In my current program we complete Ages and Stages
developmental screening tool. It covers
social, emotional, cognitive, gross and fine motor skills. This screening tool assist us to refer
children for full evaluations if their score falls in the at-risk
categories. Ages and Stages allows for monitoring and tracking of skills similar to milestones along a scripted healthy trajectory. It also serves for us to
provide parents with activities to conduct at home with their children to
assist with achieving milestones. Its
parent friendly and is conducted in a play format therefore not intimidating to
the families. I fully support using
screening tools to help identify children that maybe in need of early intervention
services.

I don’t necessarily support standardized testing in schools. It
does not account to be suitable for all types of learners and test takers. It can cause a mass amount of stress in some
children. In others that don’t have a
long attention spam they are not able to display their full potential. I was a smart kid but would get bored and
circle all d’s. The test did not have the
ability to account for me being an A-B student.
I also don’t like that fact that these state and national test are
always using it to display the assumption that children of color are lacking in
academic skills. I however support
behavioral and academic assessments. These
results can be used to support academic placements and support for children
with behavioral concerns and for the exceptional student (special needs and
gifted children).

In the state of
Arizona if a child fails the reading portion of the AIMS testing they are not
permitted to move to the 5th grade.
Testing is completed nearly at the end of the school year…. My question
is why was this child not given support earlier in the school year? What if they have been successful in other
portions of the test? Why should they be
condemned to peer humiliation and held back?
Support will be provided the following school year with mandatory tutoring. Now the educators know good and well that
this child was failing at this subject earlier in the school year. Thus my continued dislike for non-objective
testing for children. I believe that all children should be taught as if they have an IEP (individual education plan) based on their own strenghts and learning styles. There maybe a need for measurements and therefore should be customized and individualized to meet each child. Not for the mindset of the mainstream.
 |
“There are no external
standardized tests used to rank students or schools in Finland, and most
teacher feedback to students is in narrative form, emphasizing descriptions of
their learning progress and areas for growth. As in the NAEP exams in the
United States, samples of students are evaluated on open-ended assessments at
the end of the second and ninth grades to inform curriculum and school
investments. The focus is on using information to drive learning and problem-solving,
rather than punishment. Inquiry is a
major focus of learning in Finland, and assessment is used to cultivate
students’ active learning skills by asking open-ended questions and helping
students address them" (Darling-Hammond, 2010).
|

“In a Finnish classroom, it is rare to see a teacher
standing at the front of a classroom lecturing students for 50 minutes.
Instead, students are likely to determine their own weekly targets with their
teachers in specific subject areas and choose the tasks they will work on at
their own pace. In a typical classroom, students are likely to be walking
around, rotating through workshops or gathering information, asking questions
of their teacher, and working with other students in small groups. They may be
completing independent or group projects or writing articles for their own
magazine. The cultivation of independence and active learning allows students
to develop metacognitive skills that help them to frame, tackle, and solve
problems; evaluate and improve their own work; and guide their learning processes
in productive ways” (Darling-Hammond, 2010).
Darling-Hammond, L. (2010). What we can Learn from Finland's Successful School Reform, Retrieved June 14, 2014, from, http://www.nea.org/home/40991.htm