yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Standardized Testing Isn’t Totally Useless, but It Does Miss the Point | Scott Barry Kaufman


3m read
·Nov 4, 2024

Processing might take a few minutes. Refresh later.

The idea of what we should be testing is a very hotly debated because there’s a certain objectivity that we think we have once we standardize things. We give the same test to everyone. And there is some truth to that: the more you standardize a test, the more you kind of give everyone the same opportunity to perform on that test. So there is some argument to be made towards standardization.

But we don’t have standardized minds. I mean, no one has a standardized mind. There’s no such thing as an average mind. So every one of us, every unique individual, is a dynamic system of not just cognitive processes but motivational processes, dreams, and desires. I formulated a theory, and I called it the theory of personal intelligence because I argued I wanted to shift our focus of analysis from taking one aspect that we are saying this is the measure of intelligence, whether it’s a standardized test or whether it’s an IQ test.

We say, well, we’ve decided as a society that’s our measure of intelligence. And then we compare everyone to each other on that one metric. I wanted to move it to a personal level and recognize that, well, within a person, every single one of us has a combination of traits, and we can compensate for lower levels of one trait with higher levels of another trait. For instance, we can compensate with lower levels of IQ with grit or with perseverance.

So we’re capable of mixing and matching our own unique profile of characteristics in such really fascinating, exciting ways that make us who we are. That’s what makes us a whole person. So when it comes to testing, I’m not necessarily against testing and not necessarily against using standardized tests as a way of measuring learning outcomes. But as a way of measuring human potential, I’m not down with that.

A really great report came out recently called Talent on the Sidelines, which found very clearly that our ethnic minority students, ethnic and racial minority students, are not being identified in gifted and talented programs, period. And we need to call this out. We need to make this—there are some wonderful researchers here trying to correct this. Like Julia Lawson Davis, for instance, trying to figure out what is going on there, what we can do.

You know when you have very poverty-stricken environments, for instance, it’s not as easy to get the opportunity to display your brilliance. It’s not as easy to learn when people all around you are dying. When you are not being fed, you know. It’s very hard to show your intellectual brilliance. It is a fact that there’s a huge underrepresentation of ethnic and racial minority students in gifted and talented education.

And I do not believe that ethnic and racial minority students are less gifted. I mean, who wants to make that argument? It is not the reality of the matter. And what you find there are some really neat programs. For instance, this one program called Project Bright, where they taught gifted behaviors to every student. So they assumed, well, everyone in this school system was going to learn something from behaviors that gifted students tend to have.

They kind of tried to distill how do gifted students think, you know, and can we teach this? And they taught every student in the school, and they thought after teaching it, like 25 percent or so more ethnic and racial minority students all of a sudden qualified for gifted education once you gave them a chance to learn these behaviors and traits.

So I think we need to be very wary about treating these labels as though they’re an essence of a person, you know, essentialism. A gifted—there’s a key difference to me between saying that child is gifted and that child was labeled as gifted. To me, the former is an essentialism argument. You’re saying that’s the essence of that person.

And the other one is you’re saying, well, we recognize something in that person that we are giving them a label so we can give them greater resources. But it’s very important that we don’t fall prey to the idea that because someone was labeled as gifted, then therefore t...

More Articles

View All
Managing your bank account | Banking | Financial Literacy | Khan Academy
In this video, we’re going to talk about how it can be very valuable to automate your deposits and your withdrawals into a checking account, and why that actually might be useful. So in the old days, what would typically happen is someone might cut a che…
Illustrating the Beauty of a Disappearing World | Short Film Showcase
The big thing that I’m trying to do with my work is give a chance for people to connect with that landscape, to cultivate a deeper understanding, and hopefully inspire them to make a difference. I am—I just kind of disappeared into the color and the form …
Exclusive: A Conversation with Alex Honnold and Co-Directors of “Free Solo” | National Geographic
I definitely have a fear of death, same as anybody else, and I would very much like to not die while climbing. You know, I was this huge, huge wall. But all it takes is one move that doesn’t feel right for you not to be able to do it. Maybe in 2015, I st…
Mako and Tiger Sharks: Photographing the Ocean’s Top Predators (Part 2) | Nat Geo Live
The first story that I wanted to share of this new work is a story about Tiger Sharks. Now, Tiger Sharks if you read the literature are described as the most dangerous sharks in tropical waters. They are considered the second most dangerous species of sha…
It's not complicated
You know when you’re walking down the street and you see a dude, and he’s muscular, and you think to yourself, “That guy looks pretty good. He’s nice and jacked. He takes care of himself.” A stupid question is wondering how he got that way, ‘cause everybo…
LearnStorm Growth Mindset: Animation Director on setting goals
My name is Lisa Labraccio. I’m 32 years old. I am an animation director at Ted Ed. I’ve always wanted to do animation, so it just, at whatever point in high school, when they tell you to start looking at colleges and what you might, where you might want t…