Maynard Keenan said:
because of state and national "standards" that impose tests and rigid requirements so that children are simply taught to regurgitate information rather than how to analyze facts and draw conclusion. Essentially, they are taught to memorize, not to learn.
Exactly what I was going to say!
Teachers must teach the tests; and teaching the tests means giving out answers, rather than teaching kids who to seek answers.
Sadly, the very best teachers often get treated poorly by parents and administration because they do spend so much time teaching kids how to find answers and how to find the key questions in the first place.
The very good teachers, well, they manage to balance both the politics of teaching kids the test, while also spending time on teaching kids how to ask questions and find answers.
The worst enemies of the schools system are test-oriented parents and school administrations that want test results, not life results.
So you are saying that tests cannot ask questions that require analyses?
Plus in most subjects (beyond maths and sciences) what is the "correct" answer?
The "correct" answer is a)something that can be crammed in one night and b) something that go on a multple-choice test.
Tests that require detailed answers are not easily done on a large scale. The time and money that would be required would be quite prohibitive.
Even science has theoretical components to it-components not easily answered on a quickly-marked test.
Even a comprehensive exam for history, for example, requires several essays, analysis of ideas, etc. A one-off evaluation test can not cover what needs to be covered. It's much easier to have multiple-choice questions.
Teaching a governemnt English exam is easy: teachers just teach how to pick out themes, how to pick up on patterns, etc. Yet, English class is so much more than that: looking at society, looking at style, researching themes...there is so much to it!
And there is the real problem that many students just do not do well on tests, and that not all students are capable of getting A's.
A good alternative might be class-based evalution on work done in class, done at a local level.
Because its easier on the teacher. Mindless regurgitation of concepts that were taught to the children is easy to pass off as learning, and substitutes for the real thing. Imagine how much more effort goes into real teaching, and you'll see that in an uncompetative world where there's no incentive to teach the children well, there's no incentive to put in more work than that.
Sorry, but that is just not true. What is easier on a good teacher is interacting with the students; is showing them concepts; is allowing students to research and grow and be creative.
The truly joyous look a teacher has when one of their students has a breakthrough in learning is nearly at the level the parent feels.
However, because so many people have a skewed "it's easy" attitude about teaching, a lot of bad teachers get in to teaching without really caring, because they
can teach the test. The bar must be raised on what it takes to be a teacher-it should not be a simple certificate to get, but a hands-on process, along with training in child psychology, learning styles, etc.
If comprehensive evaluations were made-rather than relying on GPA's-the bad teachers would be weeded out, and the better and best teachers would remain. Students would no longer just get facts that they need to be able to bark out on cue, but instead ways of asking questions and finding answers; creativity would flourish.