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The most heartbreaking speech at last night's Common Core forum by Lorri Gumanow
There were lots of great speeches last night at the Manhattan Regents forum with Chancellor Tisch and Commissioner King at the Spruce St. School. Wonderful and eloquent comments from teachers, principals, and parents, including Manhattan CEC leaders Shino Tanikawa, Noah Gotbaum, Tory Frye and Sonja Jones. But here is a magnificent speech that made many members of the audience tear up. Shared with Lorri Gumanow's permission.
Commissioner King, Chancellor Tisch, thank you for the opportunity to
share with you tonight. My name is Lorri Gumanow, and my husband and I
are the proud parents of a very talented 13-year old public school
student who is an actor and puppeteer, and wants to work with the Jim
Henson Company someday. I am a newly retired special educator. But
tonight I am here to ask you to walk in my shoes as a parent.
Our son was born 3 months premature and has several neurological
disabilities and an IEP. His disabilities are not the result of poverty,
poor prenatal care or poor educational opportunities. He has always
thrived in the public school environment. He has had wonderful teachers,
wonderful inclusive public schools, and wonderful supports.
All of a sudden he is failing. He failed the math test last year with a
score of 1. What happened? The roll out of the Common Core asks 8th
graders to now magically perform as 10th graders, without any attention
to the skills and knowledge they might have been required to learn and
practice in those 2 missing years.
Your solution is that my son
just needs to try harder. Increase the rigor! No excuses! And what do
you really mean every time you say, "This work?" He does 4 hours of
homework every night and still fails his classroom test! If you don't
pass, you are a failure, and your teacher is a failure too. Fire that
bad teacher! Close that failing school! Failure is not an option. Raise
the bar. Unfortunately, when you throw some kids into the “deep end of
the pool,” with a brick tied to their ankle - label the brick whatever
difference you prefer - it is foolish to believe they are all going to
be able to come back up for air. A lot of them are going down! I am
tired of the jargon and the rhetoric. You are willing to write my son
off as collateral damage. I care about my child! I care about all
children! And so do his teachers! Education is not a competition – it is
a human right and our responsibility!
My son now says he is
stupid, he can’t take it anymore, my teacher will get fired if I fail,
why can’t I be normal, he says he wants to kill himself, he has
meltdowns regularly over homework – AND he has pulled the kitchen knife
out of the drawer. He has always received outstanding medical care and
mental health care! Now I have to give him, in addition to his daily
medications, a sedative when he loses control – over homework and
schoolwork????? I sedate my kid with strong drugs so he doesn’t hurt
himself over an ELA quiz??? Something is very wrong with this picture.
School should not be a life or death experience. School is not worth
dying for!
And as a parent, would you want this medical history
about your child on inBloom, for the world to see? (By the way, our son
has given me permission to share this with you!) Are we overprotective
parents, protecting him from rejection and failure? Absolutely not - he
is an actor. He knows that when he experiences rejection after an
audition, he picks himself up, works hard and tries again. But it's
demeaning to try again when you know you don't have the skills.
Experiencing failure is an important lesson in life. But being punished
for something out of your control is abuse, and it is discriminatory.
My son is a proud member of the Drama Desk award-winning TADA! Resident
youth theater ensemble, and just earned a leading role in their
upcoming off-Broadway musical production. Talent exists in many forms,
academic talent being just one form. The arts are what save my son’s
life! He will reach his dream through hard work, perseverance, and
dedication to his craft. Those are qualities that employers value! Your
testing and sorting of children, and treating them as human capital will
not bring our children down, because we won’t let you. We love and
support our children, and embrace all of their special talents! We are
active, concerned, informed and intelligent parents and we won’t let you
hurt our children. Pull out of inBloom. Fire Pearson now! Drop the
Common Core! All children, not just the children of Ivy-league educated
and wealthy parents, are entitled to a good education in our democracy.
Not just the kids in private schools and charter schools. ALL children!!
I hope you were listening. Oh, and by the way. I graduated from an
Ivy-league college too and I believe in our public schools! Thank you!
1 comment:
Thank you so, so much. I stand in front of a room of 3rd graders every day, and they are far from "common", but each has wonderful qualities and areas of excellence. My own 14 yr old daughter is brilliant and artistic, empathetic and intuitive, she is capable of outstanding success if provided the freedom-but the demands of reformers to squeeze everyone ELSE's schools is forcing my hand as a parent. LOVE YOUR COMMENTS!
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