Skip to content
Who's in the Video
Diane Ravitch is Research Professor of Education at New York University and a historian of education. In addition, she is a nonresident senior fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington,[…]

None of the characteristics that are important for thriving in the world of the twenty-first century are encouraged by standardized testing, argues Diane Ravitch, one of the most respected educational historians in the world. What we need is a generation of students who can think critically and creatively.

Diane Ravitch: The rise of the testing movement can be traced through the twentieth century.  But what we’re living now with is not just the rise of the testing movement but the overwhelming dominance of testing.  It has become almost like the monster that ate American education.  And we are so test-obsessed that schools are being closed based on test scores, even when those test scores reflect that the schools have a heavy enrollment of very poor kids or heavy enrollment of children with disabilities and children with all kinds of other needs.  We don't look at the needs.  We don't evaluate the problems that need to be solved in that school.  We just say "These are low scores.  We have to close the school."  

I am very deeply concerned about what years and years of standardized testing does to children’s brains.  I think it actually becomes destructive.  If we think about what our needs are for the twenty-first century, and not just how do we compete in the world but how do we live in the world, how do we survive in the world, we need a generation of people who will succeed us who are thoughtful, who can reflect, who can think.  You know, the expression is "think critically," and that's certainly important, but also who have imagination.

None of the characteristics that are important for thriving in the world of the twenty-first century are encouraged by standardized testing.  In fact, they’re all squashed.  So we’re doing something that is, actually, long term, harmful to children’s brains.  We’re saying to them, year after year, "You will be judged by whether you can select the right answer, whether you can put your X in the right bubble."  That's wrong. Whether we do it on a computer or do it with a number two pencil, it’s wrong, because we’re teaching children that every question has four possible answers, one of which is right and three of which are wrong.  

Directed / Produced by
Jonathan Fowler & Elizabeth Rodd


Related