General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: How would you answer this test question? From a 1st grade Common Core test. [View all]pnwmom
(110,198 posts)You'd be stuck listening to him tell you how hard the test was and he couldn't even figure out the first question, that had a picture of five nickels and a whole cup of coffee with a 6 on it. How can a nickel -- or even a cookie -- be a "missing part" of a cup?
This company is notoriously sloppy in designing its questions. When my son took one of their tests, there was a picture of a log that urban children thought was a rolled up rug -- and got wrong, of course. My son got a question that to him was very mysterious, asking about an an object of a tannish color (I forget what it was) landing in a field that was either fresh grass or dead grass, and which color would it be camouflaged by? My son was color blind so green and tan look the same to him. Stupid question since almost 10% of boys are color blind and most of them can't see green. I called Pearson to ask if they examine their tests for questions that would not work for color blind kids and they said no -- and they don't plan to, either. They had some excuse but they just weren't interested.
I didn't care enough to make a bigger issue of it because the test didn't have any effect on my son's life. But if it does now to kids, they should be examining these tests with fine tooth combs to make sure they're understandable -- and they don't.
The other thing about this particular test is that the tricky cookie question -- which you could explain to your child, if presented with it in a non-test situation -- is the very first item. A child who stumbles on this has already lost his confidence at the very beginning of the test, and quite possibly wasted a lot of time.
P. S. I'm not the only one who thought the round things looked like coins:
http://science-beta.slashdot.org/story/13/11/02/1540249/a-math-test-thats-rotten-to-the-common-core
My assistant principal for mathematics was not sure what the question was asking. How could pennies be a part of a cup?" The 6-year-old first-grader who took the test didn't get it either, and took home a 45% math grade to her parents. And so the I'm-bad-at-math game begins!"