Let’s not forget or ignore the consultants who came up with the term and sold the report on “learning loss”
The commodification of education continues to motivate policy and practice, and the paying testing agencies and consultants is the solution. #commoducation
#mineaswell add this thread from last month about the same topic
#nowreading “Over the past decade,” Ruth S. Barrett writes, “the for-profit ecosystem that has sprouted up around athletic recruiting at top-rung universities has grown so excessively ornate, so circular in its logic, that it’s become self-defeating.” theatlantic.com/magazine/archi…
Even before i dig into the article let me add a few images
Keep in mind that CT is one of the richest states in the union
Let's explore the biggest lie the testing agencies ever convinced America of:
"without the SAT ACT, I would have never gotten into college, graduated, or had any future"
(thread)
You see this narrative over and over and over in anecdatal stories about the test "providing" opportunity.
Here's one from a professor brave enough to tell his story under a pseudonym | How the ACT and SAT Help Disadvantaged Students Get Into College chronicle.com/article/how-th…
With the flurry of test optional announcements I wanted to highlight some of the best that I've seen. I've only been paying attention to this for a few years so I'll likely miss some, please forgive me in advance.
The Anatomy of a good #TestOptional announcement ...
Thread!
Let's start with DePaul for reasons. Now check it, their announcement speaks to their
1. Mission 2. Faculty support 3. RESEARCH RESEARCH RESEARCH
Next up is the STATE OF OREGON!
The coordination among 7 "competitors" alone is worth noting.
So the recent announcement of the changes to the #AP tests got me thinking about test design and the contrary messages we get from CB ... A short thread coming..
Normally AP test are 2 - 4 hours long. @CollegeBoard wants us to believe that a 45 minute test is essentially identical.
This got me to thinking about how often then just drop things from the test and tell us its samesy!
Now if you've been around testing for a few years you've surely seen the odd question dropped her and there.
On the PSAT in 2016 two math questions were deemed "unscorable". It's happened many times. There was 1 PSAT with 4 unscorable questions.