When Pineapple Races Hare, Students Lose, Critics of Standardized Tests Say
The passage is a parody of the tortoise and the hare story, the Aesop’s
fable that almost every child learns in elementary school. Only instead
of a tortoise, the hare races a talking pineapple, and the moral of the
story — more on that later — is the part about the sleeves.
In the world of testing, she said, it does not really matter whether an answer is right or wrong; the “right” answer is the one that field testing has shown to be the consensus answer of the “smart” kids. “It’s a psychometric concept,” she said.In the original version a rabbit races an eggplant, and children speculated Friday that the eggplant had been changed to a pineapple because some kids might not know what an eggplant was. Why the rabbit was changed to a hare was harder to explain. There is no mention of sleeves.
Suzanne DeChillo/The New York Times
A story by the children’s book
author Daniel Pinkwater, above, was adapted for an English test in a
way that baffled students
and caused officials to say that the questions
wouldn’t be counted.
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