But you have to admit that a portion of that arises out of the assumption that the student will spend a grand total of maybe 4 months "immersed" in a subject before leaving it behind. The texts, assessments, and entire pedagogical approach is not geared towards the accumulation of knowledge in any area. It's all educational hors d'oeuvres.
My earlier point about the "adolocentric society" also creates obstacles to being able to accomplish much at the secondary and junior college level because the learners don't see much point in acquiring and extending what the teachers are offering, simply because of who it is coming from - a culture perceived as necessarily obsolete.
As someone who worked in test development, and has had to generate plenty of tests at the junior college and undergraduate level, I have no problem with standardized tests or testing, provided they observe all the traditional criteria for validity and reliability. I do have a problem, however, with the mindless or sometimes political use of such tests, the pissing contests they tend to elicit, and the manner in which they engender stereotypy in instruction/preparation.
My earlier point about the "adolocentric society" also creates obstacles to being able to accomplish much at the secondary and junior college level because the learners don't see much point in acquiring and extending what the teachers are offering, simply because of who it is coming from - a culture perceived as necessarily obsolete.
As someone who worked in test development, and has had to generate plenty of tests at the junior college and undergraduate level, I have no problem with standardized tests or testing, provided they observe all the traditional criteria for validity and reliability. I do have a problem, however, with the mindless or sometimes political use of such tests, the pissing contests they tend to elicit, and the manner in which they engender stereotypy in instruction/preparation.
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