Standardized Tests “Deny Children a Well-Rounded Education”

Posted by Sara Schmidt on Apr 07, 2010 - 08:05 AM

Though standardized testing can begin as early as the second grade in the United States, the National Association for the Education Young Children (NAEYC) advises against it.

Ministers are stripping primary school children of their basic human right to a well-rounded education, a teachers’ leader warned today.

Christine Blower, general secretary of the National Union of Teachers, said national tests for 10- and 11-year-olds, formerly known as Sats, contravene the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child.

Under the Convention, which Britain signed in 1991, children are entitled to a broad education which develops their “personalities, talents and abilities to their fullest potential.”

Blower told the NUT annual conference in Liverpool that Sats only gave children the right to pass exams, not the right “to be educated in the round.” They reduced children to “little bundles of measurable outputs trained in a mechanistic model of education,” she said, repeating words used last month by the children’s commissioner, Maggie Atkinson.

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Sara Schmidt

Sara Schmidt

Sara Schmidt is a writer, progressive activist, artist, and homeschooling mother to a tenacious little girl. A graduate of Southeast Missouri State, she has taught students in the United States and Spain, and has homeschooled her younger sister. She lives near St. Louis, Missouri.

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