The billion-dollar problem in education | Tanishia Lavette Williams

Episode Summary

In the TED-Ed Educator Talks event of 2024, education researcher Tanishia Williams critically examines the entrenched practice of standardized testing in the American education system, presenting a compelling case for a shift towards more equitable forms of student assessment. Williams highlights the historical roots of standardized assessments, tracing back to a time before the United States was even a nation. She points out the significant financial implications of these tests, labeling the standardized testing industry as a billion-dollar industry that perpetuates racialized achievement gaps and influences the allocation of educational resources. Williams shares personal experiences from her career as a school and district leader, observing that students and teachers perform better outside the high-stress environment of standardized testing periods. She argues that these assessments do not foster the development of critical thinking and creativity among students, nor do they improve teaching practices. Instead, Williams suggests that a strategic disinvestment from standardized testing could lead to a more equitable and effective education system. Drawing on her role as the Education Stratification Fellow at the Institute on Race, Power, and Political Economy, Williams delves into the racial and economic disparities perpetuated by the current assessment practices. She critiques the focus on memorization and the narrow perspectives these tests reinforce, advocating for a system that prepares students to be adaptive and thoughtful citizens. Williams proposes alternative approaches, such as sample testing and prioritizing standards over standardization, to reduce the emphasis on high-stakes assessments. She calls on policymakers, educators, and community members to support these changes, emphasizing the importance of investing in humanity over standardized tests. Through her persuasive argument, Williams envisions an education system that values and cultivates the diverse talents and abilities of all students.

Episode Show Notes

Standardized testing is deeply woven into the fabric of US education, but does it foster genuine learning? Educator Tanishia Lavette Williams sheds light on the racial biases, financial costs and limited effectiveness of this kind of testing — calling for a fundamental shift to prioritize teacher-led instruction and empower students.

Episode Transcript

SPEAKER_03: TED Audio Collective. You're listening to TED Talks Daily.I'm your host, Elise Hu.Let's take a little step back in time to prepping for and taking standardized tests in school.Who can forget, right?In many states, we started taking these in third grade and continued right on up through the end of high school.At the TED-Ed Educator Talks event in 2024, education researcher Tanishia Williams offers a really compelling alternative to high-stakes testing— After the break, why another form of accountability is far more equitable.Support for TED Talks Daily comes from Capital One Bank.With no fees or minimums, banking with Capital One is the easiest decision in the history of decisions. Even easier than deciding to listen to another episode of your favorite podcast. And with no overdraft fees, is it even a decision?That's banking reimagined.What's in your wallet?Terms apply.See CapitalOne.com slash Bank.Capital One N.A.Member FDIC. This show is brought to you by Schwab.With Schwab investing themes, it's easy to invest in ideas you believe in, like electric vehicles, renewable energy, water sustainability, and more. Choose from over 40 themes, buy as is, or customize the stocks in a theme to fit your goals.Learn more at schwab.com slash thematicinvesting. SPEAKER_02: Canva presents Unexplained Appearances.It was an ordinary workday until... That presentation appeared out of thin air.Also, it's eerily on-brand. SPEAKER_01: Wait, did that agenda just write itself? SPEAKER_02: Words appear, making this unexplainable case... Unexplainable? SPEAKER_01: It's Canva's AI tools.I can generate slides and words in seconds. SPEAKER_02: Really?The real mystery is why I'm only learning this now. SPEAKER_01: Canva.com.Designed for work. We have a very expensive habit of creating and administering standardized assessments.Do you remember taking tests in school?Yeah, yeah, you do.Chances are you may have been one of those people who said, I'm going to stay up all night, I'm going to study, I'm going to read all these things, and if I can just remember 25 more of these vocabulary words, the probability of my score goes up 2.3%. Or maybe, maybe you were one of those ones who said, if I just lay this book on my head, the words will automatically seep into my brain.No matter either situation, you knew that the outcome of those assessments would play a very important role in your future. So chances are, if you grew up in any of the 50 states in America, you participated in standardized assessments.In fact, depending on where you live, you may have started in third grade and then tested every year until you graduated. Now, as a nation, even though we didn't really embrace this notion of written assessments until around 1845, Dr. William Rees teaches us that this process, this notion of labeling and compartmentalizing children started long before that, something like 150 years.And I did the math.Think about it.We were testing and labeling children before we were a country. It's a process that has always been embedded in our cycle of teaching and learning.It's as American as apple pie.And that's some expensive pie, because let me tell you, the standardized testing industry is a billion-dollar industry.It's used as a mechanism to define racialized achievement gaps. to dictate student promotion, to disseminate school resources and sometimes decide if it's a good school or a bad school.Now, once upon a time, I was a school and district leader, and I did the back-of-the-envelope math. And I got to tell you, in my career, I've interfaced with, I've participated in something like 203,760 standardized assessments. And that's a low-ball count.I was working.Listen, I was working.And one thing I learned, one thing I learned from my teachers and from my students is that my students actually learned more and performed better, and my teachers were actually much better pedagogues in times of non-testing as opposed to high-stakes testing. Right?So here's the reality.Here's some of what I faced.Have you ever seen a student collapse into tears because she could not remember the do-for-nothing presidents?Or what about the student who, this is what I'm saying. You've seen it?I've seen it.I've seen them. Or have you ever interfaced with a student who literally broke into hives?And I mean, we had to call in the nurse to put ice packs on this baby's chest because he could not participate in that makeup exam because he had to go to college and he needed that test score by that date.I've also had students who were more willing to punch each other in the face, to literally get into a fight, rather than to sit down and participate in a paper-pencil test.It ain't right.Now, people say that money is the root of all evil, but I got to be honest, as an educator, I don't think that standardized assessments are too far off.Mm-hmm. Standardized assessments as a form of accountability do not improve teacher practice.They don't build thinkers and creators in students.Now, what if I told you that the quality of education that we offer to students can be improved through a strategic disinvestment in standardized testing as a form of accountability? Now, in one of my roles, I serve as the Education Stratification Fellow at the Institute on Race, Power and Political Economy.I know, you like my title, I like it too.Tell somebody. I study the construct of race.I look at rankings and status and distributions of power.I examine political economies.And all that's really, really fancy. But what it really means is that I look at income and wealth as pertaining to education and its outcomes. So for the last 10 years or so, I've worked in and researched New York City schools.Now, with the understanding that history class is the place where students most often come into contact with the world and its cultures, I thought, well, let's start there.United States history and all of its accompanying exams. So in New York, like in most places, there are standards that dictate all of the skills that we want students to acquire.There's a curriculum that lays out the who, what, where, where, why, the people, the places, the things that we want to expose students to. And there's an assessment that says these are all the important things that we got to make sure these kids know by the end of the year.These three documents serve as the foundation upon which the U.S.history curriculum has been curated in New York.So when we look into the curriculum, when we dig a little deeper and we look at that in a bar graph format, we can see where some of that inequity actually begins. So this is the part that's easy.You look at my data set, you can see that.There are also parts that you can't see as closely, these pieces that have become rituals of normalcy.They manifest themselves in pieces like racialized hierarchies of intelligence. like legislative wars over what students should and should not read, like millions of dollars in and out of curriculum companies as they curate a story of the United States, like wealth and income inequities amongst people of color. Now, an irony of these assessments or the data that we glean from these students is that it actually feeds more into a political economy than it does classroom instruction.It's like the whole utility, the whole function of those standardized assessments gets lost.Reason being, we are not forefronting building teacher capacity or deepening students' knowledge in the process that we're using.And we are spending billions of dollars to do that. Now I used to say, I used to say that the color of achievement, we can look and we can associate it with hues classified by race, but maybe, maybe the color of achievement is green. Now, the way that we are currently rolling out these assessments results in an inadvertent focus on a very specific, a very laser-focused point of view that will not equip our students to be ever-evolving citizens in this crazy society that continues to change.We have created a memorization test where the most likely answer is the white male. So I said it at the onset, and I feel compelled to say it again.I believe that the quality of education that we offer to children can be improved through a strategic disinvestment in leveraging standardized assessments as a form of accountability.What we're doing right now does not build thinkers.We need tinker thinkers.What we're doing right now does not build creators.And we need creators.So imagine... Imagine a world where all of the minutes of the instructional day are used in service of creating the people who are going to run society. The radical solution is an economic one.Shift the focus of assessments back into the classroom, where the teachers can use it to make pedagogical decisions and where the students can be informed about what they know and what they don't know.So for my federal and my state policymakers, Sample test.Understandably, you would love a mathematical equation that allows you to put every single decimal point on that spreadsheet, but I assure you, you do not have to test every single American child 112 times in their compulsory school years for you to decide that the school up the street needs more books. Sample test.It's easier, it's cheaper, it's faster, and it gives way more instructional hours back into the instructional day. For my local districts and my school boards, it's okay to have standards.I have standards.But I need you to prioritize standards over standardization. We do not need to test every single child the same exact way, particularly if that way does not bring out that child's gifts or skills.Say it after me.Standards.Standards.Over.Over. Standardization.Yo, it sounds like a button, right?I should get some buttons made.I should get some buttons made. Now, for my principals, oh, this is fun because I had this gig.I had this gig.Principals, you need to resource your teachers.There are a lot of things in the building that you cannot control, but one thing you can control is ensuring that your teachers, your staff, your crew have every single resource and skill that they need to do their job effectively and that they are making good on that, that they are doing their jobs effectively. And know that every time you interact with a teacher, every time you build that teacher's capacity and give that teacher what he, she or they need, they are working with a child, and that child will go out to solve the problems of the world.Now, for my teachers, you actually have a really fun job as well.You get to ask the questions that no one knows the answers to. And here's the thing, you can't be wrong because we all know the answer, right?You get to pose unfathomable scenarios all in pursuit of cultivating those thinkers of tomorrow because the problems, the questions for which we don't have answers today become the catalyst to the solutions that we need for tomorrow.I'm going to say it again. The questions that are unanswered today serve as the catalyst for the solutions that we need for tomorrow.That's how we cultivate a growing society.That's how we build thinker-tinkers.The innovations that we need for tomorrow have yet to be conceived, but they can start, my teachers, in your classroom, under your watch.Now, for my students, my families, my community members, and everybody else, I need you to hold folks accountable.One thing history teaches us is that we cannot sit back and wait for those in power to make policy that is inclusive.Policy changes, curriculum changes, people changes can come from the people and be for the people.And people work.People work, that's good work. So let's do some of that people work together. divest in standardized assessments and invest in humanity.Thank you. 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