The kind of assessment you are talking about is called Formative Assessment. It is what good teachers do every day. Homework, quizzes, and tests can all be forms of formative assessment. Writing an essay on thematic elements of a novel can be an assessment as well, and depending on the level of the student (7th grade English vs. Senior level Literary Analysis) can be either a formative or summative assessment. Literally every month I have ever taught, my principal has been in the room at least once to evaluate my development, lesson plan, delivery, and adjustments. I'm a high school math teacher. I have a MA in Teaching and I have been in charge of department level curriculum development based on standards like Common Core.
It sounds like you're in a pretty good school district. Why would you want to deal with the distraction of standardized testing? Is it because of the funding system? Be honest, haven't there been times when you've thought that your school could do better for its students without those standards dictating what you should test for?The kind of assessment you are talking about is ... what good teachers do every day. ... Literally every month I have ever taught, my principal has been in the room at least once
I have been in charge of department level curriculum development based on standards like Common Core.
We have to consider that the people writing the standards have a lot of experience in deciding what in Math/English etc. should be taught and considered relevant within the subject. They are usually Ph. D level educators and have a lot of experience working with kids and school boards. In developing these standards they consider input from community and industry leaders to gain outside opinion on what stake holders might find lacking in the current generation of students. i.e. "Why don't graduates know statistics/programming/technical writing?" Or whatever they might see lacking. And most of the time, I agree with what they're saying. Common Core is a dramatic improvement in many ways over the previous standards and it gives realistic (but previously unheard of) goals for each grade in the major subjects. We don't find standardized testing to be an enormous distraction. It is not an obstacle but a tool where we can take a step back and assess how well the students did compared to how they entered the classroom (last year's test). Then we can figure out why and try to improve. And even though it is unfortunately being used to guarantee funding under the abortion that is NCLB, and do stupid things like dictate merit-based pay increases, these are symptoms of the problem (legislators and administrators do not understand the processes that lead to consistent education and learning and so we waste our time spinning our wheels with trying new things and old things and just seeing what works or more often doesn't) and we are better off at least making informed decisions with data than not.