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2019年翻译资格考试英语高级笔译材料:教育改革

来源:长理培训发布时间:2019-03-25 13:01:39

   英译汉

  High Stakes Are for Tomatoes
  The statewide testing of students, with penalties for failure, has run into opposition from parents across the political spectrum.
  1. By now it's hardly news that as education has risen to the top of the national agenda, a great wave — some would say a frenzy — of school reform has focused on two related objectives: more-stringent academic standards and increasingly rigorous accountability for both students and schools.
  2. In state after state, legislatures, governors, and state boards, supported by business leaders, have imposed tougher requirements in math, English, science, and other fields, together with new tests by which the performance of both students and schools is to be judged. In some places students have already been denied diplomas or held back in grade if they failed these tests. In some states funding for individual schools and for teachers' and principals' salaries — and in some, such as Virginia, the accreditation of schools — will depend on how well students do on the tests. More than half the states now require tests for student promotion or graduation..
  3. But a backlash has begun.
  4. In Massachusetts this spring some 300 students, with the support of parents, teachers, and community activists, boycotted the Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System (MCAS) tests ("Be a hero, take a zero") and demanded that if students had good enough records or showed other evidence of achievement, they be allowed to graduate even if they hadn't passed the test. Last November, after a strong majority of students failed the test, the state board of education lowered the score for passing to the level that the state designates as "needs improvement."
  5. In Wisconsin last year the legislature, pressed by middle-class parents, refused to fund the exit examination that the state had approved just two years earlier. After an extended battle with Governor Tommy Thompson, who has been a national leader in the push for higher standards and greater accountability, a compromise was reached under which student achievement will be assessed on a variety of criteria. Failing the exam will not result in the automatic denial of a diploma.
  6. In Virginia this spring parents, teachers, and school administrators opposed to the state's Standards of Learning assessments, established in 1998, inspired a flurry of bills in the legislature that called for revising the tests or their status as unavoidable hurdles for promotion and graduation. One bill would also have required that each new member of the state board of education “take the eighth grade Standards of Learning assessments in English, mathematics, science, and social sciences” and that "the results of such assessments...be publicly reported." None of the bills passed, but there's little doubt that if the system isn't revised and the state's high failure rates don't decrease by 2004, when the first Virginia seniors may be denied diplomas, the political pressure will intensify. Meanwhile, some parents are talking about Massachusetts-style boycotts.
  7. In Ohio, where beginning next year fourth-graders who fail the Ohio Proficiency Tests will be held back, a growing coalition of parents and teachers — members of the Freedom in Education Alliance, Parents Against Unfair Proficiency Testing, and other groups — are circulating petitions to place a referendum on the ballot to amend or repeal the state's testing laws.
  8. In New York a policy requiring that all students pass Regents examinations in a variety of subjects in order to graduate is increasingly the subject of controversy. Three former members of the State Board of Regents who helped to develop the policy issued a position paper earlier this year saying that they had never expected that all students would be held to a single standard, and calling for a re-examination of the policy. “The thinking [when I voted for the test requirement] was that everyone would take the exams,” one of them told The New York Times, “but you could get a diploma through other channels.”
  9. The backlash, touching virtually every state that has instituted high-stakes testing, arises from a spectrum of complaints: that the focus on testing and obsessive test preparation, sometimes beginning in kindergarten, is killing innovative teaching and curricula and driving out good teachers; that (conversely) the standards on which the tests are based are too vague, or that students have not been taught the material on which the tests are based; that the tests are unfair to poor and minority students, or to others who lack test-taking skills; that the tests overstress young children, or that they are too long (in Massachusetts they can take thirteen to seventeen hours) or too tough or simply not good enough. In Massachusetts, according to students protesting MCAS, some students designated as needing improvement outscored half their peers on national standardized tests. “Testing season is upon us,” says Mickey VanDerwerker, a leader of Parents Across Virginia United to Reform SOL, “and a lot of kids are so nervous they're throwing up.” In Oakland, California, a protest organizer named Susan Harman is selling T-shirts proclaiming HIGH STAKES ARE FOR TOMATOES.
  10. Some of the backlash comes from conservatives who a decade ago battled state-imposed programs that they regarded as anti-family exercises in political correctness. Although she has always thought of herself as a "bleeding-heart liberal," Mary O'Brien, a parent in Ohio who calls herself “an accidental activist” and is the leader of the statewide petition drive against the Ohio Proficiency Tests, complains that the state has no business trying to control local school curricula. In suburban Maryland this spring some parents kept their children out of school on test days, because they regard the Maryland School Performance and Assessment Program as a waste of time. They complain that it is used only to evaluate schools, not students — hereby objecting to almost precisely what parents in some other states are demanding. “It's more beneficial to have my child in his seat in the fifth grade practicing long division,” one Maryland parent told a Washington Post reporter.
  11. But many more of the protesters-parents, teachers, and school administrators — are education liberals: progressive followers of John Dewey, who believe that children should be allowed to discover things for themselves and not be constrained by "drill-and-kill" rote learning. They worry that the tests are stifling students and teachers. Most come from suburbs with good, even excellent, schools. Instead of the tests they want open-ended exercises — portfolios of essays, art and science projects, and other “authentic assessments” — that in their view more genuinely measure what a student really knows and can do. They have gotten strong reinforcement from, among others, FairTest, of Cambridge, Massachusetts, which opposes standardized testing; Senator Paul Wellstone, of Minnesota, who is sponsoring an anti-testing bill in Congress; Alfie Kohn, a prolific writer and polemicist who argues that the standards movement is a travesty that has "turned teachers into drill sergeants" in the traditionalist belief that "making people suffer always produces the best results"; and Gerald Bracey, an education researcher and a critic of the widespread belief that U.S. students are far behind their peers overseas, which has given impetus to the standards movement.
  12. The anti-testing backlash is beginning to cohere as an integrated national effort. Earlier this year some 600 test critics attended a national conference on high-stakes testing, at Columbia University's Teachers College, to discuss effects, alternatives, and strategies: how to get the attention of legislators, what kinds of cases would be suited to civil-rights litigation, what assessments ensure accountability, how to achieve higher standards without high-stakes tests. Some on the left believe that the whole standards movement is a plot by conservatives to show up the public schools and thus set the stage for vouchers. All believe that poor and minority kids, who don’t test well, are the principal victims of the tests and the standards movement. They contend (correctly) that almost no testing experts and none of the major testing companies endorse the notion of using just one test to determine promotion or graduation or, for that matter, the salaries of teachers and principals. But so far legislators and governors haven't paid much attention.
  13. Among the most articulate critics of the tests are the boycotting students, who complain about narrowing opportunities and shrinking curricula. The most exciting ninth-grade course in his school, says Will Greene, a high school sophomore in Great Barrington, Massachusetts, is a science-and-technology class with a lot of hands-on experimentation. In the 1998-1999 school year, when students could take the class without worrying about MCAS, eighty students enrolled; this past year enrollment fell to thirty. Greene says that students feel the course will not help them pass the test, and failing the test next year could mean they don't get a diploma. "At least create a test," wrote Alison Maurer, an eighth-grader in Cambridge, Massachusetts, “that doesn't limit what students learn, something that shows what we have learned, not what we haven’t.”
  14. The movement is a long way from achieving critical mass. The two most prominent lawsuits brought to date — one in Texas, challenging the test as racially biased; the other in Louisiana, arguing that students hadn't had a chance to learn the material — have failed. The boycotts are still small, and polls, by Public Agenda and other organizations, continue to show that 72 percent of Americans — and 79 percent of parents — support tougher academic standards and oppose social promotion “even if [the outcome is] that significantly more students would be held back.” Those numbers seem to reinforce the argument of Diane Ravitch, an education historian, an education official in the Bush Administration, and a strong supporter of standards, who has described the protesters as “crickets”— few in number, but making a disproportionate amount of noise. "There's tremendous support" for tests, Ravitch says, "among elected officials and in the business community." She may also be correct when she says that a great many of those who profess to oppose the high-stakes tests oppose all testing and all but the fuzziest standards. They are the same people, Ravitch argues, who in the end cheat kids by demanding too little and forever blaming children's inability to read or to do elementary math on the shortcomings of parents, neighborhoods, and the culture. Scrap the tests and we're back to the same neglect and indifference, particularly toward poor, marginal students, that we had before. Letting students who can't read, write, or do basic math graduate is doing no one a favor.
  15. Yet even Ravitch is concerned about what she calls the “test obsession” and the backlash it could create if large numbers of students fail and the whole system unravels. The accountability structure in Virginia has been set up in such a way that even if the vast majority of students pass the tests, a large percentage of schools could fail the accompanying Standards of Accreditation. Under the SOA, any school in which more than 30 percent of students fail in 2007 will be subject to loss of accreditation. That, according to a study by the conservative Thomas Jefferson Institute for Public Policy, in Springfield, Virginia, is a formula that fosters public distrust of both the schools and the system. The study points out that because high-scoring students are concentrated in just a handful of districts, only 6.5 percent of Virginia schools met the SOA in 1999, when 35 percent of all Virginia students passed all the required SOL tests.
  16. The Jefferson Institute study illustrates a wider set of problems underlying the new standards and tests. In an effort to look like the toughest guy on the block, some states have imposed standards that will be difficult if not impossible for many students and schools to meet. Members of the Virginia Board of Education are negotiating over allowing students to graduate without necessarily passing a standardized test. As noted, Massachusetts has already lowered the passing score on MCAS. A policy in Los Angeles to hold back all failing students has been modified. And merit-scholarship systems have been created in Michigan and California to keep top students from blowing off the test. The states that have had the least trouble with backlash are those, like Texas, that set standards low enough (and the Texas standards are far too low, in the view of some critics) that a large percentage of students can pass the tests.
  17. It is, of course, in the public ambivalence about where the bar should be set that the larger uncertainty about the standards movement lies. Robert B. Schwartz, the president of Achieve, an organization created in 1996 by governors and business executives to defend the standards movement (at that time mostly against conservative attacks), recognizes that despite the polls, "not enough has been done to bring the public along." In most cases the tests and standards were imposed from the top down, with little input either from teachers — often regarded as the problem rather than the solution — or from parents (who in Arizona and California are not even allowed to see old test questions). What's needed now, Schwartz says, is to bolster public understanding and “capacity building,” including professional development for teachers, to make the whole system work. “The good news,” he told a reporter from Education Week in April, is that “states are not simply stopping with raising the bar, and shouting at kids and teachers to jump higher, but are moving to address the support question.”
  18. The question, as Schwartz knows, is whether resources — and particularly the quality of teaching in inner cities — will catch up with the demands on students. Since April, Schwartz has also acknowledged that as the day of reckoning approaches for millions of American students, the backlash will spread and intensify. "It's easy to assent in the abstract," he told me recently. “When it's my kid, it's something different." In the mid-1990s Delaware threw out a testing program because, in the words of Achieve, the legislature "had been unprepared for high rates of student failure.”
  19. In his state of education speech in February the U.S. Secretary of Education, Richard Riley, a strong advocate of accountability and standards, seemed to recognize the danger. “Setting high expectations,” he said, “does not mean setting them so high that they are unreachable except for only a few…If all of our efforts to raise standards get reduced to one test, we've gotten it wrong. If we force our teachers to teach only to the test, we will lose their creativity…If we are so consumed with making sure students pass a multiple-choice test that we throw out the arts and civics then we will be going backwards instead of forward.”
  20. And yet the line between the political drive to be tough and indifference to standards in the name of creativity and diversity sometimes seems hard to draw. Diane Ravitch says that a person much missed in this debate is the late Albert Shanker, a longtime president of the American Federation of Teachers, who was relentless in his push for high standards for both students and teachers. But Shanker also pointed out that if only one standard for graduation exists, it will necessarily be low, because the political system can't support a high rate of failure. Shanker suggested two criteria: a basic competency level required of everyone, combined with honors diplomas, by whatever name, for students who do better and achieve more. The issue of the tradeoff between minimum competency and what is sometimes called "world-class standards" is rarely raised in any explicit manner, but it has bedeviled this debate since the beginning. As the standards requirements begin to take effect, and as more parents face the possibility that their children will not graduate, pressure to lower the bar or eliminate it entirely will almost certainly increase. Conversely, as more people come to understand that the "Texas miracle" and other celebrated successes are based on embarrassingly low benchmarks, those, too, will come under attack. The most logical outcome would be the Shanker solution. But in education politics, where ideology often reigns, logic is not always easy to come by.
  参考译文
  1 . 随着教育被提到国家重要的议事日程上,学校改革的浪潮(有些人称之为狂潮),集中在两个相关的目标上:学术标准更加严格以及对学生和学校应负的责任日渐苛求,就目前而言,这一点已算不上什么新闻了。
  2.各州的立法机构、州长和教育委员会在商界要人的支持下,对数学、英语、科学和其它课程提出更苛刻的要求,并辅之以新型的考试,依据考试成绩对学生和学校作出评价。好些地方已经有学生考试不及格而没拿到毕业证或被迫留级的情况。在一些州,每个学校的资金、老师和校长薪金 —— 并且在有些州,诸如弗吉尼亚州,学校的资格认证 —— 都取决于学生的考试情况。现在已有超过半数的州要求用考试成绩决定学生的升级和毕业。
  3.但是强烈的反冲已初露端倪。
  4.今年(2000年)春天,在马萨诸塞州约有300名学生在家长、教师和社区活动分子的支持下,联合抵制了综合评估系统考试(“是好汉,考鸭蛋”)。他们提出要求说,学生如有良好的学习记录或有其它成就表现,纵使考试不及格,也应允许他们毕业。去年(1999年)11月,大多数学生考试撞了红灯,州教育委员会为此将及格线降至原本设定为“有待改进”的水平。
  5.去年在威斯康辛州,立法机构迫于中产阶级家长们的压力,拒绝给该州政府两年前批准的毕业考试拨款。该州州长汤米·汤普森是鼓吹“更高标准、更大责任”运动的领导人。在与之进行了一番持久的较量之后,最终达成妥协:评定学生成绩可有多重标准。学生考试不及格并不一定由此而失去文凭。
  6.今年春天,在弗吉尼亚州,家长、教师连同学校的行政管理人员一起,反对1998年出台的学习评估标准考试,在立法机关刮起一阵议案旋风,要求修改考试或改变其作为升级和毕业不可逾越障碍的现状。有一个议案还要求州教育委员会的每个新成员都要参加英文、数学、自然科学和社会科学的八级学习评估标准考试,并将考试结果公之于众。这些议案都没有获得通过,但是几乎可以肯定,如果考试制度仍不修改的话,那么到2004年该州的不及格率依然会居高不下。届时首批弗吉尼亚州的高中毕业生也许拿不到毕业文凭,来自政治方面的压力就会日趋剧烈。与此同时,有些家长正在议论马萨诸塞州式的抗考行动。
  7.在俄亥俄州,从下年度开始四年级学生要是俄亥俄州水平考试不及格,就得留级。越来越多的家长和教师 —— 他们是教育自由联盟、反 对不公平水平考试家长协会和其他一些团体的成员—— 联合起来,到处散发请愿书,要求就修改或废止州的考试法进行全民公决。
  8.在纽约州,有一项政策正日渐成为争议的焦点。该政策要求所有学生必须在多项科目上都通过州评议会的考试才能毕业。三个曾经参与制定这项政策的前州教育评议会成员今年早些时候发表了一份意见书,声称他们从未打算用一个简单的标准去衡量所有的学生,他们提出重新检讨这项政策。其中一人对《纽约时报》说:“(当我投票赞成考试要求时,)我的想法是每个人必须参加考试,但你亦可以通过其它渠道获得文凭。”
  9.几乎每一个发起使用高风险考试的州都遭遇到强烈的反应。这种冲击源自于各方面的抱怨:对考试的关注以及过分准备,有时从幼儿园就开始了,扼杀了创意的教学方法与课程设置,排挤了一批优秀教师;(相反地,)考试所依据的标准太模糊,考试所涉及的内容都是学生没有学过的;这些考试对贫困生和少数民族学生或缺乏应试技能的学生都是不公平的;考试给年幼的儿童带来了过重的负担,考试时间过长(例如,马萨诸塞州的考试时间长达13到17个小时),考题难度太大或设计不当。在马萨诸塞州,据抗议“马萨诸塞州综合评价体系”考试的学生说,一些曾被定为学业欠佳的学生在国家标准化考试中,他们的成绩反而比一半的同级生都要高。全弗吉尼亚州家长联合改革SOL协会的负责人米基·凡德瓦克说:“考试的季节已向我们逼近了,有许多孩子紧张得呕吐。”在加利福尼亚州的奥克兰市,有一位名叫苏珊·哈曼的抗议活动组织者出售的T恤衫上印着“抗议高风险考试”的字样。
  10. 还有一些冲击来自那些保守派成员。十年前他们曾经为州政府硬性规定的政策规划斗争过,因为他们认为在政治改革中这些规划是反家庭的行为。来自俄亥俄州的家长玛丽·奥布莱恩是这次反对俄亥俄州水平测试请愿运动的带头人,自称是偶然参与到这次运动的积极份子。尽管她一直自认为是一位菩萨心肠的自由主义人士,她指责说,政府无权操纵当地学校的课程设置。今年春天在马里兰州郊区,一些家长不让他们的孩子在考试期间去上学,因为他们认为,马里兰州的学校业绩评估考试是浪费时间。他们认为,这个考试是用来考学校而不是考学生的,这样,他们反对的东西几乎正是其他州的父母们强烈要求的东西。一位马里兰的家长告诉《华盛顿邮报》的记者:“让我的孩子呆在五年级的教室里练习多位数除法,也许比进行测验更有好处。”
  11. 但是更多的抗议者——包括家长、老师和学校行政管理人员——崇信教育自由主义,推崇教育家约翰·杜威, 他们认为应该让孩子们自己去发现事物, 而不该用机械操练, 死记硬背的方式来桎梏他们。他们担心考试正在扼杀学生和老师的创造性。这些学生和老师大部分来自郊区,那儿有良好甚至优秀的学校。他们要求,不用考试,而是用开放式的练习方式教育孩子 —— 如写作、艺术和科学项目以及其他“真实的评估”方法 —— 在他们看来,这些方式能够更真实地衡量学生真正所学的知识和技能。这些人已得到来自其他各方面的强有力支持, 如马萨诸塞州卡布里奇市旨在反对标准化考试而设立的“公平测试”; 明尼苏达州参议员保罗· 威尔斯顿正在国会中支持通过一个反考试的议案; 多产作家和辩论家阿尔菲·康认为,标准化考试是扭曲而谬误的,它“把教师变成了训练官”,他们死报传统观念,以为“吃得苦中苦,方为人上人”;杰拉尔德·布雷希,是一名教育研究员,他对当前广为流行的看法提出了批评,这种观点认为美国学生的能力远逊于他国同龄学生,标准化运动实在是不得已而为之的。
  12.反对考试的冲击开始形成一股全国性的力量。今年早些时候有600位考试批评家参加了在哥伦比亚大学师范学院召开的关于“高风险”考试的全国性会议,他们讨论了这种考试的影响,替代办法和策略:怎样引起立法者的注意,哪种案件可适用于民法诉讼,什么样的评估办法能确保责任的履行,怎样在没有这种“高风险”考试的条件下取得较高的学业水平。部分左派人士认为,整个标准化运动就是保守者搞的阴谋,保守派企图籍此让公立学校出丑,从而为学券制创造条件。所有人都认为,考试考得不好的贫穷和少数民族学生成了考试和标准化运动的主要受害者。他们强调说几乎没有哪一个考试专家或主要的考试公司赞同只通过一次考试就能决定学生是否升级或毕业,甚至决定教师或校长的薪水。但迄今为止立法者和州长们对此不够重视。
  13.在考试的批评者中,态度最明确的莫过于联合抵制考试的学生们,他们对机会太少、课程缩减牢骚满腹。作为马萨诸塞州大巴林顿的一名高中二年级的学生,威尔·格林说他们学校九年级最令人兴奋的课程是让学生多动手做实验的理工课。1998—1999年度,学生由于不必担心马萨诸塞州综合评估系统考试,有80个学生选修这门课。然而,上一年度的报名人数降到30人。格林解释说学生们怕这种课程无助于他们通过考试,而下学年考试不过,就意味着他们拿不到毕业证书。一个马萨诸塞州卡布里奇市的8年级学生艾利森·摩勒这样写到:“起码应该设计一种不限制我们学生的学习自由、证明我们的学习业绩,而不是旨在暴露我们无知一面的考试。”
  14.要形成一个公众批评考试制度的群众性运动还有很长的路要走。目前有两个令人瞩目的诉讼案件都以失败告终:一个是发生在得克萨斯州关于控诉考试带有种族歧视的案件,一个是发生在路易斯安娜州有关学生没有机会学习教材的案件。目前抵制考试的人还只是少数,根据公众议事以及其他机构的民意测验连续显示,有72%的美国人和79%的家长依然支持更严格的学业水平测试,反对人为地让考试不及格者升级,“哪怕是再多的学生被迫留级也在所不惜。”这些数据似乎有力支持了曾为(老)布什政府的教育部官员,坚决支持水平测试的教育历史学家黛安娜·拉维契的观点。她曾经把反对者比喻为“蟋蟀”——只有那么一小撮,但是鼓噪之声,甚嚣尘上。她说,在选举出来的政府官员和商业团体中,有极多的考试支持者,那些口口声声反对高风险考试的人其实是反对一切考试的,反对除了最模糊标准的考试外的一切考试,她这么说可能有她的道理。她进一步争辩说,就是这些人他们对孩子要求太低而又总是把孩子不会阅读、不会做初等数学的问题归咎于父母、社区及其文化的缺陷,而最后上当受骗的只是孩子。如果废弃考试制度,我们将回到过去那种忽视和漠视学生,特别是穷困生和边缘学生的状态,让那些不会读、不会写,做不了基本数学题的学生毕业对谁也没有好处。
  15.然而,甚至连拉维契她也都担心:如果大量的学生没有通过考试或整个考试制度瓦解,其后果势必是产生她所说的“考试狂”以及强烈反冲。在弗吉尼亚责任制度已经建立,在这种制度下,即使是大多数的学生通过了考试,仍然可能有大量的学校无法达到这种制度所伴随的评估标准。根据这项标准,在2007,年任何学校如果有30%以上的学生未通过考试,那么这所学校将得不到办学资格。但是根据位于弗吉尼亚州斯普林菲尔德的保守的托马斯·杰斐逊公共政策研究所的调查研究,这种做法事实上成为滋生公众对学校和制度不信任的土壤。研究指出,由于高分的学生都集中于屈指可数的几个地区,尽管在1999年有35%的弗吉尼亚学生通过所有要求的SOL考试,仍然只有6.5%学校达到确认的标准。
  16.杰斐逊研究所的研究表明,在新标准和新考试中隐藏着一系列更为广泛的问题。为了逞能争第一,一些州强制采用一些标准,而这些标准对许多学生和学校来说,即使不是不可能也是很难达到的。弗吉尼亚州教育委员会的成员们正在协商是否允许学生不必一定要通过标准化测试也可毕业。大家观察到,麻萨诸塞州已经降低了MCAS(麻萨诸塞州综合评估系统)的及格线。在洛杉矶,要求不及格的学生留级的政策已经有所松动。密西根州和加利福尼亚州已经设立了优秀成绩奖学金制度来防止学习尖子不当一回事地随意应考。有些州,如德克萨斯州,采纳的考试标准极低(有些批评家觉得实在太低了),大多数学生都能通过考试,因而受到的冲击最弱。
  17.当然,公众对标准化考试运动的很大程度上的犹疑不决就在于公众对这条标准线应当如何设定存有矛盾的心理。“功业”组织的主席罗伯特•B•舒尔茨认识到尽管民意调查结果如此,但“我们在团结公众方面做得还不够。”(“功业”这个组织成立于1996年,是由州长们和工商管理人员组建的旨在于维护标准化考试运动的组织,在当时主要是用来对付保守派的攻击。)大多数的情况是,考试及其标准是自上而下执行的,根本没有征求教师(他们常常被认为是只能带来问题而提不出解决方案)和家长(在亚利桑那和加州家长甚至不被允许看往年的考题)的意见。舒尔茨认为,现在亟待解决的是增强公众对标准化考试的理解和加大“能力建设”,包括提高教师的专业能力,以致使整个系统有效运作。“可喜的是,”他在四月对《教育周刊》的一个记者说:“州政府并不是一味地提高标准,对着教师及学生吼叫,让他们往做得更好,而是在着手解决人心向背这一问题。” 18.正如舒尔茨所见,这个问题就在于教学资源,尤其是老城区的教学质量,能否达到对学生的要求这一水平线。自四月份以来,舒尔茨也承认,随着针对数百万美国学生判决式的测试一天天临近,这种对抗性行为将会更加广泛、更加激烈。“在理论上认同它并不难 ”,他最近告诉我说,“可是这搁到自己孩子身上,又是另一回事了”。在二十世纪九十年代中期,特拉华州拒绝实行考试计划,用 “功业”组织的话来说就是因为立法会“没有想到会有这么多学生不及格。”
  19. 美国教育部部长理查德·瑞利,系责任制与标准化运动的坚定支持者,他于二月份就教育状况问题的演说中似乎意识到这种危机。他说:“高期望值的设定并不意味着将标准设得那样高不可攀,结果除了少数的学生外无人可以通过 —— 如果我们为提高标准所付出的全部努力结果只沦落为单一考试的话,那我们就错了。如果我们逼着老师只为考试而教学的话,那么他们的创造性将会被泯灭。如果我们将精力过多地消耗在确保学生通过多项选择考试,甚至放弃艺术和公民学的教育的话,那么我们的社会将会倒退而不是进步。”
  20.然而,有时似乎很难在求严求高的政治努力和借创造性、多样性为名而漠视标准化考试的态度之间划清界线。黛安·拉维契说,在这场争论中,最值得怀念的人是已故的阿尔伯特·山克 —— 美国教师联盟的长任主席。他曾毫不留情的推行对老师、学生的高标准要求。但山克也指出,如果只存在一个毕业标准,那它必须要求低一点,因为现行政治体制不允许不及格率太高。山克提出两种评判标准:一种是针对每个学生的基本能力水平,另一种是给做得更好、学习更优秀的学生颁发荣誉证书,或别的什么证书。在最低能力标准和时常被称为“世界级标准”之间协调权衡的问题很少被以明确的方式提出来,然而这个问题从一开始就困扰着这场辩论。当标准化考试标准开始实施,愈来愈多的家长面对他们的孩子可能会毕不了业时, 要求降低标准或完全取消该标准的压力无疑会加剧。而另一方面,当更多的人开始了解到“德克萨斯奇迹”和其他闻名的成就只不过是建立在低得令人尴尬的分数线上时,那么这些标准同样将遭到攻击。最明智合理的方案也许就是山克的解决办法。但在常由思想意识支配的教育政治中,合乎逻辑的东西并不都是很容易做到的。

责编:曾珂

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