The Big Test

This title was previously available on NetGalley and is now archived.
Buy on Amazon Buy on BN.com Buy on Bookshop.org
*This page contains affiliate links, so we may earn a small commission when you make a purchase through links on our site at no additional cost to you.
Send NetGalley books directly to your Kindle or Kindle app

1
To read on a Kindle or Kindle app, please add kindle@netgalley.com as an approved email address to receive files in your Amazon account. Click here for step-by-step instructions.
2
Also find your Kindle email address within your Amazon account, and enter it here.
Pub Date Jul 01 2011 | Archive Date Mar 31 2016

Description

Are Mrs. Hartwell's students ready to show what they know?

Mrs. Hartwell is preparing her class to take the Big Test. Knowing they have studied and are well-prepared, she helps the students practice how to sit quietly, fill in the bubbles, and follow the directions. She even instructs them on proper morning-of-the-test nutrition.

As her students grow increasingly anxious about the Big Test, Mrs. Hartwell realizes she has to teach the most valuable test-taking skill of all: learning to relax!
Are Mrs. Hartwell's students ready to show what they know?

Mrs. Hartwell is preparing her class to take the Big Test. Knowing they have studied and are well-prepared, she helps the students...

A Note From the Publisher

Part of the Mrs. Hartwell's Classroom Adventures series.

Part of the Mrs. Hartwell's Classroom Adventures series.


Advance Praise

Kirkus Reviews

Mrs. Hartwell is back (First Year Letters, 2003, etc.) in a gentle satire on teaching to the test.

It's a Monday at the end of a really great school year. The kids have learned a lot and had fun along the way, but it's time now for the dreaded standardized test. But first, they need to learn how to show what they know. On Monday, they practice sitting still. Tuesday's lesson is on bubble-filling, and Wednesday finds the class taking a timed practice test. Throughout, Mrs. Hartwell finds that she is writing a lot of passes to the nurse's office-the students can't take the pressure. And so on Thursday, Mrs. Hartwell tosses her lesson plans and leads her nerved-up class to the library for a little relaxation. Danneberg's tongue-in-cheek humor is definitely in evidence as she describes the rigors of getting ready for a standardized test and the maladies that arise in anxiety-ridden students. Love's ink-and-dye artwork captures the varied expressions and body language of a classroom full of students, from a finger-down-the-throat gesture of disgust to the pride on their faces at having learned so much.

Once they stop laughing at the spot-on depiction of standardized testing, teachers should take a page from Mrs. Hartwell's book.

School Library Journal

Mrs. Hartwell's students have been working hard all year, but they are not sure they can deal with the Big Test. The week before it is slated, their teacher tells them they have just a few more things to learn. They need to know how to sit still for long periods of time, how to fill in the bubbles on the answer sheet, and how to follow directions. At each turn, the kids worry and get headaches, stomachaches, and other maladies. On Thursday, Mrs. Hartwell lines up her class and marches them down the hall to the library. The sign on the door says, "Library Closed: Students Testing." But inside it's a test party. The students get to play and relax and eat. This works so well that no one is sick anymore and they breeze through the actual Big Test on Friday. The illustrations, done in ink and transparent dyes on watercolor paper, are priceless. The children's faces clearly express all the agony that the situation requires. The youngsters appear to be about second or third graders. This title will be popular in school and public libraries.

Booklist

Books about school anxiety, especially the first day of school, abound, but this take is refreshing for its unusual focus on testing-related anxiety. After Mrs. Hartwell explains that they "have to know how to show what you know," the class tackles one skill daily: sitting still and working individually, reading all the directions, filling in answer bubbles, and more. The multicultural kids' facial expression—perplexed, worried, determined, and relieved once the test is over—aptly convey their experience. Standardized testing is an accepted reality in most public schools; this portrayal effectively reassures students that anxiety and challenges are normal and common, and can be overcome.

Picture Book Reviews

Mrs. Hartwell worked hard with her students throughout the school year. As the year came to a close, the kids were scheduled to take a big test to gauge what they’d learned. It was a long test so the students practiced sitting still and filling in answer bubbles to prepare. Even though they were ready, they were nervous. So much so that they started heading to the nurse’s office in ones and twos. But Mrs. Hartwell knows how to relieve the pressure. She has a big surprise waiting for them in the library! Despite their anxiousness, the hard work of the students paid off! Bright and lively expressive artwork clearly demonstrates the anguish and surprise of the students and will bring young readers right into Mrs. Hartwell’s classroom.

Kirkus Reviews

Mrs. Hartwell is back (First Year Letters, 2003, etc.) in a gentle satire on teaching to the test.

It's a Monday at the end of a really great school year. The kids have learned a lot...


Available Editions

EDITION Other Format
ISBN 9781580893602
PRICE $16.95 (USD)

Average rating from 11 members


Featured Reviews

The Big Test is great for classrooms to read before a big test.

Was this review helpful?

Mrs. Hartwell tries to alleviate her students fears about the BIG TEST, but they seem to get more nervous. She assures them that the test is just a change to show just how much they know, but students keep getting stomach aches and head aches. Finally on the day before the BIG TEST, Mrs. Hartwell takes matters into her own hands.

Was this review helpful?

With standardized testing happening in most schools around Canada and United States, there is often nervousness and insecurities surrounding these events. This is a great book for teachers to use with their students to help alleviate these feelings. In the story, Mrs. Hartwell takes a week to go over things with her students. She keeps telling them that they have learned a lot over the year and the test is a chance to show what they know. She keeps it low key and positive. When some of the students still become very anxious, she ditches her lesson plan and plans a day to help the students relax before they have to write the test the next day. The illustrations are great and very realistic. The details and colours are great and add to the story. This is a book that should be in every school library and primary classroom.

I received a copy of this book from Netgalley in exchange for an honest review.

Was this review helpful?

Mrs. Hartwell’s Class has worked hard all school year and it has come down to the last big test. Mrs. Hartwell takes her class through the skills they will need to be successful on the test. Can they sit still and Properly fill in the bubbles? Do they know what that a good breakfast is important? By the day of he practice test all of her student are anxious and nervous and have visited the school nurse and poor Mrs. Hartwell is feeling very bad for them.

I am the mom of anxious test taker. The poor kid gets so nervous, he is often not capable of showing what he knows. In a public school culture where the test is the culmination of the school year, this humorous look at Mrs. Hartwell’s class happens all too often and it would a terrific jumping off point to discuss with students that those big tests they dread don’t have to be scary. It shows the most important part of learning, how to have fun with it.

While the story is charming and quite fun, the star of the book are the illustrations by Judy Love. Brightly colored in vivid detail, Mrs. Hartwell and her students practically leap off the pages. This is a wonderful class library shelf book for grades 1-3.

5 stars

I received a copy of this from Netgalley in exchange for an honest review

Was this review helpful?

Super cute!

Was this review helpful?
Not set

The teachers will love this one. It would be good in my old school, because the kids are so whipped up before the test that it's a really unpleasant experience for everyone involved. My new school has time to take it more easily, but the kids do know of the importance. Anyway, This author is popular at the school and this book will really appeal to the kids as well as the teachers.

Not set
Was this review helpful?

Readers who liked this book also liked: