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Should teachers be held accountable for low student test scores?

Results so far:

Yes
46% 709 votes Total: 1547 votes
No
54% 838 votes

by Reynold Conger

Created on: May 20, 2008

The goal of education is to get students to think, learn skills and learn information. Unfortunately the only way we have to evaluate students is to test them with tests that we hope are uniform and standard. To start, we must recognize that any test score has a measure of experimental error, and educators frequently improperly analyze test scores. To the extent that tests are correctly written and properly administered, the tests evaluate the progress of each student both in learning information and skills and acquiring the ability to process this information. The tests do not evaluate the teacher.

The classroom teacher may be the most visible person in a school. They may be in direct contact with the student anywhere from 1 to 6 hours per day. They bear the primary responsibility of presenting lessons to the student and evaluating the student's progress on a day to day basis. Nevertheless, the classroom teacher is only one of many significant influences on the student.

Motivation is a significant factor in academic success and lack of motivation frequently aims a student toward failure. Teachers, coaches and principals work hard to motivate students, but their power is limited, especially in those cultures and communities where teachers are not given much respect. In my experience, parents have the most influence over motivation. Successful students usually have at least one family member encouraging their success. Unsuccessful students often have parents or other family members sending the message that "Algebra, English or some other subject isn't important." They may even send the message that school in general is not important.

Peer groups also motivate or demotivate students. More than ever before, pleasing one's peers is highly important to a student. When a student's peers do not think a certain class or teacher is cool, it becomes very difficult for students to become engaged in that class. For that matter, there are peer groups who advocate that school is not important. To them a GED is enough. Other peer groups are more interested in having fun than in learning.

Society itself does not encourage education the way it once did. While society gives lip service to getting a diploma or a degree, knowledge takes a second place. Parents of students who fail to meet graduation requirements frequently look for loopholes to help their student "walk the line." Students are told it is important to get a college education, yet admission standards are lowered so that

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