Welcome to DU!
    The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
    Join the community:
    Create a free account
    Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
    Become a Star Member
    Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
    All Forums
        Issue Forums
        Culture Forums
        Alliance Forums
        Region Forums
        Support Forums
        Help & Search
    
General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: One teen’s standardized testing horror story (and where it will lead) [View all]FarCenter
(19,429 posts)116. What percent of freshmen who try out for football make it to the varsity squad as seniors?
        Edit history
Please sign in to view edit histories.
  Recommendations
0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):
						
							168 replies
							
								 = new reply since forum marked as read
							
						
      
      
					
						Highlight:
						NoneDon't highlight anything
						5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
						RecommendedHighlight replies with 5 or more recommendations
 = new reply since forum marked as read
							
						
      
      
					
						Highlight:
						NoneDon't highlight anything
						5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
						RecommendedHighlight replies with 5 or more recommendations
					
                    
					
                     = new reply since forum marked as read
							
						
      
      
					
						Highlight:
						NoneDon't highlight anything
						5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
						RecommendedHighlight replies with 5 or more recommendations
 = new reply since forum marked as read
							
						
      
      
					
						Highlight:
						NoneDon't highlight anything
						5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
						RecommendedHighlight replies with 5 or more recommendations
					
                    
					
                        One teen’s standardized testing horror story (and where it will lead) [View all]
							proud2BlibKansan
							Nov 2012
							OP
                        
        
        Education now about profit for testing companies. And test-scoring companies.  And Billionaires.
        madfloridian
        Nov 2012
        #1
      
        
        "then no universities won't drop Journalism as a major until they absolutely must."
        HiPointDem
        Nov 2012
        #28
      
        
        you can presume all you like; it's not grammatical, and the problem isn't just a
        HiPointDem
        Nov 2012
        #57
      
        
        LOL and you worked in the field, criticized some 18-year old's blog post, and your comment is shoddy
        CreekDog
        Nov 2012
        #139
      
        
        journalism isn't just about reporting, and while there are way less jobs than there
        HiPointDem
        Nov 2012
        #54
      
        
        essay grading on standardized tests is an assembly line process.  no "many" about it.
        HiPointDem
        Nov 2012
        #156
      
        
        i can vouch for that.  you use a rubric with certain points you look for.  the kid can use
        HiPointDem
        Nov 2012
        #155
      
        
        He makes it pretty clear that the focus of his coursework was on test prep,
        proud2BlibKansan
        Nov 2012
        #9
      
        
        oh bull. there's plenty of kids/people who don't test well, for various reasons, but
        HiPointDem
        Nov 2012
        #38
      
        
        do they give standardized tests to judge appearance & cooking?  i had no idea.
        HiPointDem
        Nov 2012
        #87
      
        
        In high school, my calculus teacher would tear his hair out because I did so poorly on tests
        Luminous Animal
        Nov 2012
        #48
      
        
        It's not good form to make readers guess what AP means either.  "Schools hard and boring", not shit.
        xtraxritical
        Nov 2012
        #58
      
        
        The kid didn't write it for WAPO readers.  He wrote it on his blog, for an audience
        HiPointDem
        Nov 2012
        #157
      
        
        I care because I care deeply about education, its role in society, and that future.
        harmonicon
        Nov 2012
        #166
      
        
        test prep classes don't inspire anyone.  classes of the type the student praised, do.
        HiPointDem
        Nov 2012
        #167
      
        
        Expecting to write essays and developing writing skills are NOT mutually exclusive.
        silhouete2
        Nov 2012
        #29
      
        
        Thank you for that. My high school AP classes not only addressed a well constructed essay but a well
        Luminous Animal
        Nov 2012
        #52
      
        
        if it's so sure-fire, why did he do poorly in english?  but for my money, writing
        HiPointDem
        Nov 2012
        #31
      
        
        lol.  "developed better writing skills in college".  i've done essay grading/norming
        HiPointDem
        Nov 2012
        #37
      
        
        Well, I went on for art and was lucky to have some writers as teachers.
        Starry Messenger
        Nov 2012
        #94
      
        
        i wasn't being snarky about learning better writing skills in college.  i thought it was
        HiPointDem
        Nov 2012
        #154
      
        
        i didn't notice any in the excerpt (except for the other one in the same section, as noted  
        HiPointDem
        Nov 2012
        #158
      
        
        Exactly, when in a class do what the teacher wants.  When employed do what the employer wants.
        xtraxritical
        Nov 2012
        #55
      
        
        Why would it not have passed muster in your journalism classes back in the 1960s? It's a personal
        coalition_unwilling
        Nov 2012
        #65
      
        
        Subject matter has nothing to do with it...style and grammar, everything.
        Sekhmets Daughter
        Nov 2012
        #97
      
        
        Well, I can see that textual criticism is not your forte, to put it mildly. Singh's piece
        coalition_unwilling
        Nov 2012
        #144
      
        
        OMG.  You tell me there are numerous errors, & that's the kind of BS you come up
        HiPointDem
        Nov 2012
        #160
      
        
        it's funny that you, the uber writing critic, are ignorant of the theme, the discussion, etc.
        CreekDog
        Nov 2012
        #142
      
        
        i criticized you NOT because i thought Singh's post was brilliant or error-free, by no means
        CreekDog
        Nov 2012
        #146
      
        
        If he wasn't capable of college-level work, he shouldn't have been in the AP class.
        Romulox
        Nov 2012
        #6
      
        
        Yes indeed I did.  The young man does not appear prepared for college-level course work.
        Romulox
        Nov 2012
        #12
      
        
        Nope.  Not at the level he describes.  He needs to APPLY that basic level of skill to earn AP
        Romulox
        Nov 2012
        #42
      
        
        I've taken every level of english class that exists and supposedly am in the top 1%
        HiPointDem
        Nov 2012
        #50
      
        
        no problem, i'll just put you on ignore.  no great loss in missing the posts of some
        HiPointDem
        Nov 2012
        #72
      
        
        For someone who places in the "top 1%" they sure have a strange writing style.
        joshcryer
        Nov 2012
        #159
      
        
        then he was obviously judged capable of higher level work, or he wouldn't have gotten
        HiPointDem
        Nov 2012
        #33
      
        
        that's his beef.  the class didn't *do* the higher-level work.  it was a test-prep
        HiPointDem
        Nov 2012
        #45
      
        
        lol.  the central theme is quite clear, and the grammar is fine (at least in the excerpt) but
        HiPointDem
        Nov 2012
        #49
      
        
        Um, try reading *the piece*, rather than excerpt.  This is a discussion about that piece,
        Romulox
        Nov 2012
        #69
      
        
        Congratulations, exboyfil, for figuring this out.  Slowly, the word is getting out.
        antigop
        Nov 2012
        #134
      
        
        Standardized testing is not only for AP kids and college bound kids. You start in 3rd grade in MA.
        Mass
        Nov 2012
        #13
      
        
        Just to be clear:  to get the AP credit, you must pass the AP test.  Then you take the SAT.
        Romulox
        Nov 2012
        #15
      
        
        100% relevant.  If the kid wants learning qua learning, AP class ain't the place.
        Romulox
        Nov 2012
        #40
      
        
        AP classes are not -- or didn't use to be -- test prep classes.  AP classes began
        HiPointDem
        Nov 2012
        #41
      
        
        AP classes are held at high schools, not "elite colleges".  You may be thinking of a different
        Romulox
        Nov 2012
        #70
      
        
        The wiki link does support the idea that those who fail to earn the credits are poorly served
        Romulox
        Nov 2012
        #74
      
        
        And in post #67 I list the score distributions.   LOTS of students don't get college credit.  nt
        antigop
        Nov 2012
        #131
      
        
        the guy is saying that there wasn't any analysis of themes and characters in the class.
        HiPointDem
        Nov 2012
        #44
      
        
        that's a different issue.  i think it would be an unusual class -- & a pretty useless
        HiPointDem
        Nov 2012
        #53
      
        
        Can't help it, but this makes me think of National Lampoon's 1974 Stupid Aptitude Test
        eridani
        Nov 2012
        #82
      
        
        and a lot of the questions are poorly written.  The student can make the case for several answers.nt
        antigop
        Nov 2012
        #92
      
        
        If your child can test out of a semester's worth of introductory level courses, it's worth it.
        FarCenter
        Nov 2012
        #62
      
        
        See post #67 for the score distribution on AP English.  Low percentage of students will get credit.
        antigop
        Nov 2012
        #91
      
        
        With AP credits and a couple of summer sessions, my daughter got her BS in three years.
        FarCenter
        Nov 2012
        #96
      
        
        And how much did she enjoy her high school years?  How much stress was she under?  n/t
        antigop
        Nov 2012
        #99
      
        
        She had a ball, and she enjoyed a number of extracurricular activities and sports
        FarCenter
        Nov 2012
        #104
      
        
        I'll bet she was under a tremendous amount of stress and she lost a year of her youth n/t
        antigop
        Nov 2012
        #106
      
        
        College students have more time off than others who go to work out of high school and get 2 weeks.
        FarCenter
        Nov 2012
        #105
      
        
        Well, she spent another 3 years getting a professional degree -- does that count as youth?
        FarCenter
        Nov 2012
        #107
      
        
        I'll repeat --- at least 40% of the test takers did not get college credit.  n/t
        antigop
        Nov 2012
        #111
      
        
        A 60% chance of getting a college credit is worth about $1700, while the test costs $89.
        FarCenter
        Nov 2012
        #113
      
        
        What percent of freshmen who try out for football make it to the varsity squad as seniors?
        FarCenter
        Nov 2012
        #116
      
        
        Since you dismissed a sports analogy with academics, I replied with an academic analogy.
        FarCenter
        Nov 2012
        #136
      
        
        As much as 60% of the students PAID FOR THE TEST and didn't get credit.  FAIL  n/t
        antigop
        Nov 2012
        #126
      
        
        Maybe because DIDN'T LEARN ANYTHING in the AP classes or are too burned out from them  n/t
        antigop
        Nov 2012
        #130
      
        
        And I still feel sorry for your daughter, losing a year of her youth, probably stressed out and lost
        antigop
        Nov 2012
        #121
      
        
        and it's only a 60% "CHANCE" -- even a score of "4" or "5" will not guarantee credit.
        antigop
        Nov 2012
        #115
      
        
        See post #67 for the score distribution on AP English.  Low percentage of students will get credit.
        antigop
        Nov 2012
        #93
      
        
        Writing essays leads to greater rigor and organization of thought than discussion
        FarCenter
        Nov 2012
        #60
      
        
        Learning to write an in-class essay is an important skill he'll need in college.
        LeftyMom
        Nov 2012
        #63
      
        
        AP is mostly just a cash cow for the testing company.  Take a look at the score distribution here
        antigop
        Nov 2012
        #67
      
        
        good catch.  invalidates some of the other criticisms made, as his audience wasn't
        HiPointDem
        Nov 2012
        #89
      
        
        In what universe would a 40% failure rate be considered a good idea?  See post #67.
        antigop
        Nov 2012
        #95
      
        
        I feel sorry for the kids whose parents force them to put up with this stress. n/t
        antigop
        Nov 2012
        #129