Conflict Between Transformative Learning and Standardized
Testing [Wynn Ferdinand Classroom Visit]
On April 1, 2014, Wynne Ferdinand visited our Adult Learners
class. For two and a half hours, I learned more about high school equivalency
tests than I’d ever before in my life. She explained the financial aspects
surrounding the revised GED, the alignment to Common Core standards, why New
York elected to offer the TASC over the GED and more. Overall, there seems to
be a general shift towards standardization as a cure-all for the education
system, and the changes in high school equivalency are reflecting that pattern.
However, what interested me the most about all of this
information was the role of transformative learning in this new atmosphere of
standardization. What role does transformative learning or andragogy have in
test preparation courses? Teaching as merely a means to pass a test seems
contradictory to every facet of transformative and adult learning. It ignores
the individual’s past experience when it assumes a set standard of knowledge
that the student may or may not lack. It shifts the focus onto the teacher as
exclusive possessor of power, and students as receptacles of the teacher’s
knowledge. It leaves very little room for transformative changes to occur, and
within the scarce breathing room that it allows, all the work of balancing
transformative learning and test preparation is left solely on the educator’s
shoulders.
For example, I work as a teacher’s assistant/tutor for the
Veterans Upward Bound program at Laguardia Community College. The VUB helps
prepare students for the CUNY Entrance Exam and, infrequently, the
GED/TASC. In the program, we have a
problem with student retention. Because the exam can be taken whenever students
feel themselves ready, students often drop out in middle of a cycle, either
because they’ve passed the test and are able to move on to college-level
courses, or because they’ve not passed the exam and would rather start anew in
an up-coming cycle. There is very little incentive to keep them in the
classroom for the richness of learning itself, and not nearly enough opportunities
for transformative learning.
Above: The remaining two students of his VUB cycle sitting for their final exam.
Ferdinand mentioned the Bridge Program at LaGuardia, and
they seem to have a better holistic approach embedded in the way the program is
structure. But, I feel like teaching toward a test is always going to be limiting
when considering transformative learning as a major goal in education.

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