Part 2 The Testing Games ; What the Eff? Are Schools the New Hunger Games?

in education •  7 years ago  (edited)

Welcome back to The Testing Games. Much like the children in the bestseller, The Hunger Games, students in today’s schools must compete against each other to survive, taking test, after test, after test. In the US, our Race to the Top education policy pits children against each other in a competition, all to increase scores and earn additional funding for their schools. It is high pressure, high stakes, and highly immoral, in my opinion.

The feedback I received on my last blog got me thinking. While I have been making Hunger Game analogies for years, I wondered if any one else has ever written on this subject of public education as a dystopian reality. So, I went searching. What I found was a little disturbing.

A simple Google search of the key terms ‘Hunger Games’ and ‘testing’ led me to quite a few teacher websites. Initially, I had hope. However, on closer examination, I was disappointed to find many teachers use The Hunger Games theme to motivate their students to do better on tests. One teacher even produced a video, directing her students to play the various characters in the story. Rather than highlighting the hypocrisy of testing, however, she encouraged her students to buckle down and work harder, fight harder … to win.

Ugh. Not what I was looking for.

Then, I saw it. On one of the teacher’s websites, I found a comment wall. Three years ago, a woman by the name of Caroline Persons left one comment that still remains unanswered. Buried deep on that site, lies an insightful analysis of one of the most memorable characters from The Hunger Games: Effie Trinket.

I have borrowed clips of the comment below. The tenor struck deep to my core as a teacher. The comparison drawn is important enough to give all teachers reason to pause. The commentary begins:

“Maybe another similarity can be found with Effie Trinket. Effie stresses over status and always stays fashionable, and she worries over trivial things. She criticizes people for their lack of “Manners, manners!” and frets over strict adherence to schedule, while Katniss and Peeta worry about being killed.”

Ah, Yes, Effie Trinket. Remember her in the movie? In the reaping scene, her bright clothes and elaborate makeup are in sharp contrast to the pale, dusty background of the district. She looks like a clown, which is fitting, because only someone with no depth or empathy could parade around applauding such a horrid game.

We are meant to be captivated by, yet despise, Effie. Trifling Effie … but, wait. Is Effie meant to make us question ourselves? The commentary continues:

“In the lens of ego, she [Effie] may be a metaphor for teachers who fret so much about their own performance they focus more on test scores than students’ learning and well-being.”

See. Now, that strikes a chord. As a teacher, I have to stop and look within. Am I Effie Trinket? Am I more concerned with getting high scores, and consequently bonuses and recognition? Am I, like Effie, willing to just plaster on a smile and blatantly lie right to the face of children? Do I reek of privilege, unable to see my students individually as human beings, rather than just data points on a wall?

No, I see the hypocrisy ingrained in Effie’s character. She is dressed like a clown because that is what she represents. Blind allegiance, no matter the cost. No, I am no Effie. In fact, Effie infuriates me. I have a hard time forgiving teachers like Effie. But, I read on:

“Looking at her through fear, she may represent teachers who are too scared to stray beyond teaching for the test. Effie might be doing this all because it’s the only way of life she knows.”

Ahh, that point, I understand. Testing has become so systematic in our schools that, for many, testing is all they remember. Accountability has become such a major focus in our schools, many can not even remember a time when students did not have to take standardized tests, over and over, and over again.

Many do not remember a time when they, themselves, were not labeled with a number. The No Child Left Behind generation has grown up and moved on. Many still, silently, wear their badges of shame or honor, depending on score. Being labeled with a number early in life is hard to shake. Perhaps, perhaps it is all they know.

Or, maybe, as Persons explains, maybe teachers are just scared. Maybe they are afraid of losing their jobs due to low test scores. Maybe teachers are terrified to find themselves left behind, holding overpriced teaching degrees that don’t guarantee any opportunities in the world outside of education. Maybe they are scared to death of being embarrassed, of the public disgrace.

I understand scared. Many of us do.

But, does being afraid justify blind allegiance to a system of high stakes testing, a system that we know reinforces the inequities already strangling our public school children?

Does being conditioned to testing justify the excessive amounts of testing, the continued labeling of children as failures?

Does putting on a fake smile, while we cheer our students on to do their best on the tests, make it ok?

Do students look at teachers, like we look at Effie, and wonder...

What the eff ?


*Food for Thought – For Those Who Hunger *

“Or Effie could be the parent who treats their child like a trophy, blinded so much by their own pride they neglect to see their child and student as the person they are.”

Are Standardized Tests the New Hunger Games?

Read Part 1 Here:
https://steemit.com/education/@gatorlynne/the-testing-games-is-standardized-testing-the-new-hunger-games

Blessings, Gator
226877_1039272830045_1114_n.jpg

'Steemin my way through @gatorlynne

Sources:

Testing Games - This is a repost from a personal blog, written in 2014.
Comment from Persons: http://www.cleanapple.com/?p=481
Gifs via giphy .com

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Awesome article, yeah my dad has been a teacher for a long time, and all the standardized testing has done is made him no longer focus on truly teaching the students, but more on teaching them how to pass a test!

Nothing good comes from taking test, in fact most the information learned just for the test is never truly retained!

Your also right schools in my city all boast the ratings, specially the ones that claim they were in the top as in A+, to me the big A+ just means it is a school I would never send my kids to being they are more focused on a test that, to me, means nothing in the end. To bad teachers can no longer do what many of them really love, and that is to really just teach people!

So true! We decided to shift our focus from testing to arts at our school and my, oh my, has the turnaround impressed everyone. The arts motivate the students to come to school and teach them to think outside the box, or in the case of testing, outside the bubble. I am a teacher, also. We got a pretty solid movement together a few years back and managed to convince our local school board to opt out of testing. It was a first. It didn't last, feds came down hard, but we got our point across. In the last few years, we've managed to decrease the testing laws by half. I, personally, opt my daughter out of all state testing. Many do not realize that is an option. Glad you enjoyed the article. I have a few more in the series. I am posting this series once a week. Happy New Year to you and your dad! Send him my thanks for his service! Blessings!

Hi! I am a robot. I just upvoted you! I found similar content that readers might be interested in:
https://gatorbonbc.wordpress.com/2015/01/12/a-return-to-the-testing-games-part-2-what-the-eff/

Yup. That would be my old blog. Thx