INNOVA Research Journal 2017, Vol 2, No. 6, pp.94-99
Introduction
How standardized tests became a practice of oppression
More than a century ago, Francis Galton, the founding father of eugenics, was greatly
influenced by Darwin’s publication of The Origin of Species in 1859. To Galton, intellectual
capacity was inherited and the preservation of races was a matter of selection (Alland, 2002).
The idea that human beings were superior to other species spread new seeds of racism in Europe.
Testing became a practice of oppression.
The French anthropologist Paul Broca was convinced that small brains were the result of
innate and social inferiority. These radical ideas about the intellectual differences between
“inferior” and “superior races” were the cornerstone of “scientific racism” – an ideology that
deviated IQ tests from their original objective (Gould, 1981). Back in the nineteen century, the
Ministry of Education of France aimed to find a method that psychologists could use to
determine the intellectual development of the child. By 1905, Binet had invented the first
diagnostic evaluations after 10 years of trial and error. Contrary to the oppressive nature of
standardized tests in the twenty-first century, Binet’s evaluations were never intended to
emphasize stereotypes but to figure out a way to improve the learning process of children.
Due to the impact of eugenics, the philanthropy embedded in Binet’s tests disappeared in
America with Henry H. Goddard, the man responsible for translating the tests into English. The
first recorded misuse of IQ tests took place in the USA around 1912 when tests were
implemented to measure the intelligence of those who crossed the Atlantic to “enjoy” the
benefits of the American dream (Gould, 1981). IQ tests became a symbol of oppression and
reminded immigrants their place in America just the same way that standardized tests nowadays
remind students that public higher education is the privilege of certain groups.
The idea of genetic superiority was simply dehumanizing. In 1979, Leon Kamin reported
what he called the great IQ fraud. According to Kamin, the psychologist Cyril Burt had falsified
data to support his assumptions of selective education. To Kamin, Burt was a “pathologically
disturbed scientist” who consciously falsified statistics to influence educational policies and
maintain social hierarchies (Kamin, 1979).
Another example of dehumanizing science was the American physicist William
Shockley, who in 1956 obtained the Nobel Prize of Physics. Shockly firmly believed that the
reason why African Americans scored lower on IQ tests was because of their genetic inferiority
(DOC & Co, Films for the Humanities & Sciences (Firm), & Films Media Group, 2011).
Shockley, a eugenicist and a defender of the white-cognitive elite, was convinced that IQ and
race were linked. He affirmed that black inferiority was inherited and that IQ tests had
demonstrated the fact (Alland, 2002).
There is a cruel history behind the creation of IQ tests and, consequently, the origins of
standardized testing are oppressive. Rebecca Zwick (2002) says that admission tests have long
been viewed as a major barrier to higher education for people of color and other “minorities”.
This relationship between the dominant and the subordinate is well explained by Tatum (1997)
when she says that dominant groups own the power and know how to use it to structure the kind
of society they want. The use of standardized tests does not promote social equality but inhibits
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