The Indian Child Goes To School
CHAPTER I
WHAT THE STUDY DISCLOSED—A SUMMARY
This is a
report on Indian school children; their school achievement, and
some of the cultural and environmental factors related to it.
Herein Indian children are studied by comparison with their white
schoolmates and neighbors. Each succeeding year finds a greater
proportion of Indian children attending the public schools of the
States in which they reside, as arrangements are concluded between
the Federal government and the several States and local school
districts.
There are probably few dissenters from the general
policy behind this trend. The education of children has traditionally
been a
function of State and local governmental unit in America. And most
persons would agree in principle that the children of Indian American
citizens should have the opportunity of attending the public schools.
A
large number of Indian children (approximately 10,500 in 1956)
chose to attend schools maintained by the various religious denominations.
This, too, is their established American right. From the earliest
days the mission schools have made a signal contribution to the
education of Indian youth.
It would be idle and less than honest,
however, to pretend that the transition from Federal to State and
local responsibility is
being, or can be, brought about without certain strains and tensions.
Some of these revolve around the question of the financial support
of schools. Some are concerned with the matter of timing the
transfer of Indian pupils to public schools; opinions vary from
those who
would effect the transfer, completely and immediately, to those
who would postpone it indefinitely. Sometimes disagreements arise
as to which type of school is doing the “better job.” Usually
such controversies "generate more heat than light." Amidst
this welter of conflicting opinion, what of the Indian child himself?
What are the facts about his school achievement, particularly as
compared with that of his white neighbors? What are some of the
facts about his language background, his age in relation to his
grade, his attendance, his friends, and his aspiration for further
schooling? What difference does it make in his learning whether
he lives on a reservation rather than off, or in a town rather
than in the country?
It is the earnest hope of the writers that
this report will help to put the problem in perspective—will
substitute fact for fancy, and lead to a sounder understanding
of the influences which
affect the learning of Indian boys and girls.
GROUPS, AS WELL AS
INDIVIDUALS, DIFFER
During the past several decides teachers have
become more and more aware of the differences between individual
children and have tried
to adjust their teaching to accommodate these differences. Professional
educators have had less occasion, however, to understand the cultural
differences which characterize whole groups of pupils and affect
their learning in school. Often, in local school systems, it has
seemed impolitic to raise such questions for fear of being misunderstood.
The present study admits and discusses such cultural differences
frankly; no good purpose is likely to be served by pretending that
they do not exist. The fact that they do exist does not necessarily
reflect discredit on anyone. But if such cultural differences adversely
affect learning we need to know what they are and how large they
are so that we can ameliorate the effects or at least understand
them.
THE STUDY WAS A COOPERATIVE EFFORT
This study came about through the joint efforts of a great many
people. The Bureau of Indian Affairs and the University of Kansas
guided the study but it was made possible only by the generous
and interested help of hundreds of workers in public and mission,
as well as Federal schools.
WHO WERE THE PUPILS?
Information was gathered on a total of 23,608 pupils. Fifty-eight
percent of these pupils were Indian and forty-two percent of them
were white. Of the Indian pupils, 8,564 or 62.6 percent were attending
Federal schools; 3,144 or 23 percent were attending public schools;
and 1,978 or 14.5 percent were attending mission schools. Of the
white pupils, 9,353 or 94.3 percent were attending public schools.
A scattered few were attending mission schools or community schools
operated by the Bureau of Indian Affairs and are not treated in
this study.
WHERE DID THEY LIVE OR GO TO SCHOOL?
The children lived or went to school in the following States: Arizona,
New Mexico, Colorado, North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Montana,
Wyoming, Oklahoma, Mississippi, arid Kansas. The great majority
of them attended schools in the communities in which they lived,
but a few of them who attended boarding schools lived in other
communities or even other States. They were virtually all rural
children in that the study was confined generally to communities
of 2,500 population or less, except for a few of the non-reservation
boarding schools. Even in these schools the great majority of the
pupils came from rural homes. The public schools which participated
were located close by the Federal and mission day schools and reservation
boarding schools and enrolled a considerable number of Indian pupils
as well as white pupils.
THE GROUPING OF PUPILS FOR THE STUDY
For purposes of making comparisons, the pupils were grouped at
various times in the following ways:
(a) By administrative areas of the Bureau of Indian Affairs. These
areas were: Albuquerque (New Mexico and Colorado); Phoenix (Arizona);
Aberdeen (North Dakota, South Dakota, and Nebraska); Billings (Montana
and Wyoming); Muskogee (Eastern Oklahoma and Mississippi); Anadarko
(Western Oklahoma and Kansas).
(b) By school grades. All pupils in grades four through twelve
were included.
(c) By race and type of school attended. Thus, there were four
such groups: white pupils in public schools; Indian pupils in Federal
schools; Indian pupils in public schools; and Indian pupils in
mission schools.
(d) In relation to certain cultural and environmental factors as
will appear later.
TRIBES AND SCHOOLS FROM WHICH THE PUPILS CAME
Most of the tribes represented are mentioned in Chapter Ill. There
were no Navajo or Hopi included since these tribes were under the
jurisdiction of another area office. A list of the schools that
participated is shown in Appendix A. In all there were 319 of them
and they are shown by administrative types.
THE TEST USED AND WHY
The pupils were all given the complete battery of the California
Achievement Tests. This battery measures achievement or learning
in what are commonly called the basic skills: reading vocabulary,
reading comprehension, arithmetic reasoning, arithmetic fundamentals,
mechanics of English and grammar, and spelling; when put together
these yield a total score.
It must be made clear that limiting the testing to such highly
academic areas of learning does not imply a reaction or retreat
by the Bureau of Indian Affairs from its long established conviction
that Indian children need to be taught functional, social, and
vocational skills—far from it. The teaching of these latter
skills continues without loss of emphasis in the schools operated
by the Bureau. But the basic skill subjects have always been taught
in Bureau schools also. It was recognized in the present study
that these basic skills are the fundamental tools which pupils
must have in order to acquire most other leanings satisfactorily.
Most important of all, the basic skill subjects represented an
area of similarity and agreement among the three administrative
types of schools; all taught them and would agree that they were
indispensable.
It is clear, then, that when we speak of school achievement we
are referring to the basic skills mentioned—nothing more.
And we are not implying that these skills are more important than
other educational goals that the schools may have set—that
is a matter of educational philosophy into which we will not enter.
We simply assume that these skills do represent highly important
goals for all the schools concerned.
A COMPARISON OF ACHIEVEMENT BY ADMINISTRATIVE AREAS
It was expected that differences in achievement would occur among
groups of pupils of different races attending different types of
schools. This proved to be true as we shall see presently. It may
be more surprising to many readers to learn that achievement among
the several areas differed widely and significantly, even though
the pupils of both races and all three types of schools were grouped
together in each of the areas.
As is described in Chapter III, a general hierarchy or order of
achievement of the areas was established. This hierarchy proved
to be as follows: 1) Anadarko. 2) Billings. 3) Aberdeen. 4) Muskogee.
5) Albuquerque. 6) Phoenix. Except as between Anadarko and Billings,
all the differences were statistically significant. Thus, with
the exception mentioned above, the hierarchy is quite clear-cut.
One can scarcely observe such sectional differences without becoming
curious as to the reasons that lie behind them; and the reasons
are indeed hard to define. It is easy enough to say that these
area groups differed from each other culturally. It can be shown
that a much greater infusion of white blood has occurred among
Indian groups in some areas than in others, and that more English
is spoken by the Indians of some areas than by those of others.
But how, for example, does one explain the fact that the white
pupils tested in the Dakotas achieved higher at every grade level
than the white pupils tested in eastern Oklahoma? An insignificant
proportion of either group spoke any language other than English.
Without any desire to wound local or sectional pride, it seems
fair to surmise that some subtle socio-economic or cultural influences
are operating here to cause such differences. It must be quickly
and forcefully pointed out that the findings of this study do not
purport to be characteristic of all the pupils of an area, but
rather of the rural pupils tested in the vicinities where the Federal
government operates Indian schools.
The differences in average level of achievement among the areas
had been noticed since the beginning of the testing program in
1951 and led to the decision to establish a separate set of norms
for each area.
It had also been observed in the first areas tested that, whereas
the mean scores of the area groups were close to the published
norms of the California Achievement Tests at grades four and five,
they tended to fall progressively farther below the “national” norms
as the higher grades were reached. This phenomenon has characterized
the scores of every area group in the study. It has been particularly
true of the Indian groups but has tended to be true of most of
the white groups as well. Numerous explanations of this phenomenon
have been offered by teachers whose opinions have been solicited.
It has been suggested that because many Federal schools stress
vocational training in the upper grades, instruction in the basic
skills is slighted. This, if true, would not explain why the same
thing tends to happen to most of the mission school Indian groups
and to white public school pupils, particularly in the Albuquerque
and Muskogee Areas. It has even been claimed that teaching is generally
of a better quality in the elementary grades than at the intermediate
and high school levels. Again, if this were so, there is no evidence
that it is any more true of the schools participating in this study
than of those upon whose pupils the “national” norms
were based.
It has been observed that in the higher grades it becomes increasingly
difficult to motivate poorly acculturated pupils to an academic
type of study. The immediate needs of their lives do not seem to
require it and it is difficult for them to envision a long-range
need that might or could occur later in life and in a different
socio-economic setting. Herein may lie an answer for those persons
who marvel that so few Indian young people, relatively, enter the
professions.
One astute and thoughtful teacher has commented that in the elementary
grades nearly all learning experiences center around life experiences
which most children hold in common—home, family, the community,
and the natural things which surround them. As learning moves into
more abstract areas or experiences farther removed from the daily
life of the child, the underacculturated home and community contributes
less and less help to the learning process.
Whenever one makes comparisons between groups in terms of the “average,” he
is faced with the ever-present facts of “range” and
of “overlap” and must not ignore them. Within each
of the area groups there was a large range of achievement, with
some individuals in even the lowest achieving area making higher
scores than some of the pupils in the highest achieving area. Furthermore
this range of achievement becomes greater the higher we go into
the grades. Twelfth-grade pupils, as a whole, are less similar
in achievement than are fourth-grade pupils.
A COMPARISON OF ACHIEVEMENT BY RACE-SCHOOL GROUPS
As was indicated earlier in this chapter, there were differences
in average achievement among groups of pupils of different races
attending different types of schools. These groups were then arranged
into a hierarchy or order of achievement as was done for the area
groups. The following clear-cut general hierarchy emerged:
1. White pupils in public schools
2. Indian pupils in public schools
3. Indian pupils in Federal schools
4. Indian pupils in mission schools
There were two exceptions to this order. In the Aberdeen Area the
mission school Indian pupils were tied with the public school Indian
pupils for the second and third positions; in the Albuquerque Area
the Federal school Indian pupils were in the second position; and
the public school Indian pupils and the mission school Indian pupils
were tied for the third and fourth positions. There were no mission
school pupils in the Anadarko and Muskogee Areas.
There is a popular off-hand assumption that the quality of a school
can be determined by the amount its pupils learn in a given period
of time, by comparison with other pupils and other schools. This
assumption is both persistent and pervasive. It is indulged in
not only by the lay public but also by teachers who should know
better. It is as though all pupils were considered to be equally
blank and equally impressionable sheets of paper which are sent
to school and upon which no one is ever permitted to mark except
the school itself. If such were the case, the school should indeed
be held entirely accountable for the amount and rate at which pupils
learn, but the facts are something quite different. The facts are
that children do not learn everything they know in school, although
some are far more dependent upon the school than are others; they
do not all start even in point of ability, or interest, or experience,
or health; and they certainly do not remain even throughout their
school careers in terms of learning advantages outside the school.
Most persons know, of course, that this is true of individual pupils,
but they forget sometimes that whole groups of pupils may be characterized
by such differences.
It is not to be wondered at, then, that the white pupils in the
study, as a group, consistently made higher scores than Indian
pupils, considering the great cultural advantage they enjoyed with
respect to such things as language, motivation, and out-of-school
learning opportunities. Nor is it surprising that the Indian pupils
who attended public schools achieved better on the average than
Indian pupils who attended Federal and mission schools since culturally
they were more advanced, as later evidence will reveal.
There is no intent, of course, to try to minimize the school’s
role in the educative process. The school is the instrument that
the community employs to give formal shape and direction to the
education of its children. But it cannot and must not get too far
out of joint with the community it serves and from which it receives
its support. The school is a reflection of the community even while
it seeks to lift the community gradually to a higher level. Its
curriculum and the level of difficulty of its instructional program
must suit the needs of the people it serves. The private preparatory
schools of the East which specialize in preparing the students
for Harvard, Yale, and Princeton, fine as they are, would not work
on the Papago Reservation, for example, or in most of the strictly
rural communities of America.
For these reasons it is true that schools differ in “quality” but
communities usually get from their schools what they want and are
willing or able to pay for. In the light of this, it behooves the
Bureau of Indian Affairs to take a close look at each public school
to which it may be contemplating the transfer of pupils, to be
sure that the school is prepared to offer the Indian pupil what
he needs and at a level at which he can function successfully.
A COMPARISON BASED ON THE SEVERAL SKILLS
We have seen that, on the average, the white pupils in the study
achieved better on the tests than did the Indian pupils. The further
question then arises of whether this superiority was equal for
each of the several skills or whether the Indian pupils did better,
by comparison with white pupils, on some skills than on others.
This question is explored and discussed in Chapter V. Specifically
the comparison was made between Indian pupils in Federal schools,
and white pupils in public schools, these being the two largest
race-school groups.
It was found that the Indian pupils compared best in spelling,
and least well in reading vocabulary. There was a wide difference
between these two extremes, with the comparative achievement of
the Indian pupils in spelling being significantly higher than for
any of the other five skills. In reading vocabulary they were significantly
lower than in reading comprehension, arithmetic fundamentals, and
spelling.
By comparison, the Indian pupils were second highest in arithmetic
fundamentals and second lowest in arithmetic reasoning. While the
difference in their comparative standing on these two skills does
not meet the requirement for “statistical” significance,
it approaches it nearly enough to justify some comment.
It seems fair to point out that spelling and computational skills
in arithmetic are probably learned, by most children, largely within
the school and by a rote method. Word meanings, on the other hand,
may be acquired by pupils in a wide variety of learning situations,
outside the school as well as in. In other words, the pupil who
is culturally disadvantaged in point of language or experience
may suffer less by comparison with other pupils in the learning
of skills over which the school has the greater control. Furthermore,
in the particular spelling test under discussion, the pupil is
asked to identify one misspelled word out of four words presented
in each item. It is possible, although not proved, that a large
percentage of Indian children have high aptitude for visualizing
the form of words. If this is true they might be able to identify
the misspelling of a word which they had previously seen spelled
correctly, even though they did not know its meaning.
In addition, it was observed that the Indian pupils compared more
favorably with white pupils in the elementary grades, and particularly
in grade four, than in the junior and
senior high school grades. It was also noted that they compared
most favorably with white pupils in the Muskogee and Albuquerque
Areas and least well in the Aberdeen and Billings Areas.
THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN ACHIEVEMENT AND DECREE OF INDIAN BLOOD
AND PRE-SCHOOL LANGUAGE
The hierarchy of achievement by race-school groups has already
been set forth. It has been suggested that this hierarchy is a
result of basic cultural differences between the groups. What data
can be adduced to support such an assumption? Investigation of
the data reveals an amazingly consistent, relationship between
the degree of Indian blood and pre-school language on the one hand
and level of achievement on the other. With only one notable exception,
the smaller the amount of Indian blood in a group and the greater
the amount of English spoken prior to school entrance, the higher
the group achieved. Stating it another way, the higher achieving
race-school groups contained fewer full-blood pupils and more pupils
who spoke only English, or at least a combination of English and
some other language, prior to school entrance. The single exception
was in the Albuquerque Area where the Indian pupils in Federal
schools, despite the fact that a higher percentage of them were
full-bloods and fewer of them spoke English before starting to
school, achieved higher as a group than the Indian pupils in public
school. In the Aberdeen Area, the Indian pupils in Federal schools
achieved lower, as a group, than the Indian pupils in mission schools;
however, consistent with the general rule, more of them were full-bloods
and fewer of them spoke English, pre-school.
The writers do not believe that blood quantum and pre-school language,
of and by themselves, are strong determiners of achievement. They
do believe that these characteristics are two of the best indices
of the degree of acculturation of a pupil and that the stage of
acculturation that a pupil and his family have reached has a powerful
influence upon his school achievement. In Chapter VI the writers
have been at some pains to describe what they mean by “acculturation.”
It is noteworthy that, by and large, the Federal schools now remaining,
together with the mission schools, are enrolling the least acculturated
Indian pupils.
This, no doubt, is as it should be. Special Federal schools can be justified
only where educational opportunity for Indian pupils would otherwise be lacking
or where Indian pupils, because they are disadvantaged, need special curricula,
methods, and materials. Mission schools, likewise, have in most areas traditionally
sought out pupils who stood in the greatest need of help. It would be manifestly
unfair, however, to expect pupils who are at a relatively lower cultural level
to achieve as well as those who enjoy much greater cultural advantages.
AGE OF PUPILS IN RELATION TO GRADE
Indian pupils are, on the average, older for their grade than white pupils. Again,
there are differences among the several Indian groups. Indian pupils in Federal
schools were, on the average, slightly more than one year older than White pupils
in the same grade. Indian pupils in public schools averaged about six months
older than their white classmates, while Indian pupils in mission schools were,
in general, nearly a year older than white pupils of the same grade in the public
schools.
The greatest over-ageness of Indian pupils in Federal schools occurred in the
Phoenix and Muskogee Areas and the least in the Albuquerque Area. For Indian
pupils in public schools it was greatest in the Aberdeen Area and least in the
Anadarko Area. Indian mission school pupils were most over-age in the Phoenix
Area and least so in the Aberdeen and Albuquerque Area.
It seems probable that the over-ageness of Indian pupils is accounted for not
only by late school entrance, but also by the necessity for a beginning year
for many of them in which basic social and conversational English skills are
taught, and by the fact of irregularity of attendance.
OTHER OBSERVATIONS RELATED TO AGE-GRADE
In general, the range of ages in a given grade was greatest for
Indian pupils in Federal schools and least for white pupils in
public schools. In general, too, the range of ages within a grade,
regardless of the race-school group, lessened from grade four through
grade twelve. It is believed that this is occasioned by the dropping
out of school of over-age pupils. This belief, so far as it applies
to Indian pupils, is supported by the fact that except in the Albuquerque
and Phoenix Areas, Indian and white pupils were more nearly the
same age in grades eleven and twelve than was true for the earlier
grades.
For the most part, the concentration of ages of white pupils in
any given grade was in one or two years, whereas the concentration
of ages of Indian pupils in Federal schools in a grade was usually
in three or four different years.
Interestingly the preponderance of pupils, regardless of race-school
groupings, who were over-age for their grade were boys and the
majority of pupils who were under-age for their grade were girls.
THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN AGE IN GRADE AND ACHIEVEMENT
There is impressive evidence that on the average pupils who are
over-age for their grade do not achieve nearly as well in the basic
skill subjects as do those who are at-age or under-age. It must
be noted, however, that many pupils who are classified as under-age
in this study would not be considered so in most of the nation's
schools due to the higher average of pupils in this study. It is
also felt that over-ageness in itself is not the only contributor
to the low achievement of over-age pupils, but that the same social,
economic, and cultural factors which tended to make them over-age
in the first place continue to operate against their learning.
THE HOLDING POWER OF THE SCHOOL
For a number of reasons set forth in Chapter VI, the present study
does not lend itself well to an investigation of the “holding
power” of the school. Nevertheless, there are clear indications
from the data that Indian pupils, the country over, are not staying
in school to the completion of their high school education in as
large proportions as do white children. This is cause for genuine
concern and indicates that some intensive studies of the school “drop-out” of
Indian pupils should be made with a view to determining the causes,
if possible, and seeking remedies for the situation.
THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN ACHIEVEMENT AND PLACE OF RESIDENCE
The data yield strong evidence that, on the average, Indian pupils
who live off an Indian reservation achieve better than those who
live on one. Likewise, Indian pupils who live in a town achieve
somewhat better, on the average, than those who live in the country.
THE CHOICE OF FRIENDS BY INDIAN AND WHITE PUPILS
The findings concerning choice of friends by Indian and white pupils
are of more than ordinary interest and importance. Each pupil was
asked to indicate whether his friends were “all or mostly
Indian” or “all or mostly white.” Since only
in the public schools did both Indian and white pupils attend in
any considerable numbers, special importance attaches to the responses
of the public school pupils.
Inasmuch as white pupils in the public schools greatly outnumbered
their Indian schoolmates in most areas, it is not surprising that
the great preponderance of white pupils said that most of their
friends were white boys and girls.
What is surprising, to the investigators at least, is that in the
Phoenix, Albuquerque, and Aberdeen Areas, although they had many
more white schoolmates to choose from, a great majority of the
Indian public school pupils said that all or most of their friends
were Indian.
The Billings Area presents an especially revealing situation. Here
Indian and white pupils in the public schools tested were in almost
equal numbers. And yet more than 80 percent of both Indian and
white pupils indicated that they were choosing all or most of their
friends from their own race.
Only in the Oklahoma Areas was the usual pattern departed from.
In the Muskogee and Anadarko Areas a substantial proportion, and
in many grades a majority, of the Indian pupils indicated that
most of their friends were white.
It seems clear that mere attendance of the children of two races
in the same school does not necessarily lead, immediately at least,
to their choosing their friends without regard to race.
THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN CHOICE OF FRIENDS AND ACHIEVEMENT
Because of the small number of Indian pupils claiming all or mostly
white friends, little success was had in comparing achievement
on the basis of choice of friends. In the few cases where comparisons
were possible, no significant differences in achievement were found
between groups of Indian pupils claiming that most of their friends
were white and those who said that most of their friends were Indian.
It must be pointed out that this does not disprove the assumption
that Indian pupils may learn letter if they attend school with
white pupils. Presumably one may learn from a schoolmate or associate
even though he does not consider him a close friend.
THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE ACHIEVEMENT OF INDIAN PUPILS AND THE
PROPORTION OF WHITE PUPILS IN THE SCHOOL
The evidence that Indian pupils achieve better if they attend a
school composed mostly of white pupils is far from convincing.
Since Federal and mission schools enroll few, if any, white pupils,
this phase of the investigation was confined to public schools.
As a result of this and other factors, it was possible to make
only a small number of comparisons. There may be a slight indication
that Indian pupils attending a school composed mostly of white
pupils, or where the enrollment is at least half white, achieve
better than those attending a school composed mostly of Indian
pupils, but the data are by no means conclusive.
THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN ACHIEVEMENT AND REGULARITY OF ATTENDANCE
As would be expected, pupils who attended school regularly tended
to achieve better than those who were irregular in their attendance.
The investigation of this question was confined to the day schools
of the Aberdeen Area where factors of distance, severe weather,
and seasonal employment combine to make the attendance problem
especially acute. It may be surprising to some that the evidence
is no more overwhelming than it is. It should be remembered that
regularity of attendance is only one factor that influences achievement.
There is no reason to doubt that if all other variables could be
held constant pupils who attend school regularly would achieve
consistently higher than those who do not.
Of the pupils studied, the greatest absence was among Indian pupils
attending Federal schools, the next greatest among Indian pupils
attending public schools, and the least
among white pupils attending public schools. Since nearly all of
the mission schools in the Aberdeen Area are of the boarding type,
no mission school pupils were studied. Once again, the cultural
differences existing among the various race-school groups must
be pointed out.
THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN ACHIEVEMENT AND THE EDUCATIONAL ASPIRATION
OF PUPILS
There is striking evidence that the higher achieving pupils expect
to go farther in school than do the low achievers. Assuming that
a cause and effect relationship exists, we cannot tell from the
data whether high achievers expect to go farther in school because
they learn well, or whether they learn well because they are motivated
by higher aspiration. Perhaps each contributes something to the
result.
Several other findings are worthy of special mention. The great
preponderance of even fourth-, fifth-, and sixth-grade pupils,
regardless of area or race-school group, expected to get at least
some high school training. In general, more of the pupils of both
races in the Oklahoma areas expected to get some sort of post-high
school training than was true for the other areas. There was a
slight, although not a consistent, tendency for a greater proportion
of white pupils than Indian in the elementary and intermediate
grades to aspire to education beyond high school. This proportion
was likely to reverse itself in the eleventh and twelfth grades,
however.
Especially interesting is the fact that even at the fourth-grade
level the relationship between educational aspiration and achievement
had begun to manifest itself.
THE USE OF ACHIEVEMENT TESTS FOR INSTRUCTIONAL AND GUIDANCE PURPOSES
Chapter VII is devoted to a description of suggested ways of using
achievement test results for the improvement of instruction and
pupil guidance at the classroom level. It is not feasible to attempt
to summarize it here. The chapter is intended to be used as a kind
of handbook or guide by teachers and supervisors.
THE PROPER USE OF PREDICTIVE TEST RESULTS
Chapter VIII is concerned with a description of the proper use
of test results obtained with the pre-college and pre-commercial
test batteries, with a view to predicting probable success or failure
in post-high school academic study. Again, it is not practicable
to summarize it in this chapter. Chapter VIII was prepared for
use by those persons who must assume responsibility for making
decisions concerning the granting of educational loans or grants
in aid, or admission to certain courses of study.
IN CONCLUSION
A summary chapter in its very nature has limitations. There is
a tendency to over-simplify findings and to state them too categorically.
It is hoped that the serious reader will find time to go to the
several chapters for more precise information concerning the questions
investigated.
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