"I'll be a Nothing" (Raey and William, 1999)
I have already blogged about number crunching with care and today I’m sort of revisiting that. A phrase that has stayed in my head since first I read it is: “ I’ll be a nothing ” said by a child in Year 6 and found in an article by Raey and William (1999). This child, by age 10, had already defined herself as worthless based on her grades in school. What does that tell us about the messages we can so easily give the children in our care! I read that as part of my doctoral studies when trying to find my own understanding of truth. I’m no philosopher, so that’s not the direction I’m going in here, but I do care about people - how we view ourselves and how others view us.
Educational assessment plays a part in this. If the child is viewed only as data, numbers on a page, then so much is lost. This can have an enduring effect, as Rowntee (1987) states, “- educational assessment… The ‘truths’ that emerge from it tell other people (and often ourselves) what to think and feel about us – and thus open or close to us life’s opportunities and rewards .”. The truth from the assessment is only part of the story, as Tomlinson said (2014), “the scores you get will tell you something, but they will not tell you everything.”
As I’ve written in previous blogs, I am dyslexic. For years I saw my slowness in reading, difficulty with spelling, lack of distinction between words I’d written and words in my head (so that words thought had often not reached the page), my slowness at processing, weak working memory and my malapropisms as signs of my stupidity. Ironically it is scores on a page that finally helped me to see that I am not stupid, not a dumbbell and doughnut but someone who is actually intelligent (the unpicking of intelligence can be for a later date). So what does this mean for us as teachers and parents?
Along with ‘dumbbell’ and ‘doughnut’ I was always praised for my efforts, told that I worked hard and could accomplish whatever I set my mind to. I had an English teacher in what would now be year 9 who believed in me, who focussed on the content of my writing as opposed to my handwriting and spelling, enabling me to believe for the first time that I could succeed in English. Mrs Hurlihy (no idea of the spelling) I thank you. You made me the English teacher I later became. Other teachers couldn’t understand how I could get full marks in a spelling test, yet make errors throughout my written work, not understanding the effort that had gone into learning those few words for the test, spellings which were forgotten the moment the test was completed. I would get told that my work was messy. It was, as it was full of rubbings out, crossings out and scruffy writing to disguise the incorrect spellings. This English teacher saw beyond the presentation, saw the effort and saw any ability that I had. She also took the time to know us as individuals, so that we were more than a score on a page.
If as teachers and parents we focus on test scores, we are defining our children by the numbers they produce. We can lose sight of the effort they have put in and not see the other contributions they make. There was a child I taught several years ago who I likened to a stepping stone in the class. He was one of our SEND pupils, with low reading and writing scores who struggled to get anything down on paper. His test scores did not reflect his innate abilities and he was easily overlooked for anything other than being a bit of a ‘class clown’, ‘attention seeker’. The clowning and attention seeking were his way of masking his low scores and weaker written work. He thought of himself at stupid. I used to do lots of general ‘thinking skills’ type of activities in class. I would set challenges for the class and these were not reliant on writing skills. This young lad would invariably be the first to get an idea of the answer. He wouldn’t necessarily solve the problem, but what he did was work out where the problem was going and make a contribution that enabled others to find the solution. He was a vital member of the team and the recognition he gained for this helped to raise his self-esteem. Hearing others praise him by acknowledging that they wouldn’t have found the answer without him was a tremendous boost. He was also one who would come up with some of the most creative thoughts for open-ended discussions, again receiving praise from his peers as well as from me. Scores in assessments could so easily have led to him feeling like the child I mentioned at the start of this “ I’ll be a nothing ”, but going beyond assessment scores enabled him to know that he was so much more.
Schools need to find time for these activities, whether they’re built into subject teaching or have their own dedicated time slots. We need time for children to find their worth in ways that aren’t necessarily linked to assessment. We need Music, Art, Drama, Sport. We need discussions, problem solving, creative thinking and more. Yes we need some form of assessment, yes we need our basic skills of numeracy and literacy, but we also need to value the rest of the child. The individual person that we each are.
References
Reay, D. & Wiliam, D, (1999) ''I'll be a nothing': structure, agency and the construction of identity through assessment ', British Educational Research Journal, 25: 3, 343 — 354
Rowntree, D. (1987) assessing students, how shall we know them . 2nd Edition. Kogan Page London
Tomlinson, R. https://twitter.com/BarrowfordHead
Heard on, Radio 4, Woman’s Hour 10am 15/07/14 http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0496c07
©Hélène Cohen
