It floor It cleand: fryer Post n was i> • Scort Tuesday, March 11, 1986AThe Battalion/Page 5 Teacher Testing Local teacher disagrees with use of literacy test ome teachers r take excuses followH ozzles a ) avoid test ceded t f i I : ■: STIN — A case of the hic- conflict with a golfing tee nd an old reliable — car bk- — were just a few of the s given by teachers and ad- three wistrators trying to get their folio (ointments changed to take te’s literacy test. Jan Wood, director of tea- ssessment for the Texas tion Agency in Austin, said, ad one woman call in who at she gets the hiccups ev- |ay at 3:30 p.m., so she ’ttake the afternoon test.” er than 100 of the more 1200,000 teachers and ad- orators statewide have actu- ^ed to get out of taking the ood said. said one of his favorites, portsax! actually one of the most valid, given!* jives the number of teachers Tare expected to give birth “ PostOa n was '■ Scott at hu un not ems in :ood in one in tht awer for N’85A.\i xpe allegt Mike oking t he repot ay. ilationsJo matter what the excuse, 5 werek 0 ^ sa *d the TEA considered hange request and moved schedule if the educator had a octor’s excuse. By BRIAN PEARSON Senior Staff Writer Those who took the Texas Exami nation of Current Administrators and Teachers Monday probably found the exam to be less than chal lenging to the intelligence, says the president of the College Station Ed ucation Association. Ann Heuberger, also a librarian at Oakwood Middle School in College Station, says the test doesn’t meet its purpose of testing the competency and literacy of teachers and adminis trators. Heuberger took the exam along with about 1,000 teachers and ad ministrators in the area. “It (TECAT) doesn’t even begin to test to see if you’re a competent teacher or not,” Heuberger says. “It just tests to see if you’re able to take this type of test.” The TECAT, she says, which was given Monday to about 210,000 tea chers in Texas, would not be helpful in weeding out the illiterate and in competent teachers in state’s public schools. “Anybody who doesn’t pass that test does not need to be teaching. ” — Scott Laws, literature teacher at AScM Consol idated High School. According to state education offi cials, about 10,000 are expected to fail the exam. Heuberger says the competency and literacy of a teacher should be determined by school principals and not by the TECAT. She added that the test should never have been given. “Apparently the principals have not been doing a good job with eval uations if there are 10,000 incompe tent or illiterate teachers in Texas,” she says. “If there is an incompetent teacher, there’s a principal that needs to be fired.” Heuberger says a majority of tea chers in the area share the same opinion about the TECAT. Scott Laws, a literature teacher at A&M Consolidated High School, says the test was “ridiculously easy.” Laws says the TECAT barely tested for literacy and didn’t test for competency at all. “Anybody who doesn’t pass that test does not need to be teaching,” Laws says. “I think it was a waste of taxpayers’ money.” Steve Allen, a special education teacher at A&M Consolidated High School, also says the TECAT was easy. Allen says he felt the TECAT was necessary because it could expose some teacher illiteracy in Texas schools. “I think the test should have been given,” Allen says. “But I think the test should be much more difficult than it is.” Texas teachers and educators who don’t pass the test by June 30 will lose their jobs and teaching certifi cates. xas teachers claim tests easy but unfair i A Ttiij on was Associated Press PASO — As teachers across • Scoit-tas completed the state-man- :d a ft: d competency test Monday, : a faut tof them said the same thing: “It oage pc easy, but we shouldn’t have had id a w ft it.” ?n fonfany grumbled aloud that it was ome c« air and some illustrated their dis- )red on tent with stickers signs that read lints wider Protest.’ A few admitted be- t fortnehand they were nervous, astic baiiut although officials had antic- 12,000 failures among the than 200,000 educators tested ay, no one voiced any fears of n g- dy Benton, a chemistry and bi instructor at Andress High 1 in El Paso, completed the hour test in 2‘A hours at one-poc] ing: s and led; leal n; broil landles uched ik Thomas Jefferson High School in the border city. She wore a T-shirt emblazoned with a red apple and the words “I’m a Teacher and I’m Com petent.’ A sticker on her arm read ‘Under Protest.’ _ — “I resent it very much,” Benton said. “First, I don’t understand how they can give you a lifetime certifi cate and then on the basis of one test tell you it’s invalid. “Secondly, I don’t feel this test measures your competency as a tea cher in the classroom. All it does is measure your competency in read ing and writing.” Students in Texas had the day off so their teachers could take the Tea chers Examination of Current Ad- CAT. The 1984 public school reforms passed by the Legislature mandated the test in an effort to im prove the quality of education in Texas public schools. Jon Heike said, “If the Legislature wants to pass a law, it’s legal. Even if the majority thinks it’s unfair, it’s the law.” Heike was a student-teacher in the fall and started teaching science this semester at Andrews High School. But Maxine Johnson of Austin, a Travis High School English teacher with 30 years of experience, dis agreed. “I think it’s unfair because it puts to shame my having earned a per- ministrators and Teachers, or TE- manent teacher certificate,” she said. :he twoj ncescol checks 1 icted os / will bfj The! - field ol| lets fci ,hey M iod waif) hey ay fil ea for he is yeari] lained( had no | f their o| [ter the I •iod, Ml d TI4 II candj point. Why Choose Between Low Prices Good Service When you can have Both oks ,o!i ash Off] at Computerland omputerUincj “That was supposed to have been my ticket to being qualified.” In Houston, Linda Saveli said the test was so simple that she resented having to take it. “After graduating from college and taking all those tests, why go back and take an eighth-grade test?” said Saveli, who teaches at Worthing High School. “It was so easy,” said Joanne Stemple, a second-grade teacher in the Houston Independent school district. “If they (other teachers) can’t pass it, they shouldn’t be teach ing. I can read and write, and that’s what it tested.” Lorene Patneaude, an English teacher in El Paso for 1 1 years, said it was not a hard test, “but it’s not a baby test, either.” o to Aggieuon 17 FREE ?!? Find out how at the mandatory Workers’ Meeting Tues. 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