Our Results-Driven, Testing Culture: How It Adversely Affects Students' Personal Experience, Lyn Lesch (9781578866625) — Readings Books
Our Results-Driven, Testing Culture: How It Adversely Affects Students' Personal Experience
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Our Results-Driven, Testing Culture: How It Adversely Affects Students’ Personal Experience

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Lyn Lesch advocates that learning cannot be measured by empirical results like testing and grading. As the founder of Chicago’s The Children’s School, Lesch didn’t give grades or submit students to standardized testing_such conditions may seem blasphemous to most educators, but the results spoke for themselves. Without the high-stakes pressure of results, accountability, and testing, students were able to take a more active role in their education. With reduced stress on performance, students can develop an openness to the material and link learning to their own personal experience. If the status quo goes unchanged, Lesch argues that students will be schooled in a disembodied, dull manner that prevents true learning and comprehension. To avoid this, Lesch describes how education should revolve around each student’s personal experience (i.e., linking school with what matters to individual students). Perhaps more than anything, this book is intended to be a discussion point for developing a healthy relationship between personal experience and academic learning.

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Format
Paperback
Publisher
Rowman & Littlefield
Country
United States
Date
10 August 2007
Pages
154
ISBN
9781578866625

Lyn Lesch advocates that learning cannot be measured by empirical results like testing and grading. As the founder of Chicago’s The Children’s School, Lesch didn’t give grades or submit students to standardized testing_such conditions may seem blasphemous to most educators, but the results spoke for themselves. Without the high-stakes pressure of results, accountability, and testing, students were able to take a more active role in their education. With reduced stress on performance, students can develop an openness to the material and link learning to their own personal experience. If the status quo goes unchanged, Lesch argues that students will be schooled in a disembodied, dull manner that prevents true learning and comprehension. To avoid this, Lesch describes how education should revolve around each student’s personal experience (i.e., linking school with what matters to individual students). Perhaps more than anything, this book is intended to be a discussion point for developing a healthy relationship between personal experience and academic learning.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Rowman & Littlefield
Country
United States
Date
10 August 2007
Pages
154
ISBN
9781578866625