Student Outlook -- Matt Meredith
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As we enter a new era of civilization and begin to undergo the mass
quantification of life itself, everything must be represented in tidy
little numbers. The goal is no different in regard to public schooling,
and what better way to tally up the intelligence of students and teaching
abilities of instructors than good old standardized testing? Give all
students in a state the same test so you can gauge, compare and,
ultimately, judge their performances on a fair and equal basis. However,
in its simplicity lies its complexity.
The chief concern with standardized testing is, of course, apathy. So,
measures must be taken to ensure that teachers and students alike try
their hardest for such an immeasurably important event. Unfortunately,
laws have been created to avert negative reinforcement, so we’re left
with an incentive system. Methods such as funding, funding and funding
have been devised to keep the administrations in line. Money is
infinitely important to the schools. In fact, with just a couple million
more dollars, we could probably run the schools in the absence of
faculty. Only then would the pinnacle of human development be reached.
But what about the students? After all, we’re the ones who take the
tests. What’s in it for us? Absolutely nothing. Do you think we could
give a flying hoot whether our school gets an extra $10,000? It’s not like we see any of the money. We all know that million-dollar grants go
toward computers that cost more than small Japanese cars, as anonymous
Swiss bank accounts mysteriously grow larger and larger. So, we need
incentives. Creative, appealing incentives. Airline miles, lifetime
supplies of pudding, a spot on the “Real World” after graduation, tickets
to Britney Spears’ concerts, a job at Starbucks -- things that high
school students can relate to. But all of these cost valuable dollars.
Thus, the question remains: What has absolutely no practical purpose
or tangible meaning to students, yet interests them nonetheless? For
those of you who said independent thought, kudos.
After years of public schooling, it should be clear to students that
independent thought has no place in the “real” world, yet we are still
fascinated by its poetic beauty. Therefore, if the need for independent
thought was somehow implemented into these tests as a clever ploy,
dimwitted teens would be fooled into having some interest in the test.
The graders could, of course, instantly throw away the questions that
require thinking -- better yet, burn them, in case ideas were to spread
-- for the mere existence of those questions would accomplish the task.
Students would attack the tests with vigor and excitement, scores
would be high, and the government would award the districts with funding,
funding and perhaps funding. Life would be further quantified, and
therefore more meaningful. And if we’re lucky, we might get some funding
out of it.
* MATT MEREDITH is a Newport Harbor High School senior whose columns
will appear occasionally in the Community Forum section.
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