Sunday, November 3, 2013

Test-Administration Doesn't Pass the Test



I walk around the room when the students are writing, but I hate to do the police-checking when I suspect they have something pre-written under the paper we let them provide.  It makes me feel creepy (where’s my basic trust?), but when I’ve overcome by aversion to being a suspicious creep and have checked, I’ve usually found that sure enough, there was something there. 

This wasn’t always the case.  When I taught at Golden Gate University, the students were not allowed to take  any books or papers to their desks when they took the TOEFL writing test.  Actually, most of my own test-taking situations as I was growing up were that way.  (More on that later)  The students doing the TOEFL part of their writing had thirty minutes to deal with a simple, unannounced topic.  The school provided them with paper, but they couldn’t have brought a pre-written piece anyway because they weren’t given the topic in advance, and they weren’t given dictionaries at all.    Except for the departmental final, our students usually know the topic because it’s based on the reading we’ve been doing in class and of course they’re encouraged to bring a dictionary, which they sometimes pack full of good stuff. And have you read some of those dictionaries even without the crib sheets?  They have sample essays in them already!  But here’s another possibility.  If the students know the topic is going to be the pros and cons of mandatory community service, they can write the essay at home, look busy during the first thirty minutes, and then hand in the one they wrote at home.  The good thing about that is that it motivates them to write an essay before they come to class.  The bad things is that we might mistake it for in-class writing.

I think the way we conduct tests in general invalidates them—not just for in-class writing, but for Scantron tests too.  Do you remember how we were tested?   A teacher said, “Stop!  Put your pencils down!”   and 250 pencils made one clicking sound—although I do remember a time when only 249 pencils made that click.  A little boy decided to finish what he was doing, and he continued to mark his Scantron instead of joining in the communal click.  The teacher gasped in horror and disbelief, clutched her hand to her heart,  and stomped over to the little boy to grab his Scantron and tear it in two.  “This is invalid!”  she said.   I’m still suffering for that little boy.  How could he have stooped so low?  (No, that little boy wasn’t me.  But if I’m suffering this much 60 years later, I wonder how he’s doing…and what new criminal activity he’s been up to.)  We can roll our eyes at that over-zealous teachers.  But do we gasp and clutch our hand to our hearts enough? We’re so casual in our departmental finals because we don’t want to intimidate the students, and we want to catch up on our reading and  socialize with the other proctors.  Eventually someone says, “The time is up” but there’s no mention of those pencils, and as people collect the booklets or the Scantrons, some students continue to mark their Scantrons, sometimes making the changes their friendly  classmates suggest.  Once, failing to get the attention of a student who was continuing after half of the Scantrons had been collected,  I brought this to the attention of another proctor, and he nodded.  He thought the student might need some extra time.  I know some teachers think it’s rigid to enforce the time limit, but it could also be called fair.  If the students have  special needs, they can get extra time through DSPS. 

When I was in non-credit at John Adams and Peggy Doherty was Resource Instructor, she instructed us on how to proctor.  She said the desks should be arranged with wide aisles.  I was surprised when I came to the Ocean Campus and saw the testing places here—often lecture halls with immovable desks that had no space between them at all, and the students had to sit on each other’s laps.  Only the most confident or least curious students would be able to keep their eyes on their own paper.  I remember my own curiosity when I took tests in school and my eyes went roving because I had so much respect for the opinions of the other test takers and just wanted to know what they thought.  Our students do too, and we set them up so they can do their best pair work of the semester.

I once did a unit on cheating with my advanced class, ESL 40 it was called at the time, and they were very candid about what they’d done or seen done.  Some of them even expressed anger for teachers who let students cheat.  One student spoke contemptuously of a teacher who praised a student for being a model student as reflected in her great test results after they had seen her with her book wide open at the back of the classroom during the test.  But they described  quite a lot of different and more subtle techniques.  We make it so easy for them to implement them.

Still, I don’t think most of our students are cheating.  If they were, wouldn’t the results be a lot better? 

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