Главная страница «Первого сентября»Главная страница журнала «Английский язык»Содержание №12/2008

Teachers criticise over-testing

UK tests and league tables have made children the unhappiest in the western world, teachers have claimed.
Even nursery-age children were being taught to spell and write in readiness for the tests waiting for them at primary school.
Very young children knew exactly what educational levels they had reached, and many stopped trying because they believed they were “dumb”, they said.
The government has denied that children have to take too many tests.

Under Pressure
Delegates at the National Union of Teachers conference in Manchester heard that children were being streamed from the first year of primary school.

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[Sats] turn teachers into robots and they turn children off learning.
Netta Ford,
NUT conference delegate

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School Tests: Who Takes What
A guide to the varied pattern of tests around the UK in the school years prior to the public exams (such as GCSEs) which most sit at the end of compulsory education.
Ages are approximate: tests are taken mainly in May and many children will not reach the age in question until later in the year.
It also heard that they faced increasing pressure from intensive monitoring.
Sara Tomlinson, a teacher from a school in Lambeth, south London, said: “They all know their own level – they walk around schools almost with their level printed on their foreheads.”
She also argued that schools were only focusing on those pupils who were likely to meet the targets because they were the only ones who counted for their league tables positions.

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Testing Figures
• Pupils in England on average take 70 national tests while at school;
• 54,000 examiners employed in national tests;
• 25 million test papers each year.
Source: GTC

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Another delegate Netta Ford said: “Sats were the poison at the heart of the education system – they turn teachers into robots and they turn children off learning.”
Children are tested at the ages of seven, 11 and 14, but many teachers say they spend much of their school life preparing for them.

Story from BBC NEWS: By Hannah Goff