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Culture War Roundup for the week of October 31, 2022

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I discussed #2 at some length.

No, you mentioned things teachers unions do. You did not explain how they improve decision making or benefit students in aggregate. If you're merely claiming that in at least one case they do (but might be negative value in aggregate), I don't disagree with that claim.

Yes, teaching how to game the test is not utterly devoid of value. But that is a red herring. The issue is whether teaching that, in lieu of teaching substantive material

If what you describe actually exists and takes a non-trivial amount of time, that would be bad. Can you please explain how to actually do this for a real standardized test in one of the 10 largest US states which was given in the last 10 years? I claim that it's not possible, except for some very trivial stuff that doesn't take much time such as "if you can rule out 2 choices out of 4, select one of the remainder at random."

I've had people tell me a few theories about how this might happen when I press the issue, but on the rare occasion they don't refuse to be specific, googling actual standardized tests suggests that their theories are impossible. Would you care to provide mechanics, as well as a link to the specific standardized test on which you think it works?

We were asked to spend about a week on that exact sort of stuff. I don't have all the details on what was in the proposed curriculum because I threw it away. And I never claimed that it worked.

Here is another example. CA has history content standards, and history analysis standards, including:

Students distinguish valid arguments from fallacious arguments in historical interpretations.

Students identify bias and prejudice in historical interpretations.

Students evaluate major debates among historians concerning alternative interpretations of the past, including an analysis of authors' use of evidence and the distinctions between sound generalizations and misleading oversimplifications.

Students construct and test hypotheses; collect, evaluate, and employ information from multiple primary and secondary sources; and apply it in oral and written presentations.

The analysis standards are not tested on state tests, or at least they were not when I was teaching. Principals, whose jobs depend on how students perform on state tests, have an incentive to push teachers to ignore the thinking standards and focus on the content standards, esp memorization etc (it is impossible to do both, given the size of the standards and the time needed to teach analysis skills). It is in the interests of students that a teacher need not fear being fired for focusing instead on the analysis standards.

Principals, whose jobs depend on how students perform on state tests, have an incentive...[to do things that]...I never claimed...worked.

I'm pretty confused here. Principals push you to do things that don't improve performance on tests because...they are incentivized to improve performance on tests?

On the flip side:

I don't have all the details on what was in the proposed curriculum because I threw it away.

we also have teachers refusing to teach the curriculum they are assigned.

It is in the interests of students that a teacher need not fear being fired for focusing instead on the analysis standards.

At least it is if you assume some random teacher knows better about what students should learn than the semi-democratically chosen school officials who created the curriculum and decided what was important enough to be on the tests.

I'm pretty confused here. Principals push you to do things that don't improve performance on tests because...they are incentivized to improve performance on tests?

Why don't you show me where I said they don't improve performance on tests? I didn't say they work, and I didn't say they don't. I have no idea either way, and I don't care, because it is irrelevant. Even if it does work, it was not part of the curriculum, and was pushed for purposes unrelated to the best interests of students.

At least it is if you assume some random teacher knows better about what students should learn than the semi-democratically chosen school officials who created the curriculum and decided what was important enough to be on the tests.

Dude, the analysis standards were not on the tests because designing and implementing a standardized test to test those skills is vastly more expensive than asking "which of the these people was not a leader of an Allied power during World War II" or whatever.

we also have teachers refusing to teach the curriculum they are assigned.

  1. Principals, etc, do not get to assign curriculum. The state determines what curriculum is to be taught, not principals. As I said, the state has established social studies content standards, and social studies analysis standards. "How to game multiple choice tests" is not in the standards. As you yourself imply, teachers are supposed to teach the state mandated material, not some alternative that is designed to make the principal look good. Thank you for proving my point.

  2. I suspect that you would be singing a different tune re teachers teaching curriculum pushed by administrators if, instead of saying, "This week, because I want the school (and me) to look good on the upcoming state tests, I want everyone to teach these 'how to take multiple choice tests' assignments," she had said, "This week, because I want the school (and me) to look good on the upcoming state DEI review, I want everyone to teach these "microaggressions and you" assignments."

Why don't you show me where I said they don't improve performance on tests? I didn't say they work, and I didn't say they don't. I have no idea either way, and I don't care, because it is irrelevant. Even if it does work, it was not part of the curriculum, and was pushed for purposes unrelated to the best interests of students.

It is true that any system involves administrivia that is necessary for the functioning if the system but not directly related to it's end goal.

For example, GAAP accounting does not directly benefit either customers or shareholders of a corporation. Does that mean an accountants union would be beneficial for stakeholders because it would allow accountants to keep their job even if they find tracking SBC to be annoying and just decide to ignore it? Would software companies benefit if developers could ignore their manager and just build whatever they think might benefit shareholders?

I suspect that you would be singing a different tune re teachers teaching curriculum pushed by administrators if,

I would support teachers who took these assignments to libsoftiktok/tucker/any of the last remaining journalists and visibly refused to do their job as a form of protest. And if the governor overrode process to let them keep their job I'd be fine with it.

I would not support creating any procedural methods to enable people who refuse to do their job to keep getting paid, however.

It is true that any system involves administrivia that is necessary for the functioning if the system but not directly related to it's end goal.

While administering the tests might well be necessary for the functioning of the system, I don't understand why you are inferring that teaching kids how to game the test is necessary for the functioning of the system. Indeed, my entire point is that it is inimical to the functioning of the system, but was pushed because it was nevertheless in the interests of the individual administrators. As noted in my initial post, it is a classic example of the principal-agent problem.

I would not support creating any procedural methods to enable people who refuse to do their job to keep getting paid, however.

I don't understand the relevance of the reference to people who refuse to do their job, since teaching subjects that are not part of the state standards for the course in question is not the job of any teacher; rather, it is the job of the teacher to refuse to do so.

I don't understand why you are inferring that teaching kids how to game the test is necessary for the functioning of the system

It ensures an unbiased measurement of tested material between students who did learn to "game" the test and those who didn't. Similarly, "bring a #2 pencil" or "there will be a test on Fri" has no direct benefit to students so teachers who don't feel like making those announcements should be protected.

But I guess teachers who can't figure that much out are definitely qualified to do whatever the heck they feel like regardless of what management/administration assigns them.

But I guess teachers who can't figure that much out are definitely qualified to do whatever the heck they feel like regardless of what management/administration assigns them

Well, since I have repeatedly said that teachers are NOT free to do whatever the heck they feel like, but rather must teach the state-mandated curriculum, I am not sure why you think that is relevant. Unless, as I suspect, you aren't really trying to answer OP's question at all.

And, btw, it is hardly in the interests of the system to have falsely beliefs about what every kid has learned, rather than false beliefs about only some students. But I guess internet commenters who can't figure that out are definitely qualified to denigrate others.

And, btw, it is hardly in the interests of the system to have falsely beliefs about what every kid has learned, rather than false beliefs about only some students.

Feel free to provide specific mechanics of how test prep produces false beliefs about student's ability and show a real standardized test on which your proposed strategy works.

Of course, the last time I asked this, you claimed to be agnostic that such a thing existed, yet now you seem to claim it exists for sure. Weird.

I didn't say they [methods to produce false beliefs about what kids learned] work, and I didn't say they don't. I have no idea either way, and I don't care, because it is irrelevant.

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