School Exams Are Ineffective

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In a typical classroom, all students are required to study the same material and take the same tests. Most students would acquire an average grade, while some may have scored below average, and very few will have gotten higher or even complete scores. This shows that some students are at a higher level than others in the same classroom, which goes to show that school exams are ineffective and, most of the time, inaccurate. Firstly, school exams place much pressure on all students. Many of them may give up and resort to cheating, and some students may get very nervous for the exams, clouding their mind and causing them to do poorly on the exam, again resulting in an unfair evaluation of knowledge. That is not to mention every parent’s expectation that their child will excel. This extra stress could put down a student to a point where his or her social life is obliterated. Stress can also cause fatigue, headaches and problems with digestion, which will also affect the student’s test grades. Secondly, testing is not an accurate reflection of some students’ understanding. For example, Student A has a sharp mind and is able to comprehend things quickly, while Student B has a hard time “getting it” and is swept under Student A’s achievements and forgotten about. Teachers do express that any questions are welcome and will be answered, but some people are too shy to speak up, for fear of “looking stupid” or for embarrassment that they weren’t as good as Student A. This results in the student submitting a test with absence of confidence, thus the student does badly. Thirdly, exams do not test what knowledge; they test memorization skills. This provides no real intelligence boost, as most of the material is erased from the mind as soon as the class has moved on to the next subject. Exams are not accurately evaluating a student's knowledge -- a student may not know the

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