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The Pros And Cons Of Standardized Testing

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he American College Testing Program (ACT), is a standardized test that has been around for decades. Taken in one’s junior year of highschool, the four hour exam tests a students common knowledge. This test is now used mainly for colleges to make admission decisions; however, critics are becoming more against the idea of standardized tests like the ACT. Standardized tests are impractical because there is limitations set for education, do not give an accurate view of a student’s education, and puts a negative attitude towards schoolings. To begin with, in 1838, American educators began establishing an assessment that measures a students achievement. Over the next 30 years, American educational testing including formal written testing begins to replace oral examinations administered by teachers and schools at roughly the same time as schools changed their mission from servicing the elite to educating the masses (History). As the testing developed, colleges begun using standardized testing to assess how well prepared a student is for the future; by 1880 Harvard was proposing entrance examinations. Now in the 21st century, standardized testing has become a normality and students are bombarded with examinations the the SAT and ACT. Standardized testing has now been around for 150 years and face critical issues regarding the goals of American education. With almost two centuries under our belts, standardized testing has put limitations on a students’ education. A student goes to

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