[Youth-list] Candy and test scores and an enduring comment...
Elizabeth Shack
brownshack at sbcglobal.net
Thu Mar 22 08:32:34 PST 2007
I Want Candy Like flowers in spring, those little tricks that supposedly boost student performance pop up every standardized-testing season. Some paint classroom walls a soothing pink while others, hoping to pump the adrenaline, lead pre-test physical exercises. In parts of Maryland this week, theyre handing out peppermint candies. And, as it turns out, there may be a good scientific reason. Back in the 90s, a study at the University of Cincinnati concluded that the peppermint scent helped test subjects focus better on long-term tasks. Reactions at the 800-student Eastern Middle School in Silver Spring are mixed. I dont think [peppermint] makes you smarter, one 11-year-old says, but it clears your mind and makes you feel more confident. An ETS research scientist suggests that, even if the science is questionable, the suggestion that peppermint helps may have a positive impact. But Paul Skilton-Sylvester, at the University of Pennsylvanias Graduate School of
Education, believes folks are missing the point. Using a Philadelphia specialty as an example, he comments (with due sarcasm): Weve found that test scores go up when theres a steady diet of cheese steaks with provolone, in combination with exciting lessons that ask students to wrestle with important ideas connected to real world problems. Chew on that.
Posted by Rich Shea, Teacher Magazine on March 20, 2007 1:52 PM
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