge now is to identify noncognitive individual differences that determine the same outcomes. Noncognitive…
Descriptors: Standardized Tests, High Stakes Tests, Individual Differences, School Psychology
Baker, Keith – AASA Journal of Scholarship & Practice, 2010
The justification for national standards is that test scores predict a nation's future economic success. There is no evidence that supports this assumption. There is evidence that it is wrong. For more than half a century, reformers have been trying to fix our schools with little success. The obvious conclusion is that something that can't be…
Descriptors: Test Results, Disadvantaged, National Standards, Economic Impact
Graff, Gerald; Birkenstein, Cathy – Academe, 2008
In responses from higher education to the 2006 report on Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings's Commission on the Future of Higher Education, "A Test of Leadership: Charting the Future of U.S. Higher Education," one particular argument is made repeatedly: that educational standardization of the sort implicitly called for in the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Accountability, Federal Legislation, Standardized Tests
Spellman, Bill – Liberal Education, 2010
The history of post-secondary education in America since World War II has been in many ways a success story, with greater student access a signature feature of the many changes witnessed on campuses large and small. Much work remains to be done in the area of access and affordability, especially in the financial aid system and in standardized…
Descriptors: Standardized Tests, Public Sector, Liberal Arts, Higher Education
Hornberger, Nancy H.; Link, Holly – International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism, 2012
As US classrooms approach a decade of response to No Child Left Behind, many questions and concerns remain around the education of those labeled as "English language learners," in both English as a Second Language and bilingual education classrooms. A national policy context where standardized tests dominate curriculum and instruction…
Descriptors: Sociolinguistics, Federal Legislation, Bilingual Education, Standardized Tests
Good, Thomas L. – Elementary School Journal, 2011
This article reflects on my 28-year tenure editing "The Elementary School Journal" ("ESJ"). During my tenure as editor, the educational system was in constant reform, from a Nation at Risk to No Child Left Behind. Considerable evidence suggests that these various reforms, which consumed vast resources, were not successful in…
Descriptors: Evidence, School Restructuring, Federal Legislation, Standardized Tests
Watson, Anne; Kehler, Michael; Martino, Wayne – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2010
Boys' literacy underachievement continues to garner significant attention and has been identified by journalists, educational policymakers, and scholars in the field as the cause for much concern. It has been established that boys perform less well than girls on literacy benchmark or standardized tests. According to the National Assessment of…
Descriptors: Social Class, Test Results, Females, Underachievement
Scherer, Marge – Educational Leadership, 2009
There is no doubt that in the past 10 years, school culture has become a testing culture. But all the "multiple measures" do not really lead one to achieve the three most often cited goals of testing: building proficiency in basic skills, closing achievement gaps, and fostering the top-notch knowledge and skills that students will need…
Descriptors: School Culture, Testing, Accountability, Student Evaluation
Vyrostek, Sarah – Educational Horizons, 2009
Rather than regard frequent and subjective testing as a negative, it should prove more beneficial for educators to offer students an opportunity to acquire life skills that will carry them through any test-taking situation. Offering students the skills necessary to succeed not only in the classroom but also through testing is where accountability…
Descriptors: Educational Testing, Accountability, Teaching Experience, Educational Objectives
Schroeder-Davis, Stephen – Understanding Our Gifted, 2011
Currently, American schooling, driven by No Child Left Behind (NCLB) and standardized tests, emphasizes development of intelligence. Because of this, teachers must heavily emphasize acquisition of foundational information (facts) in lectures, assessments, and of course, time-consuming test preparation, at the expense of intellect, that…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, State Standards, Teaching Methods, Standardized Tests
Au, Wayne W. – Multicultural Perspectives, 2009
The effects of high-stakes, standardized testing on the curriculum are discouraging the teaching of multicultural, anti-racist content. Test-influenced educational environments contribute to the reproduction of racial and cultural inequality in education. Using the lens of sociolinguistics, the author asserts that high-stakes, standardized tests…
Descriptors: Sociolinguistics, Testing, Standardized Tests, High Stakes Tests
Worrell, Frank C. – Gifted Child Quarterly, 2009
There is a fallacy about identifying gifted and talented children and youth that refuses to go away: It is the notion that a single score is "sufficient" for determining giftedness. In this article, the author addresses several reasons for the longevity and ubiquity of this myth, as well as the data that call the myth into question. These include…
Descriptors: Talent, Predictive Validity, Scores, Academically Gifted