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Summary Of A Test Worth Teaching To Susan Headden

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Summary of “A Test Worth Teaching To”
In “A Test Worth Teaching To,” Susan Headden describes her study of DC CAS tests and concludes that the tests are ineffective. Headden begins by narrating an experience of a teacher by the name Voskuil who is so good at what he does that he manages to turn around a nonperforming school. The teacher drills the students since they are to take the DC CAS tests in April. The teacher admits that he does not like this method of “teaching to the test” (Headden p2). Notably, Voskuil is not the only one who shares such sentiments about the American way of teaching. Many believe that this way of teaching degrades the whole learning experience. In the same vein, reformers who believe in the best educational standards are not happy with the current narrow-minded test preparations (Headden p4). …show more content…

These two countries outperform the United States of America in matters education. Headden wondered why this was the case yet both Australia and Singapore use assessment tests in their education sector. Mark Tucker, quoted in Headden’s article, explains that the problem is not the test but the nature of the test. He notes that while the American tests are only made up of multiple-choice questions, Australia and Singapore’s tests are made up of open-ended questions that require the students to write extensively. For the same reason, Mark notes that the national obsession with the test methodology is the major undoing of the American education system (Headden p12). Mark opines that it is time the American educational experts embraced a more engaging way of teaching that does not require the students to memorize questions and answers that may not even be relevant to what they are

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